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Old 24-03-08, 05:11 PM
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e14724 e14724 is offline
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e14724 is a scuba diver - cold watere14724 is a scuba diver - cold watere14724 is a scuba diver - cold watere14724 is a scuba diver - cold watere14724 is a scuba diver - cold watere14724 is a scuba diver - cold watere14724 is a scuba diver - cold watere14724 is a scuba diver - cold watere14724 is a scuba diver - cold watere14724 is a scuba diver - cold watere14724 is a scuba diver - cold water
Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Boy
Rather than follow fish by swimming after them, settle yourself down on the gravel, get negative by dumping everything, let the fish adapt to your presence, then start filming. heavier housings [like your own] are steadier in the water, so it's really a matter of getting used to it. sometimes diving on your own [putting the blinkered attitude of solo diving to one side for the moment] is a better option to chasing after other divers. you get to think about the shot first and better able to concentrate on the job. there comes a point when you have to ask yourself, are you diving to record the dive casually or are you diving with the sole purpose to film. you can't do both.
That is a good point, ive been doing a bit of research and that seems to be the theme. That particular dive i had no buddy and just followed the two guys i met on the day, and it shows. It would be nice to arrange a dive with the specific purpose of filming, but as you said it would be better alone or with a buddy who is involved in the filming process.
Thanks for the advise
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