The Lyrids are coming! How I watch meteor showers from the middle of a city


During last April’s Lyrid meteor shower, I left my camera outside and went to bed. I’d set my tripod, wide-angle lens pointed skyward, exposures firing every 30 seconds. It’s my usual routine for meteor showers, particularly relatively minor displays like the Lyrids. Sure, it’s the first display of “shooting stars” since January, but my camera would be more patient than I — and see more meteors than I could from my light-polluted location. It’s a calculated kind of laziness, and I’d done just enough to feel like I’d taken part.

Hours later, just before dawn, I stepped outside to bring my camera in. The sky was tinted with a deep pre-sunrise blue, the stars beginning to fade. I switched off the camera — and then, of course, it happened. A sudden, brilliant meteor tore across the sky — exactly what the Lyrids are known for. Excited, I went inside, straight to my laptop, slid the camera’s SD card in, and started flicking through its hundreds of identical images for a previous fireball. Nothing — not a trace. The camera had been watching all night, but captured zilch.



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