Aerial photography always presents problems. Getting this picture for National Geographic’s soil story presented extra problems. But the view was worth it. Boy, was it worth it.
Here’s how shooting aerial pictures is often presented. “Sweeping low over the clouds I shouted to my pilot ‘There’s the farm.’ Quickly I raised my Nikon to my eye and clicked the shutter. I had my picture!”
Well, not quite. It makes a nice story but it hardly ever works out that way. Here’s how it really worked.
My assignment for National Geographic was to photograph soil, that least honored of all resources, without which human life on earth would be impossible. Telling its story in pictures, however, was no easy matter. One aspect I wanted to illustrate was that soil, so susceptible to erosion, can also be restored to health. From a previous story I knew about the Coon Creek Watershed of southeast Wisconsin, the area where the then-new Soil Conservation Service first began efforts to halt and reverse the erosion that was, in the 1920’s, the worst in America.
I had been lucky enough, during my first visit, to find fog in the valleys during an early morning flight. I wondered if I might get lucky again. The luck was in finding the right pilot, who knew the weather patterns around that area of Wisconsin. That turned out to be a flight instruction teacher just across the Mississippi in Winona, Minnesota, the nearest airport where I could find a high wing Cessna 182 for my photography.
The trick is timing. Under the right meteorological conditions (dew point, temperature before dawn, etc.) the fog forms just before dawn. Since you can’t take off in a small plane in the fog we had to be in the air 45 minutes before sunrise. (As it happened that was just enough and the fog was drifting in from the river as we lifted off the ground.) The second trick is that the fog won’t burn off until later in the morning, meaning it would be several hours until we could land again. But the fog forms in the valleys of that hilly region around the river, not up on the high hills further away. That meant that there were several small airports within easy reach where we could put down, if we had to, and wait out the fog (and where we could have a nice breakfast in the airport cafe.)
In the event, it all worked like clockwork. Almost immediately upon takeoff I could see that the fog was forming. Within half an hour it was whisping over farms, curling around barns and silos, making everything quite dreamy. (Now it was my job not to screw up this incredible opportunity with some stupid mistake.)
Dawn really lit up the fog but I knew it would also burn it off eventually so we were in a race to find the right farm to shoot. Several opportunities looked good, and I worked them hard, which means circle around, looking for the right angle and flight path, then flying and refining that flight path over and over to position the camera exactly.
Finally we found the farm you see, gloriously floating in the clouds, along the winding road that snakes along St. Mary’s Ridge. The red barn, white house and windmill were perfect, offering just the right scene. And the contoured fields were graceful, the very picture of fertility. Hard to believe these very fields had once been gullied with erosion, sending their precious topsoil down the muddy Mississippi.
We worked it hard. I haven’t counted but I would guess we made fifteen to twenty passes over the farm. Who knows what the farmer thought of this airplane circling his fields. For this shot we came in low, fly perpendicular and slightly away from the farm so I could shoot out the open window and get the plane’s strut out of the way (always a problem.) I shot it with my Nikon D2Xs and 17-55 f2.8. Metadata says it was 1/640th at f4, motordriving all the way.
The remaining trick was to get home on the remaining fuel. Not so tough, as we found a hole in the clouds over the airport back at Winona and tucked down quickly while we had the chance.
But here is the big lesson. The picture would never have happened without the pilot who knew the tricks of the weather. A pilot who can put your camera in the right place at the right time is priceless.
Jim,
This is the most wonderful, beautiful, magnificent photograph!
Did you ever get ahold of the farmer who was surely wondering who was flying over?
Thanks for all the hard work with this, and everything else you do.
Posted by: Richard Glaser | July 18, 2009 at 11:47 AM
It's not often you see an image of somewhere you have never lived and think: "I wouldn't mind living there for the rest of my life". Thank you for this picture!
Posted by: Robert | July 21, 2009 at 12:45 AM
Beautiful photo! So glad I came across this. Just blogged about it: http://f-stop-photo.blogspot.com/2009/07/dream-world.html
Posted by: Amie | July 22, 2009 at 10:47 AM
Beautiful. I would have never guessed this was taken so close to home (Minneapolis).
Posted by: Weston | July 22, 2009 at 02:41 PM