Around 3:00pm on November 22 I happened to look out and see a brilliant rainbow and locked my new cam on it. It was perhaps some of the most beautiful footage my cams have ever captured. It went on for an hour and 6 minutes. I did a time lapse of it and got it down to 4 minutes. It was beautiful and interesting to the very end.....
Skunk Bay Weather Blog
Weather and Photography
Sunday, November 24, 2024
Saturday, October 12, 2024
Tuesday, September 17, 2024
The Aurora Shows Keep Coming....
They just keep on coming. Even with a full moon last night we had a very nice Aurora show. It started very early. You can see the time stamp on this image is 8:26. Sunset was around 7:20. Astronomical twilight when the viewing is best would have started around 8:20.
Here is a time lapse of the whole show....
Thursday, September 12, 2024
Northern Lights - September 12, 2024
Northern Lights again. We have been getting a lot of great shows lately. Here is the time lapse from September 12, 2024.
Wednesday, August 28, 2024
Beautiful Aurora Show - August 27 - 28
We had a very nice Aurora show last night. It actually lasted all night.
Here is a brief highlight snippet....
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
New Camera Installed
I just finished the installation and code modification for the new cam. It is a live streaming, pan/tilt/zoom IP cam. This opens up lots of different opportunities. I have set it up to pan and stop for 20 seconds at each position that the old cams were. To start the live stream, click on the "Play" button in the middle of the image. You can stream full screen by clicking on the icon in the lower right hand corner. It needs to buffer for a few seconds before it provides a solid 1080 high definition video. You can move the slider at the bottom of the image to go back in time. Click on "Live" and it brings you back to the current time. So far I am pleased with the quality and features of this new cam. I hope you like it.
Friday, August 2, 2024
Some Changes Coming To SkunkBayWeather
I have been using software and cameras that were developed around 2010 to put the three images at the top of my site. I also use those images for a variety of time lapses and single images to share on social media. The cameras have been very durable and have reasonable “internet quality”. The software is developed specifically for these Olympus cameras. I have been buying these cams on Ebay at a reasonable price. They are all used. They can last up to 3-4 million shutter cycles. They take 3,500 images per day for each cam. Obviously, I love this package. I have not been able to find anything that is close to this functionality. For reference a standard DSLR camera only lasts about 100,000 to 300,000 shutter cycles.
Now for the bad news.
In order for these cameras to work with my software they require a
firmware upgrade from the default version.
I just had 2 cams start to fail and ordered a couple more. When I tried to upgrade the firmware, I found
that Olympus has permanently retired this utility. I can no longer upgrade the firmware. This makes the cams unusable. In other words, the 3 cams at the top of my
site will no longer be available in the very near future. Cam 3 is dead, Cam 2 is intermittent and Cam 1 is still functioning. This is a very sad day for me.
The Canon night cam will still continue to function as usual
for the foreseeable future. It is not affected by this.
I am working on a “Live Streaming” solution as a replacement. I hope to
have this operating soon.
I do want to give a HUGE shout out to Michael McCormack who
developed this software years ago (IPTimeLapse.com). He continues to develop and support software for
IP Cams and the Canon package.