Fill your memory cards
Normally, I preach “shoot with intention” as a way of slowing folks down, and this includes my own inner dialogue. “Shoot with intention, Kenton,” I whisper to myself as I’m sizing things up behind the lens, using the mantra as a way to make sure everything I do is for a reason. This helps with getting the exposure correct, deciding on a filter, composition, to help eliminate distractions and other errors, and even help with creativity. This slows down the number of clicks, too, and thus the number of images to look at when I am back at home on the computer (I’d rather look through 100 images than 1,000). This being said, when you’re operating under extremely windy conditions, it might benefit to take maybe like four or five times as many frames as normal, just to give you a puncher’s chance at having a few that are sharp.
Try faster shutter speeds
I know what you’re thinking: we’re photographing during low-light at blue hour, golden hour, and then sunrise. How can I increase my shutter speed and still get a well-exposed image? As landscape photographers, we are often told to always keep your ISO at its base number. This is ISO 100 for most (some cameras go lower). Although it’s true we want to keep our ISO as low as possible so as to not introduce ‘noise,’ it can be helpful and sometimes necessary (astro/handholding), to increase that ISO a bit. A sharp photo at ISO 400 is more useful, in my mind than a blurry photo because I was too stubborn to bump my ISO.