People can do Amazing Things – Homemade Aerial Photography

The Louisiana Bucket Brigade arrived on Dauphin Island Sunday afternoon to do some aerial photography. Beginning at noon on one of the hottest days of the year, MarikoToyoji, Shannon Dosemagen, and Raphael Bachal went straight to work. Rather than using a plane or satellite to obtain their pictures, the Louisiana Bucket Brigade uses inexpensive techniques developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology that employ kites and helium balloons. On Sunday the winds were calm, so a helium balloon was used to carry the camera 700 feet up. With the camera automatically snapping pictures every ten seconds, we walked along the beach obtaining numerous photos of the area.

People power

People power - MarikoToyoji, Shannon Dosemagen, and Raphael Bachal get ready to create high quality aerial maps, photographed August 1, 2010.

Mariko Toyoji getting the camera aloft - up, up, and away!

Mariko Toyoji getting the camera aloft - up, up, and away! Photographed August 1, 2010.

Later this week, using free software, the photos will be stitched together to create high quality aerial maps. When completed the maps will be uploaded to GrassrootsMapping.org where they will be publicly available.


The Louisiana Bucket Brigade works to enable coastal communities to make scientific measurements of their local environment. The work of the Louisiana Bucket Brigade currently includes an oil spill crisis map, “fenceline” community networks, community air sampling, and sustainability in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

Bay Jimmy aerial map

Bay Jimmy aerial map - a low resolution image (see http://www.flickr.com/photos/labucketbrigade/4845375332/ for high resolution map link).

August 2, 2010 · Leo Denton · 2 Comments
Tags: ,  · Posted in: Community, Sustainability

2 Responses

  1. Nevada Schmelter - April 24, 2011

    Greetings! Very helpful advice on this article! It is the little changes that make the biggest changes. Thanks a lot for sharing!

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  2. Andrea - May 16, 2011

    What camera did you all use? and how was it attached to the balloon?

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