Ed, I purchased the Canon HV-20 which won numerous awards in '07 for a 
"consumer camcorder". It records in full high def: 1920x1080 resolution at 60 
frames per second. Unfortunately, by the time you get it on any online video 
site, it degrades considerably. The originals do look much better. It comes 
with a built in 10X zoom but I found a wide angle lens is necessary for forest 
work- so I got a very wide angle adaptor- comparable to a 20mm lens on a 35 mm 
camera. You get a little "barrel distortion" along the edges which is 
noticeable if filming buildings and telephone poles, but barely noticeable 
filming trees as we all know few trees are straight. I also bought a very nice 
"shotgun microphone" which mounts on top of the camcorder. I still need to buy 
a good mic which I can plug into my PC for voice overlays. I'll probably add a 
version to YouTube- but that site can't show high definition- whereas Vimeo can 
show the lesser version of high def which is 720p (1280x720 res.). YouTube can 
only do 640x480. Sticking with Vimeo I'll lose some people with telephone 
connections but even YouTube sometimes downloads very slow. At least with 
Vimeo, if it's downloading slow and you click on the pause button it will 
continue to download- after much of it downloads, click on the pause button 
again- and click on the full screen mode. The result is 720p, but not as good 
as the original 720p which I uploaded since Vimeo like all web sites will 
greatly compress the files.

I have a very nice Manfrotto tripod designed for outdoor work- and recently 
topped it off with a "fluid video head".

I should get a wireless mike but after last year's negative income and this 
years slightly above zero income (did someone say we might have a Depression?)- 
I'm already maxed out with spending money on such luxuries. I only did it with 
the camcorder as I feel an urgent need to "speak truth to power"- that is, 
confront the absurd propaganda of the forestry establishment with video truth.

Since these are my first attempts at video- I have a lot to learn. My next 
projects will include filming good forestry and high grading. I'll start with 
some footage of colleague Mike Leonard, one of the most conscientious foresters 
in Mass. I don't mind at all filming a competitor! I also plan on filming 
Michelle Wilson, a consultant from Conway who said she's interested. I'll show 
these foresters at work- and good logging crews.

I also intend to film more of the lousy work on state land- such as the debacle 
at Robinson State Park.

I should also go to Mt. Tom to film Bob Leverett doing his favorite thing- 
measuring trees! Just let me know Bob when you want to do this. <G>

By the way, for those of you interested in getting into video- you had better 
have a vast amount of time on your hands. These modern camcorders are very 
complex and you need a high end computer for editing and good editing software 
which I don't yet have- I'm using MS Movie Maker which comes with the Vista OS. 
It's OK as training wheels.

Joe

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Edward Frank 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2008 11:38 AM
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: video on uneven vs even aged silviculture


  Joe,

  I added a link to your new vireo on Vimeo on the Joe Zorzin Channel page of 
the ENTS website.  I would encourage you to post a version of the video to You 
Tube also as that site receives many more viewings than does Vimeo.  What kind 
of video camera did you end up getting?  Do you have ay accessories like a 
wireless mike to go with it?

  Ed 

  "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both. "
  Robert Frost (1874-1963). Mountain Interval. 1920. 
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Joseph Zorzin 
    To: ENTS 
    Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2008 10:45 AM
    Subject: [ENTS] video on uneven vs even aged silviculture


    How interesting that the boom in clearcutting on state land coincides with 
subsidies available for private owners to clearcut- both practices supposedly 
to enhance biodiversity and wildlife- just when the state wants to increase 
biomass production. How convenient! We will soon see far more clearcutting on 
private land if not state land (due to increasing public resistance). I 
recently talked to a procurement forester from the "far north" who said that up 
there in a few years there will be far less lumber being sawn- partly because 
the forests up there are wasted- and partly because the industry is learning 
how to make products from raw fiber, along with the increased market for pulp 
and wood energy. The industry in southern New England is on the ropes, dying 
fast- the ones that want to survive will join this "sea change"- they'll high 
grade what they can (sending logs north), clearcut the rest and claim it's all 
wonderful ecoforestry. The entire forestry establishment at all levels are 
pushing this change.

    What would make far more sense would be to use the new demand for pulp and 
wood energy to thin the forests intelligently based on great silviculture. It 
would help if the forestry establishment discouraged clearcutting! Any help 
given to the wood industry should be based on that industry thinning the 
forests, not clearcutting them. Huge grants have been given to some firms for 
biomass projects- firms with reputations for high grading! Go figure.

    Thinning the forests is far superior- resulting in removing low grade wood 
while enhancing future high value timber- in the interest of the forest owner, 
the profitability of the wood industry, creative work for licensed foresters 
and a far better forest ecosystem.

    I've uploaded my second video showing the difference between thinning 
forests and massacring them. It's all a bit ironic- one would think that the 
reality would be about private land being slaughtered while the state shows how 
to do it correctly, conservatively, ecologically intelligent, without damage to 
recreational and aesthetic values of OUR state forests- but alas.

    These videos are in high definition, what's known as 720p. If they stop 
frequently while trying to download- just click on the button in the lower left 
corner which will pause it- but it will continue to download- then click on the 
play button again. Also, in the lower right corner of the window is a button to 
click for "full screen".

    Go to: http://vimeo.com/2090043

    (my first video is at: http://vimeo.com/1993866)

    Joe
    


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