2. Keep your batteries warm. Your camera will work fine in very cold temperatures as long as it has functioning batteries. The cold can quickly zap the energy out of any battery, but warming them up can restore much of their power. If I’m taking extended exposures where I can’t afford to have my camera quit such as photographing northern lights, I use a rubber band and attach a chemical hand warmer to the battery compartment. Otherwise I keep extra batteries in a pocket inside my jacket where I can keep them warm. Sometime I put a chemical hand warmer in that pocket to speed up the process. I then rotate the batteries between my camera and my warm pocket.
3. Warm your camera slowly when you return home or in your car. If you walk into the house with a cold camera, it will instantly become covered with condensation. Anyone who has worn glasses in the winter will know exactly what I’m talking about. Some photographers will put their camera gear in zip lock bags and that works fine. I just leave my gear in the camera bag and make sure I don’t open the bag for an hour of two. The camera bag seems to be adequate for avoiding condensation. Be sure to remove film or cards from your camera before you bring it inside so you won’t be tempted to open your bag prematurely.
4. Keep your car cold. This is a tip you will rarely read, but I think it is a good one. Having a cold car will prevent any condensation on your camera as you come and go while shooting. This is really helpful when you are in and out of your car a lot, like when you are driving around chasing northern lights. I have found that if I’m already dressed for the cold, like you need to be while driving a cold car, that I’m more likely to stop and explore photo opportunities. If I have to stop and put on jackets, boots and gloves, I’m more likely to convince myself it really isn’t a good photo opp.
5. Watch your breath. I’m not talking bad breath, but you should watch that too
6. Keep your tripod legs together in snow. If you push your tripod into the snow with the legs sprayed, you can easily damage them. I start with the legs just slightly apart, and then I will push the tripod into the snow which slowly spreads the legs as the tripod sinks further into the snow. Having the legs spreed as the tripod sinks helps keep it a little more stable as well.
7. Use chemical hand warmers. These are one of the best inventions. As a kid, I used to use hand warmers powered by lighter fluid – they were really a pain. Today’s chemical hand warmers are easy to use, they start warming the instant you open the package, and can last 6 to 8 hours. Warm gloves are also important, but gloves alone are not enough. The problem with photography is it seems you are always taking your hands out of your gloves to change cards / film or something. Once your hands are cold, gloves can’t rewarm them. It is kind of like a well insulated Thermos that keeps warm things warm and cold things cold – gloves work the same way. So for gloves to work with cold hands, you need a heat source, and that is where the hand warmers come into play. I keep one stuffed in each glove or mitten, and this way my gloves are always warm and toasty when I go to put them back on.
Some of the most unique photo opportunities are during winter, don’t let the cold keep you inside!
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