Since I am not seeing eclipse/Finsternis panoramas, let me throw one inside, although made of only two pictures. Actually, I was too busy in following the moon, who seemed to move so fast. Or maybe the moon moves at the usual speed, it is the photographer who is getting older and lazier...
I chose this position, 45.99956 11.34468, since the moon was due to set with azimuth 300°, whence I was expecting it to sink somewhere left of Cima Brenta. Actually, this happened left of Cima Tosa, which luckily was in sight as well.
Position: 45.99956 11.34469
Larger: http://bit.ly/2UbH165
Sebastian Becher, Alvise Bonaldo, Klaus Brückner, Hans-Jörg Bäuerle, Günter Diez, Friedemann Dittrich, Alexander Egger, Jörg Engelhardt, Johannes Ha, Leonhard Huber, Walter Huber, Heinz Höra, Martin Kraus, Geir Anders Langangen, Dieter Leimkötter, Giuseppe Marzulli, Steffen Minack, Jan Lindgaard Rasmussen, Danko Rihter, Patrick Runggaldier, Björn Sothmann, Michael Strasser, Konrad Sus, Jens Vischer
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Comments
For better planning: https://www.mondverlauf.de/#/45.9996,11.3447,14/2019.01.21/07:29/1/3
or photopills app
Unfortunately clouds covered the eclipse when the mood approached the Karwendel in Austria an I therefore enjoy pictures like yours to remember this rare occasions
So, good work and definitely unique for at least 10 years!
Alexander
Vedi tu se darci anche delle technicalities.
Alvise
Alvise: di tecnico c'è che è fatta col solito 70-300, anche se è dato per morto. Si è infatti "liberata" qualche lente all'interno, per cui funziona un giorno sí e uno no, il giorno piú no essendo stato forse quello del N.22718, alquanto affine a questo...
Ricordavo che sul sentiero da Barco alla Val di Sella c'era un altro candidato belvedere, ma quel che non ricordavo era se ci fosse vista libera o alberi in mezzo. Quindi ho scelto la soluzione piú sicura e conservativa di rimanere basso...
LG, Alberto.
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