Day 10 – Cameras & Filming Plan
“Filming a Sailing Course Without Falling Overboard”
This is, I suspect, going to be harder than the sailing.
Because it turns out:
Sailing with cameras is one thing
Sailing while filming properly is something else entirely
And ideally:
I would like to return with footage… and still be onboard.
The Plan (In Theory…)
The goal is to document the whole experience:
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Learning as a Royal Yachting Association Competent Crew
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Life onboard
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The mistakes (there will be many)
All while:
Not dropping expensive equipment into the Adriatic Sea
The Camera Setup
360 Cameras (The “point and hope” method)
These are my favourites on a boat:
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Capture everything
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No need to aim (very helpful when you’re busy not falling over)
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Great for action shots
Downside:
They also capture everything… including mistakes
Olympus Tough (The survivor)
My trusty Olympus Tough TG-6:
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Waterproof ✔
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Drop-proof ✔
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Sailor-proof (hopefully) ✔
This is the camera I can hand to anyone and say:
“Just press that button”
The Backup System (Because things go wrong)
Every day:
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Dump footage to a hard drive
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Possibly a second backup (if I’m being sensible)
Because losing footage is:
Worse than getting wet
Almost worse than falling in
Cross-Filming Plan
This is where it gets interesting.
We have:
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Two boats
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Two filming teams (Steve doesn't know tjhis yet)
- Often the Sunsail Instructors also film
I’ll be filming the catamaran, my wife will be filming me
Steve will be filming us on the yacht
Which means:
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External shots ✔
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Different perspectives ✔
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Much better storytelling ✔
Assuming, of course:
We don’t both miss the shot at the same time
Final Thought
The aim is simple:
Capture the experience
Tell the story
Stay dry (optional)
What could possibly go wrong?