Friday, March 20, 2026

Lake Tyrrell Milkyway Sky with aurora australis for Sky Watch Friday

 


Seven years ago, long before I understood what the sky was quietly preparing that night, I drove six hours to the wide salt pan of Lake Tyrrell. I had imagined the lake filled with water, a perfect mirror for the heavens. Instead I arrived to find it dry and pale, the earth cracked and empty, with construction scattered across the flats.

For a moment the journey felt misplaced.

Yet the night had its own intentions. The countryside was wrapped in a darkness so complete it seemed the world beyond my small circle of light had vanished. With no reflective lake to frame the sky, I turned instead to the silhouettes of a few random trees standing quietly against the vastness above.

The Milky Way stretched across the heavens in a soft, luminous river of stars. I focused on that ancient band of light, making one of my earliest attempts at astro-landscape photography, guided more by instinct than experience.

Only later, after the photograph was taken and examined, did I discover something else hidden in the frame — the faint trace of the Aurora Australis. It had been invisible to my eyes that night, quietly painting the sky while I stood there unaware beneath the stars.

Looking back now, the dry lake and the deep darkness no longer feel like disappointments. They were simply the beginning — a first, uncertain conversation with the night sky



Sony A7RIV

FE 16-35mm f2.7 GM



Linking Skywatch Friday


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