Under the black bowl of an Alberta night, Moraine Lake becomes a theater for the sky. This astro workshop runs from Banff National Park’s Moraine Lake in Alberta, Canada, and guides photographers and stargazers to the Valley of the Ten Peaks for concentrated night-sky instruction and guided viewing. The lake’s glacier-fed turquoise surface, framed by jagged sedimentary cliffs and the distinctive scree of the Ten Peaks, reflects constellations while the Milky Way threads overhead—on rare, strong geomagnetic nights you may even glimpse the aurora borealis.
The experience matures as a small-group, five-hour outing with pickup and drop-off at Banff, Lake Louise or Canmore accommodations. Guides fluent in English and French lead groups of up to 12 people. The itinerary centers on the classic Rockpile and lakeshore viewpoints where the ten summits form a stone amphitheater. Guides cover night-photography basics—composition, long exposures, manual focus—and practical safety in alpine darkness. This trip is suitable for all fitness levels; most of the activity is short walks and positioning on stable moraine boulders.
What makes this workshop special is the collision of place and sky. Moraine Lake’s glacial silicate sediment gives water that rare, intense blue that doubles the intensity of star reflections. The surrounding peaks are layers of Paleozoic sedimentary rock—limestone and shale—that throw up crisp silhouettes against the Milky Way. Historically, the Valley of the Ten Peaks has been a landmark in Banff since park creation in 1885, and the site remains among the park’s most protected light-sky assets.
Practical notes: once you receive your exact pickup time, arrive ten minutes early. The small group size means individualized attention for camera settings and composition feedback. Dress for alpine night temperatures, bring a headlamp with a red filter, and carry warm layers and insulated footwear for standing on cold rocks. The operator asks guests to respect quiet nights for wildlife and to avoid flash when possible to preserve dark-sky conditions.
For photographers and non-photographers alike, this workshop turns a famous daytime vista into a nocturnal landscape—one where the Ten Peaks read as a black serrated horizon and Moraine Lake acts like a polished mirror. Whether chasing the Milky Way, practicing manual exposures, or hoping for an auroral streak, this guided night on Moraine’s Rockpile is an intimate way to experience Banff’s high alpine under the stars.
Expect hands-on coaching in settings like aperture, ISO, shutter-speed, plus composition cues to maximize star reflection on the lake; guides often demonstrate focus stacking and single-exposure techniques so you leave with usable frames. The five-hour window balances driving time, setup, and shoot time; because group transit covers remote parking closures, the operator manages permits and park rules so guests can focus on making images without hassle.