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Wake Up on your Cruise before Sunrise to Snap your Best Photos

Independence of the Seas deck 12 at sunrise in the Caribbean after the rain

Some of the prime photo opportunities on a cruise happen while everyone else is sleeping. Here are 5 reasons to wake up early.

Why would anyone intentionally get up early on a cruise? It’s dark out, everything is closed, and nothing is seemingly happening onboard. You should probably catch up on your z’s and sleep in along with the other thousands of guests. But you’d be missing the opportunity greet the dawn’s light.

And that’s exactly what I did each morning on our Royal Caribbean cruise to Nassau out of Miami on the Independence of the Seas. It’s totally worth it for five big reasons.

#1
Your Moment of Zen
As the sky glows orange and the sun prepares for its entrance shortly after 5:30am, it’s just you and maybe a couple dozen other people on the massive deck. There are no crowds or music. No splashing or lines of people.

It’s just you, the vessel, the vast ocean and the refreshing breeze that centers you in this stunning ‘waterworld.’ It’s such an amazing feeling. You’ve effectively got the entire deck to yourself.

Sure, you can take some great pictures, but it’s much more than that.

#2
Perfect View of the Sunrise
So, the wind blows. If you’re like me, you’ve got your cup of Joe with you. And then the sky comes to life. And if you’ve got some cloud action, you’re really in for a treat. It’s absolutely time to take out your phone or camera and start snapping away!
View of sunrise from the Independence of the SeasGolden Caribbean sunrise from the Independence of the Seas

But capturing a great sunrise is just the beginning.

#3
It’s Also About your Ship
So, you’d be missing half the story if you just snapped a few shots of the sunrise. Your cruise is not only about the sunrise. It’s about where you are in that moment of the sunrise and revealing your larger location.
It’s all about your gigantic ship. That’s really the visual story here. It’s incredible, right? So, include it in your shots and show your vessel!
Independence of the Seas deck 12 at sunrise in the Caribbean
#4

Docking at Dawn
On the first two mornings, our ship’s itinerary got us to our Caribbean islands as the morning sun appeared. For me, entering port is its own photo opportunity. Docking as the sun rises makes it especially magical.
Independence of the Seas docks in NassauHere, we’re docking in Nassau.

Vision of the Seas at sunrise docked at CocoCayAs we docked at CocoCay, I was fortunate that Royal Caribbean’s smaller Vision of the Seas was already there, perfectly positioned for my sunrise photo.

#5
Sunrise Silhouettes
There’s also the opportunity to captures cool silhouettes of the few folks who have also journeyed on deck to greet the sunrise. So, now you’ve got the sunrise, your ship and a little humanity to pull it all together. That composition will make for a great photo.
Woman in silhouette watches sunrise from Independence of the Seas aftMan in silhouette watches sunrise from Independence of the SeasWoman in silhouette on Independence of the SeasWoman in silhouette watches sunrise on Independence of the SeasWoman and man watch sunrise from the Independence of the Seas

Don’t Sleep In
Yes, if you don’t get up early on your cruise, you’ll miss some of your best photo opportunities for the entire day. I also discovered it’s one of the top ways to experience drinking your first cup of coffee in the morning.
Cup of coffee on Independence of the Seas near MiamiHere, we’ve returned to Miami to (sadly) end our cruise, but my joy continues.

So, don’t forget to set your wake-up alarm early, and I assure you…
You won’t regret it.

Timelapses from our Royal Caribbean Cruise to CocoCay and Nassau

Independence of the Seas and Vision of the Seas docked at CocoCay

I snapped this moment right before my timelapse that captured the Independence of the Seas’ departure from CocoCay during my family’s Caribbean cruise vacation. Below is the full video along with my other timelapses and the challenges I faced creating them.

My family and I have returned from a fun, four-night cruise on Royal Caribbean’s Independence of the Seas. Our itinerary took us out of Miami, spending the first full day at CocoCay and then another at Nassau. The next day, we were on the water, returning to Florida. And then back in Miami on the final morning.

We had a fabulous time, and I’ll be writing more about it and sharing photos in my posts to come.

If you’ve watched some of my timelapse photography in previous blogs posts, you might assume I would try capturing a few timelapse videos during our cruise. And you’d be correct. I brought along my DJI Osmo Pocket 3 gimbal camera and a Joby GorillaPod for the job.

I didn’t have a plan going in, but it quickly became clear what I needed to do.

Don’t Forget to Include your Ship in your Timelapse
I decided that cruise ship timelapses are optimized when they show your vessel moving through the water as it arrives at port or departs. Just capturing a timelapse at sea isn’t as visually dynamic (though if there’s good cloud action, that dance can be really interesting).

Ideally you should simultaneously see the hull of the ship, the water and the port in your framing. The boat anchors the whole shot (and the rest of the imagery moves).

But it’s hard to frame it all in, because that means having to somehow position your camera a foot or so beyond the hull of the ship.

Sure, it’s simple to stretch your arm out to capture a quick photo (don’t drop your phone). But it’s a different story when you need to use a tripod to steady an extended timelapse. Where are you supposed to place it?

Grip the Railing in the Right Place
The trick is to first do a walk around and review the top deck’s railing design. If you’re lucky, you’ll find a part that extends out a bit next to a low-enough glass barrier. (Shooting through glass doesn’t work.)

I found the railing around the Independence of the Seas’ main top deck (12) was not a perfectly oblong design. It did, in fact, jut out in a few places. I found a great spot by the aft, starboard side.

Joby GorillaPod and DJI Osmo Pocket 3 on cruise ship Independence of the SeasMy GorillaPod gripped the railing there for one of my timelapses. Then, I attached the vertical Osmo Pocket, which enabled the Osmo to barely peek over the glass barrier.

My rig held together as it captured this timelapse which showed our arrival at the Nassau Cruise Port.

Find a Flat Surface for your Tripod
I also discovered that a section of Deck 12’s railing ran by two flat metal surfaces located towards the bow of the ship. These were the foundations for the two circular glass roofs covering the Solarium whirlpools a deck below.

Each provided a perfectly flat surface for my GorillaPod and Osmo Pocket 3.
DJI Osmo Pocket 3 records timelapse from cruise ship Independence of the Seas.So, when I positioned my Joby and gimbal an arm’s length out from the railing, it offered me the ideal perspective (as if my camera was hovering next to the ship).

Here’s my timelapse leaving CocoCay from that vantage point…
It really helped having another ship (Royal Caribbean’s Vision of the Seas) docked there to provide additional visual context.

This next timelapse utilized the gimbal’s pan function, showing the view while we were docked in Nassau. (That’s the Disney Wish cruise ship in the shot.)

And here’s our departure from Nassau.
(I added a ‘Gaussian Blur’ on the left section in post to mask a couple of travelers who unknowingly walked into my shot.)

Safety Concerns
I ran these timelapses for up to 30 minutes Each frame was recorded at two second intervals. (I sped up some of my timelapses in post). That’s plenty of time to allow for Murphy’s Law to come into play. For the record, this little vacation hobby of mine was a great way to destroy or lose my gear.

There was a constant wind blowing throughout these timelapses. Gripping the railing with my GorillaPod was an unproven strategy under these conditions. Plus, standing my little tripod all on its own outside the railing on the Solarium roof offered no anchor solution (other than my hand nervously holding onto one of the legs).

A lot can happen with no net.

Tempting Fate for Creative Pursuit
My Osmo Pocket 3 could have easily blown over. A big gust of wind would have carried it overboard and into the drink. (I’m sure this would not have been the first time a camera or a smartphone fell into the ocean during a cruise.)

Happily, none of this happened, and my gear survived.

I’m not sure what it says about me that I put my camera at risk like this. I could say I took a ‘calculated’ risk. But that doesn’t change the variables. I think I just wanted the shot, and I felt compelled to try. Perhaps it simply comes from the creative fire that stirs in me and many of us.

So, should you also choose to try something like this, good luck and be forewarned.

And you might want to consider bringing along a roll of duct tape with you… that couldn’t hurt.

Don’t Forget the Basics for a Relaxing Vacation
Beyond the creative achievement and risks to create my timelapses, this simple exercise served another important purpose.

I had to slow down a few times to focus on this singular activity during our cruise, which offered a thousand other possible distractions. These half-hour immersions helped to focus me on the real star of the show… our majestic ship and its own journey. Strangely, this headline is easy to miss.

Some people hang at the pool all day to unwind. I apparently like to shoot risky timelapse videos to recharge.

All that matters is you travel your own path to relaxation… and satisfaction.

How Found Memories from Forgotten Media Can Affect your Own Story

Today’s tech easily enables you to meet your younger self through countless photo and video moments, many of which you may have forgotten about. How does that awareness change your personal history, and what are you supposed to do with all your media files in the decades to come?

What would it be like to time travel and experience your younger self? This is not an impossible dream. Today, we all leave multimedia breadcrumbs for our future selves. Our thousands of user-generated photos and videos is the resulting digital wake in the virtual ocean of our lives.

Your past will always be there for you to see and hear. It’s never further away than your smartphone’s media library.

This clear view into so many moments from your own history will likely anchor many of your memories that would have otherwise evaporated or organically shifted across time.

Is that a good thing? Well, it certainly isn’t ‘natural.’ Our minds aren’t built to maintain a photographic memory.

But thanks to digital tech and cloud storage, we now effectively have that superpower.

It didn’t always used to be so easy.

Digitizing my Parents’ Photo Albums
I grew up straddling the technology transition between analog and digital. When I was a kid, it was all analog. Today, trying to access any of my family’s 20th remaining century media is almost impossible.
Thankfully, our collection of physical photos, including this college graduation photo with me and my parents, is an exception. (A pile of disorganized photos in a lost shoe box in the back of a closet can serve as a great time machine.)

Of course, old photo prints are easy to scan and convert over to digital duplicates.

For the past couple of years since my father passed away, I’ve been digitizing parts of his old photo collection, which includes some of my grandfather’s pictures. (This multi-generational project has been complex and time consuming. So, I’ve been chipping away at it.)
Yes, that’s baby Barrett with my dad and grandfather in Central Park.

When I brought home all my dad’s photos, they included albums that my mother had originally curated. And those collections contained my own history from birth through college.

Yes, I knew these albums existed, but I had never taken the time to digitize most of the photos. I figured I could do it ‘next time.’ But my mom passed in 2006 and then my father in 2022.

So now I’m finally dealing with it.
I’ve realized there is no next time. No next time to save this cool photo of my mom and me. If I put these pictures in boxes on a basement shelf, that will likely be their final resting place.

Or perhaps they’d be uncovered by ‘Lester: The Next Generation.’
And I absolutely don’t want that for our son.

The good news is every photo doesn’t need to be converted. It’s just the ones that help fill out the story I’m curating for my family’s history… as well as my own. What was important then, may no longer have relevance.

So, you have to put a critical eye to what’s digitized and what gets discarded.

Finding Forgotten Audio Moments from the Past
An old photo can tell you a lot. But it can’t compare to experiencing a piece of old audio or video. Now, that can really bring the past to life.

While going through my father’s things, I uncovered an audio cassette tape my parents had recorded when I was in high school to document their vacation to Turkey and Greece. (I was away at boarding school.) These recordings were designed to accompany the photos my dad had shot (and displayed on his massive slide projector).

I don’t know that I ever listened to this tape. Of course, I wondered what it contained.

So, I pulled out an ancient cassette player I had stashed in our basement and my long-retired MacBook Pro with an analog input. I tethered them together with an audio cable with mini connectors and completed my popup sound conversion station.

I crossed my fingers, and happily, my Macgyvered solution worked. And as I clicked on ‘play’ and the still-functioning cassette began to turn, I heard my parents’ voices as they went through their travel log. It was as if I were sitting right there with them again at our dining room table. It was remarkable.

I successfully digitized my parents’ conversation… and I felt a bit like Doctor Frankenstein.

Hearing Myself as a Kid Again
As I celebrated my time machine, I knew this tenuous technical tether to my past wouldn’t hold. (Either my cassette player or ancient Mac would conk out.) I knew I had other deteriorating cassette tapes representing early Barrett history in our basement. They contained nothing earth shattering, but I had felt their mere existence with my younger voice was worth holding onto. (Yes, I know my logic is debatable.)

I started generating audio recordings when I was a kid. It all began when my mom bought me a Sound Design cassette recorder when I was seven years old. That gift was life changing. And it put me on a path that eventually led to my career in video production.

So, I finally saved my old audio recordings from oblivion.

I listened to myself as a silly kid. I heard my teen self in high school, and then college. I even had audio as a young adult.

Whoa. Hearing myself throughout these decades was a huge head trip.

Facing your Younger Self
We know that life experience affects us all.

I’ve always thought of myself as essentially the same person across my life. And I believe that largely holds true, but each version of Barrett I listened to was slightly different. And I’m not just talking about age. There were subtle differences that only I would be able to pick up on.

My phrasing. My energy. My attitude. Yes, of course, we change over time, and I was witnessing this firsthand through my popup time machine.

I felt like I was listening to multiple Barretts from different multiverses. Many of the moments I heard I don’t even remember. (It was all a bit freaky.)

Do You Want to Remember Everything?
Which leads me back to the slingshot effect your archival media can have on your brain. For better or worse, your memories will get jolted with an instant upgrade. It certainly happened to me.

So, if you uncover and revive long lost audio and video files from your past, you should proceed understanding that you may not find what you remember. That should be a good thing. But you never know…

As we all travel into the future, we will remain tethered to countless digital memories and moments from our past. It’s all there. Nothing to forget.

But it’s really too much to remember, and why would you want to?

Sure, the many access points to your past via your ever-expanding media library have some value for occasional reference.

And experiencing a deep-dive ‘review’ like I did helps to offer perspective and center yourself.

Anchor your Memories that Matter Most
Otherwise, the opportunity is not to swim in a sea of disorganized digital memories. Instead, it’s to mindfully select which pieces belong in your story and then put them in their rightful place as you travel through life.

It’s just like building any valuable album of memories, which is to anchor the ones that really matter.

The trick is not to wait for years or longer to do this. You are the author of your own story. And you can best curate it as you experience it.

Actively Curate your Own Story
Imagine being able to reference all the personal media highlights from your past. Consider how many of the smaller moments are the sweetest ones. Think about how many might have been lost if you didn’t curate them along the way.

This takes a lifetime of ongoing attention and some work. But it’s your story.

Yes, it can feel overwhelming. But doing a little at a time will help.

And it’s never too late to get started.