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#2 |
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Major Player
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Boca Raton, FL
Posts: 635
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I enjoyed this ... nice clean audio ... that was all handheld? jeepers ... It's clear you were busy manuevering in a crowded space. One time I thought for sure you had to be on an outrigger or something but I guess that wide angle made the difference between onboard and overboard ... LOL
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#3 |
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Trustee
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Honolulu, HI
Posts: 1,385
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Hi Les... Yes, that's 100% handheld. With single-camera coverage, and on something as unstable as a boat, there's very little chance of using a tripod or even a monopod. Even the basic EX1 with a shoulder mount can be cumbersome on some boats.
The hardest part is that both hands are needed to operate a camera, and that means there's no holding onto something to keep me from falling over. A good sense of balance helps, I guess!
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Dean Sensui Exec Producer, Hawaii Goes Fishing |
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#4 |
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Regular Crew
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Wash. DC area
Posts: 145
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Great Job, Dean!
The clean audio really helped tell the story. Impressed there was no wind noise. Very steady hand held camera work considering the tight quarters. Laughed when the woman caught the largest salmon and someone groused "woman's luck". You really have this One Man Band thing down. Thanks for sharing. chris |
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#5 |
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Major Player
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: France
Posts: 537
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double post
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www.gwenllyn.com |
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#6 |
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Major Player
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: France
Posts: 537
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Hi Dean,
Must say I enjoyed that, really nice atmosphere and fantastic scenery, the joy the lady showed in catching such lovely fish was great... captured the fun, pleasure and essense of fishing... Nice quality off the EX1.. sure can see the difference to my Z1, (I'm certainly going to be looking at the EX1R as my next camera). I've been doing a different type of fishing video ... so your tech spec for audio in particular is of real interest as I'm always struggling as a one man band to get good audio off multiple anglers, when I can't have a sound guy with me. Do you have a website with any more stuff??? Regards Gareth here the last clip I shot on fishing in France: vimeo.com/7112871
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www.gwenllyn.com Last edited by Gareth Watkins; October 29th, 2009 at 11:53 AM. Reason: double post |
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#7 |
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Trustee
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Honolulu, HI
Posts: 1,385
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Chris...
Having everyone on a discrete audio channel helps in post. In the original rough mix, Wayne's "women's luck" comment is missed in the melee of voices. But I'm able to isolate it much better during the mixdown. I built the setup recently and only started using it in the last few months. Wish I had it long ago. Gareth... That's a very high quality production. You took great advantage of the scenery and handled the exposure as I would: maintain highlight detail. The foggy shots are quite artistic, good enough for a calendar. And you're using two cameras? Sure looks like it. Interesting rigs they're using. The rods are very slender and seem mismatched with such large spinners but they are bringing in some very large fish. And they take great care to minimize stressing the fish. I haven't seen fish handled this gently by fishermen. The fish here tend to thrash a lot, despite anglers trying to be as delicate as possible. The rigs there are so different from the rigs used for "ulua" or great travelys here. Large cow bells take the place of the electronic alarms. The rods are about 15 feet long and very stiff. Lead weights are often a half-pound with anchor wires extending out one end to lock them into the reef. And everything is staked into the rock with heavy hammers. Baits can be whole fish large enough to pan fry for dinner. I don't have any other clips on the website yet, except for a 30-second promo for next week's show. Now that I have Flash sorted out I'm considering putting up material there. Until now I only did Quicktime H.264 which limited it to Macs, as well as PCs that had Quicktime installed. Aloha,
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Dean Sensui Exec Producer, Hawaii Goes Fishing |
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#8 |
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Major Player
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: France
Posts: 537
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Hi Dean,
Nope all shot on one camera... I was lucky with the weather and the fish caught... I don't think I've ever seen so many big carp landed in such a short time... The rods are slim but tough.. similar to surf castign rods for sea
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www.gwenllyn.com |
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#9 |
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Major Player
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: El Paso, TX
Posts: 323
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Hi Dean,
Thanks for sharing this! Great fishing footage (and really happy folks catching salmon :). Alaska certainly is a contrast to Hawaii. I've been on a short family vacation to Kauai but sadly didn't get the chance to go fishing; maybe next time. Awesome handheld work; good balance indeed! Does the Alaskan lodge have a website? Real curious now about their rates... |
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#10 |
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Major Player
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: France
Posts: 537
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Hi Dean,
Nope all shot on one camera, the trusty ol' Z1..I used ND grads and polarizer to get good exposure in the scenics... I was lucky with the weather and the fish caught... I don't think I've ever seen so many big carp landed in such a short time... The rods are slim but tough carbon fibre.. similar to surf casting rods for sea bass...they can cast upto 8oz - 12oz... They don't use lures but baits... balls of boilied paste known as "boilies"... what looks like a spinner is probably the lead.. We fish with a static bottom bait and add ground bait over the top...(equivilant of chumming in sea fishing). For food we go and get a steak and a bottle of local wine... carp are not good eating, and in any case, local "no kill" rules apart, they are massive 30lb - 50lb and once you've caught a few.. what would you do with them??? hence the care taken for catch and release.... Cheers Gareth
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www.gwenllyn.com |
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#11 |
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Trustee
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Honolulu, HI
Posts: 1,385
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Jeff...
The lodges are Shelter Lodge and Anchor Point Lodge. You can check out both at: Alaska Reel Adventures Gareth... By "spinners" I meant the reels. Spinning reels, as opposed to conventionals. Those graphites are nice. There's a lot more catch-and-release here lately. In fact a state-run tagging program for certain fish have logged thousands of specimens by thousands of fishermen, and their re-capture have opened an intriguing window on their behavior.
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Dean Sensui Exec Producer, Hawaii Goes Fishing |
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#12 |
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Major Player
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: France
Posts: 537
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hi Dean,
Ok I didn't realise you were referring to the reels... they are pretty big Shimano's that I imagine were intended for light shore and boat fishing so they can take the punishment. I have some slightly older models and have landed catfish over 100lb on them. Funny you should mention the change in behaviour through catch and release, carp in particular become very hard to tempt once they have been cuahg a few times... cheers Gareth
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www.gwenllyn.com |
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#13 |
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Trustee
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Honolulu, HI
Posts: 1,385
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Gareth...
Yep, people don't realize that fish are smart and can be trained. In this case, they're being trained that munching on anything attached to a line means being abducted by aliens and having bright lights flashed in their eyes. It's also the reason why it's very hard to overfish an area with just rods and reels. Many sport fishermen feel that fisheries everywhere would be a lot better off if nets and traps were outlawed. Of course that will adversely affect the price of fish. But we all need to face the reality that the resource is finite.
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Dean Sensui Exec Producer, Hawaii Goes Fishing |
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#14 |
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Regular Crew
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Vancouver, B.C. Canada
Posts: 79
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Nice clean work Dean. Do you shoot in 30 or 24P?
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#15 |
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Trustee
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Honolulu, HI
Posts: 1,385
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Hi Brian...
Thanks! It's all in 1080p30. TV here is 30 fps so I shoot to match that frame rate. No sense using a lower frame rate and having to worry about temporal problems.
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Dean Sensui Exec Producer, Hawaii Goes Fishing |
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