Travis wrote:For some reason I never noticed this post before, Great video. Very well done.
Thank you.
Last week I experimented with a couple of shotgun slings (I make shotgun parts) so that I could carry the camera on its monopod hands-free. A single-point sling was convenient but the camera and monopod bounced and moved around too much while walking, so I rigged up what we call a two-point or carry sling. That seems to work well, at the cost of biting into my neck. I'd like to take it up with me to wherever I am going this weekend.
Did you notice if Ye Old Tavern campsite still had wood burning stoves for fires? I heard they were removed,
I'm pretty sure I saw them there, but now you have me doubting my memory. In any case, even if they are there I am sure that most of the year there would be restrictions against building fires, unless the drought is really over.
If you are trying to fit your video in under 5 minutes in order to post on Youtube, you may want to check out Google Video, they have no limits on file size nor time. That is what I typically end up using myself. They are free also.
Thanks. I might look into that, but aside from file size the main reason I want to keep the videos to five minutes is I have noticed that's about the longest most people are interested in sitting through one. In fact, it's maybe a little longer than optimal.
The YouTube limit is ten minutes or 100 MBytes. I have one ten minute video up, and in retrospect you
really have to be interested in the subject matter to sit through all ten minutes. I have also run up against the 100 MByte limit with much shorter videos (in .WMV format), if there is a lot of panning in the videos. Heavy panning or other scene changes limits the compression you can get compared to, at the other extreme, a video of a talking head where the background never changes.
Watching other folks' videos, I am constantly amazed how so many of them are able to tell a good story within something like three minutes or so. I have such a hard time paring my footage down. I need to keep practicing to get a better feel for what to cut and how to cut.