Barry,

I watched both videos, very good.  I even watched your short Velvet Ant video 
the other day.  It is an interesting style in these videos.  You walk around 
and provide a continuous narration for the duration of the video without 
stopping.  There are pros and cons to various styles and this one has merit.  I 
remember working for the Bureau of Mining.  We would dictate our reports 
through an audio system and then it would be typed up as spoken.  it too some 
practice, but after while the reports could be pretty well sent out as 
dictated.  I would think it would take awhile to develop your continuous shot 
and narration technique.  You are also shooting specifically for YouTube 
watching your ten minute limits as you work.

There is a nice site about vernal pools from Massachusetts.  
http://www.vernalpool.org/vpinfo_1.htm  The website by the Vernal Pool 
Association has links to some other documents and forms for documenting vernal 
pools (designed for a MA program, but applicable elsewhere.)  There are many 
other sites, but I thought this one was worth mentioning.

Ed

"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. 
It is the source of all true art and all science." - Albert Einstein
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Barry Caselli 
  To: ENTS 
  Sent: Sunday, August 09, 2009 8:42 PM
  Subject: [ENTS] big vernal pond in Wharton State Forest - 2 videos


        ENTS,
        On Sunday August 2, and again on Friday August 7, I visited a big 
vernal pond in Wharton State Forest in the NJ Pine Barrens. The pond runs 
parallel to the sand road on which I filmed a video on Saturday August 1 (which 
some of you watched).
        In the first video I never got near the east end of the pond, which is 
filled with vegetation. Actually the entire south side is also filled with 
vegetation as well. In the second video I started down near the east end and 
headed back to the west end where I came in.
        The west end of the pond has an outlet which seems to be man-made. But 
someone sandbagged it. But then sometime ago either the sandbags didn't hold, 
or someone drove a 4X4 in there and broke down the sandbags. I'm not sure 
which. But the pond again has an outlet. It flows into a small, apparently 
man-made channel, which goes north/northeast over to the river.
        The pond has many interesting plants in it, as well as old blueberry 
bushes and other things. I absolutely love it up there. I need to go back 
again. According to the aerial photography, there are more vernal ponds and 
cedar swamps running parallel to that sand road.
        Hope y'all enjoy the videos.
        Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kwPZiGEFQh8
        Part 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xj_uoAlsr6Q

        Barry
       
    
     
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