Visibility IV / V
It was evening. The direction of Lappeenranta had been predicted to be completely clear and the Northern Lights forecasts were quite promising. However, when I got to the venues, the situation was a little different. Clouds. A lot. And they multiplied menacingly. At 12:30 the sky was completely overcast, except for a small cloud over my head. Through the cracks in the clouds, I saw that the aurora borealis brightened and a substorm started. Then it started to snow, snowflakes. I considered for a moment that I would throw a waterfowl with the camera and go home. Well, of course I wouldn't do anything like that, it just felt that way. And the sky started to promise to clear up little by little. Shortly before midnight, I was able to photograph the red northern lights from the cloud gaps and little by little the view expanded in front of me. Shortly after the sky opened, the aurora borealis began to rise towards the zenith. After that, I didn't photograph much other than the ever-changing corona flying at the zenith. During the night, many kinds of northern lights were visible, pulsating and fluttering and blazing. Until at half past two the Corona looming over the head dimmed and the aurora borealis flowed towards the northern horizon and things calmed down. And the sky was clouded again. On the way home, I saw a few times that the arc persisted relatively high in the sky, but I got so tired that I didn't stop to take pictures anymore.
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