Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Deer gets revenge after hunter shoots him

The animal appeared dead but rose up and attacked the man


updated 9:02 p.m. ET, Mon., Dec . 1, 2008
SEDALIA, Mo. - A hunter bagged a big buck on the second day of firearms season, but the kill caused him a lot of pain. Randy Goodman, 49, said he thought two well-placed shots with his .270-caliber rifle had killed the buck on Nov. 19. Goodman said the deer looked dead to him, but seconds later the nine-point, 240-pound animal came to life.
The buck rose up, knocked Goodman down and attacked him with his antlers in what the veteran hunter called "15 seconds of hell." The deer ran a short distance and went down, and died after Goodman fired two more shots.
Soon Goodman started feeling dizzy and noticed his vest was soaked in blood.

Hormone-fueled deer 1, young football player 0

Ohio boy, 7, is flipped by ‘aggressive’ buck during backyard game


msnbc.com staff and news service reports
updated 1 hour, 28 minutes ago
WINTERSVILLE, Ohio - A 7-year-old boy playing a game of backyard football was tackled by a deer.
Brandon Hiles said he encountered the buck when the ball rolled into woods while he was playing with friends Saturday in Wintersville, about 125 miles east of Columbus.
Brandon told WTOV that the buck "started charging" at him, flipping him with its antlers, leaving bruises and a gash.

North Carolina Hunting Videographer Camo4x4s

Heroes:

Bill Gates, Daniel Boone, Warren Buffet, Donald Trump, and his dad.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Hire a Wedding Videographer or a Hunting Videographer

Hello everyone! First off, let me say that I’m not going to spend any time trying to convince you to hire a hunting videographer; there’s just too much to say! What I want to talk about is how to select a videographer that’s just right for you.

A lot of the same principles apply to finding a wedding photographer: you look at their work and see if you like it! That’s the most important thing. But beyond that, here are a few things to consider that are specific to wedding videography:

1) Audio is one of the primary things that differentiates photo from video, so you should definitely pay attention to it. Ask the wedding videographer how he or she captures audio at an event. A microphone on the groom or officiant is standard these days, but you should look for someone that goes beyond that. We like to mic the groom, the officiant, the podium, the musicians, and sometimes we get a feed from the sound board. This way every part of the ceremony sounds crystal clear. As for the reception, look for someone that mics the DJ or band speakers or gets a feed from the sound board. This way the announcements, music, and toasts are all crisp. All of these different audio tracks should be mixed in post so that everything sounds clear and natural.

2) When you’re comparing different videographers, be sure to compare “apples to apples” when it comes to package options. You have the basics like hours of coverage and number of cameras and operators, but you should also consider other factors:

- How are the DVD’s packaged? What do the DVD menus look like (motion versus static)?

- How is the video archived? Are you provided a master tape of the video?

- Do they attend the rehearsal to plan camera placement?

- How long is the final video? Does the package include a highlights montage/recap?

3) Let’s get a little technical with this one and talk about some of the tools videographers have available these days.It’s a very exciting time to be a wedding filmmaker; there are more options than ever before. Here is a run-down on some of them:

- High Definition: This high resolution format is fast becoming the standard, replacing standard definition. Oftentimes it costs extra to have your video delivered in HD, but you will certainly appreciate the difference in quality.

- Super 8: This nostalgic film medium is shot on circa 60’s and 70’s cameras. The camera operates noisily, but you’ll end up with warm evocative imagery that adds spice to videos. The film is expensive and it works best with lots of light. Pairs perfectly with a vintage-style or outdoor wedding.

- Canon 5D Mark 2: Wedding filmmakers are buying this still photography camera because of the beautiful HD imagery it can capture. Because it uses photo lenses, the depth of field is shallow and it looks more like a movie. This camera really sings with detail shots and dancing coverage at low-light receptions.

- Steadicam/Glidecam: These are counterbalanced camera stabilizers that allow the videographer to walk and run while the camera remains steady. Originally created for use in big budget movies, they are now trickling down to the event industry. They create a dramatic cinematic look that can really enhance a production.

- Magic Bullet Looks: This is a software plug-in that generates effects for video while editing. You can have a video clip that looks blah and flat and washed out, apply Magic Bullet and make some tweaks, and turn it into something that is vibrant or romantic or moody. Think of it as Adobe Photoshop actions for video.

Hopefully this little crash course on new technologies will help you make a more informed hiring decision. It’s nice to know what’s out there, what you might like, and what you need to look for in a videographer.

How to hire a wedding videographer

Heroes:

Bill Gates, Daniel Boone, Warren Buffet, Donald Trump, and his dad.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Discovery Channel Destroyed in Seconds

Discovery Channel "Destroyed in Seconds"


Camo4x4s got a call from the Discovery Channel, it seems a producer for the hit show "Destroyed in Seconds" wanted a talented videographer that specializes in Outdoorsman Videography

Destroyed in Seconds is a clip show (now I gotta find out exactly what that IS)

Web definitions for Clip show

A clip show is an episode of a television series that consists primarily of excerpts from previous episodes. Most clip shows feature the format of a frame story in which cast members recall past events from past installments of the show, depicted with clip of the event presented as a flashback. .


John Moss at Pilgrim Films is from the Discovery Channel and they are looking for clips







Heroes:

Bill Gates, Daniel Boone, Warren Buffet, Donald Trump, and his dad.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Pray for Judge John Mull

BURKE COUNTY, N.C. -- A Burke County judge died while saving his son from drowning in the Catawba River. According to WCNC

Family, friends and even people subject to his punishment praised 25th District Court Judge John Mull on Monday.

"He was just a nice judge, family man," said Lola Fleming, who was due in Mull's courtroom Monday.

Mull was having a family get-together on Sunday when he died. Mull, his wife, sons and father were having fun on the Catawba River where Mull was building his dream home.

His sons swam laps in river. His 17-year-old son cramped and yelled for help.

Mull jumped in, told his teen everything was OK, and then gave him a huge push towards shore.

The son made it, Mull did not. Family members pulled him out, but CPR couldn't save him.

Investigators aren't sure if Mull drowned or had a heart attack saving his son.

"It shocked me," Fleming said.

That's the mood Monday in Burke County. If you had a court case, Judge Mull was the man you wanted to hear it.

"He was the most fair judge around here," said defendant Marshall Evans. "He would listen to your situation and if things had changed and your circumstances have changed he would understand the reasons why you did what you did."

"He treated everybody the same -- with respect. It didn't matter if it was defendant or victim," said Bailiff Shane Brown.

Family members say Mull died the way he lived -- listening, helping and saving.

Other judges are filling in until Gov. Bev Perdue assigns Mull's replacement. The seat will be up for election next year.

I found this story on Twitter and followed the link to the WCNC article. Our hearts go out to the family of Judge Mull. Pray for them.

N.C. Judge Drowns While Rescuing Son in River
CHARLOTTE, NC A North Carolina judge has drowned after jumping into a river to help his struggling son near a home he had been building. The Charlotte Observer reported Monday that Burke County District Court Judge John Mull of Drexel ...
Articles for Top News on Daylife - http://www.daylife.com/topic/Top_News/articles

Heroes:

Bill Gates, Daniel Boone, Warren Buffet, Donald Trump, and his dad.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Sportsman Videography Tips

Hunting Bragging Rights

Or do you remember the one that got away?


Outdoorsman Videographer Camo4x4s Professional sportsman

We don't have to depend on our memories to relive the best hunts of our lifetimes. Modern technology enables us to capture the essence of great hunts, good hunts and even enjoyable, non-productive hunts through video.
But how do you film your hunt and try to take game at the same time? Which cameras will serve you best? What's the best technique for getting top-notch footage? Where and how can you get a hunting buddy to shoot footage for you instead of trying to take a deer or a turkey for himself?

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To learn the answers to these questions and more, we've interviewed some of the best videographers in the outdoor industry. These people use video cameras to tape television shows and to create the best-selling videos in the nation. Follow their advice to make the kind of videos your friends will lean out of their chairs to watch instead of nodding off to sleep when you turn on the VCR.


1) "Keep your camera with you," Ronnie Strickland of Mossy Oak advises. "You can't get good hunting video if you leave your camera at home or in your vehicle. How many times have you heard, 'Man, if I'd only had my camera, I could have gotten some really good video."

2) Get a hunting buddy, and determine who will commit to filming. One or both of you must agree to learn to operate a video camera and dedicate yourselves to shooting the best footage you can shoot.

3) Know your camera. When you video a deer hunt, don't take a brand-new camera right out of the box. Purchase your new camera as soon as deer season ends. Spend the rest of the year practicing shooting videos. Then you'll know without looking the location of every button on your camera and what it does. Michael Waddell emphasizes that your camera needs to become an extension of your hand. "Then when you pick it up, you don't have to mentally tell every finger what its responsibility is. Your fingers and your hand will react automatically to the message you send." Become so familiar with your camera that when a deer moves into view, you automatically do the right things to get great video. A longtime bowhunter doesn't have to think about how he's going to draw the bow, aim the shot and release the string. All these steps happen automatically, and that's the level of proficiency you need with your video camera.

4) Eliminate camera shake by using a tripod or a treepod to steady your camera. Then, your audience won't get seasick when they watch your videos.

5) Purchase a remote microphone for better audio. The remote microphone will pick up more wildlife sounds while preventing the viewer from hearing annoying camera noise like your hand, clothing or a tree making a "swish" sound when you brush against them.

6) Know the location of the sun in relationship to the camera before you climb into your tree stand. If you shoot directly into the sun, your video will contain bright spots from glare on the lens, making the action difficult to see. Watch the amount of light in an area carefully, because often you won't have enough light to film when the deer move the most.

7) Wear total camouflage from head to toe yourself, and put it on your camera. If you don't want to put camouflage tape like the Duck tape made by Manco on your camera, then purchase a camouflage t-shirt. Either put the lens of the camera through the neck hole, or cut a hole in the t-shirt for the camera lens.

8) Have a game plan. Before you enter the woods, decide what kind of video you want to shoot. Set a goal for the video. Do you want a video of any buck, a monster buck or a particular buck or a doe? Try to produce what you've planned. If you prefer to get video footage of a monster buck, then you and your hunting partner need to agree not to take the shot or do the video if you don't get the buck you want. If you hope to video long-bearded turkeys, then let the jakes walk past you unmolested, and wait for a longbeard.

9) Keep the camera in sharp focus while videoing. Don't use the auto-focus feature on your camera. Instead, learn to focus manually because your focus point will change as the deer comes toward you or moves away from you. The focus point also will change as you zoom in and out. To obtain that sharp image, you'll need to continually sharpen your focus point manually.

10) Understand the game and the hunter you'll video. Know where the deer most likely will appear, where he'll probably walk, where to take the shot and what he'll do after he's hit. The more you know about the game you hunt, the better the video you'll produce. Also anticipate what the hunter will do. The more you hunt with somebody, the more you can anticipate the hunter's actions. Then you can focus on either the hunter of the deer and make preparations for the action when it takes place.

11) Know when you can and can't move. To get a good video, you may have to switch your camera position and make some movements in the tree. To move without spooking the game, you must know what the deer will do, when he'll do it, how he'll do it and how to keep him from seeing you. You only can learn this information by spending hundreds of hours in the tree stand and studying the body language of the deer.

12) Shoot more footage than you think you'll need. Don't just show the deer, the shot and the hunter with the deer. Bring more elements into the story. A good video should tell a story as effectively as a good book. The videographer needs the ability to see the same sight picture and down the same shooting lanes that the hunter can see. Connect the hunter to the game he's about to take. Then, zoom in on the animal. Once the hunter makes the shot and the animal goes down, pull back so that you can see the hunter in the stand immediately after the deer has gone down. This adds credibility to your video and makes it much more pleasing to watch.

13) Consider the viewer. Don't show a bad shot of bloody deer or any footage that gives hunting a bad image. After you show the hunter coming down the tree and walking toward the game, before you show a really close-up shot of the deer, wipe the blood off the animal, and clean it up as much as possible. Put the buck's tongue back in his mouth or remove it, and make the deer look presentable before you video him.

14) Get the word out that you want to shoot videos for fun and/or profit. Let people know that you're videoing hunts- even if just on a very amateur level; some hunters may pay you to go and video their hunts. Other hunters may invite you to go hunting with them if you'll spend part of your hunting time videoing them. Anytime you shoot good video footage-even if it doesn't include a kill-show that footage to the landowner. He'll enjoy seeing the game on his property.

15) Have fun. Don't pressure yourself to become the world's greatest hunting videographer. If you want to go hunting, then go hunting, and forget about the video. If you want to carry the camera with you, then do. Try not to come across on the hunting video as a know-it-all. People like to see hunters get excited and enthusiastic.



Heroes:

Bill Gates, Daniel Boone, Warren Buffet, Donald Trump, and his dad.

Friday, June 26, 2009

North Carolina Videographer

Professional North Carolina Videographers have perfected the art of capturing your Wedding or private event!

They have the skillful eye and talent that is needed to make sure that your event is caught on video and that you can always look back on your special day or function. Videography is truely a skill and should not be taken lightly. That is why when searching for a professional North Carolina videographer, you are certain to do your homework. It is important to ask questions on how long the company has been in business as well as obtaining references of previous videography work performed in NC.

It is also a good idea to view the videos of the work the North Carolina wedding videographer has created and ask the question, can I watch a video of the videographer who will be performing at my event. It would not make much sense to view the work of another videographer in North Carolina who will not be the actual person filming your wedding or function. Wedding Videographer in NC (North Carolina).






Heroes:

Bill Gates, Daniel Boone, Warren Buffet, Donald Trump, and his dad.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Snow Goose Hunting by the Numbers

Step by Step Snow Goose Hunting

By John Pollmann

Even with a growing reputation as some of the most difficult birds to hunt, light geese – snows, blues and Ross’ – are pursued by more and more hunters every year. Armed with the latest in blinds, decoys and e-callers, some might think that hunters have the cards stacked in their favor. Those that chase the giant flocks know their jobs are cut out for them every time they hit the field. The following tips will help you gain the edge this year when you launch into another spring edition of the wild goose chase.

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A Fine Line

This year marks the 11th consecutive spring conservation season for light geese, and South Dakota waterfowl hunter and Avery Pro-staffer Ben Fujan has seen many changes since hunters were first enrolled in an effort to reduce the pressure that light geese put on their fragile summer nesting grounds in the tundra. However, there is one aspect to the hunting that hasn’t changed much: when it comes time to find snow geese in the spring, it all comes down to food and water. “In the spring, snow geese are constantly trying to push their way north,” Fujan says. “But when they reach the ice-line or snow-line, their northward momentum is stopped. Find that line and you’ll find the geese.” Fujan adds that while snow geese will spend time on the ice, they seldom venture into an area where the food sources are still covered with any snow. “That snow-line really is a great place to start when searching for snow geese. Use weather reports to stay on top of the changes in temperature that are necessary to melt ice and clear snow.”


Location, Location, Location

Much like the fall, window-time is a reality for the spring snow goose hunter, but Fujan stresses that hunters can save time if they focus on an area that historically holds large snow goose numbers. “You have won half the battle if you position yourself in an area that sees good goose traffic,” Fujan says. “Unless the snow-line has completely pushed birds off-track, they will typically return through the same areas year after year.” By concentrating on high-traffic areas, you place the odds in your favor that you are going to be hunting fresh birds. “Your best bet in the spring is to hunt birds that are new to an area and are looking for places to rest and eat,” Fujan says. “If you are in the right location, you will likely shoot birds in the morning that are coming to the field to feed, and as the day progresses you will pick up birds that are migrating overhead. New birds are much more likely to respond to your decoys and calling.”




BORN TO BE A HUNTER
I was BORN TO BE A HUNTER. I'm 45 minutes from one of the most pristine rivers in North Carolina where I was raised hunting and fishing to live off the land. See, I come from a farming/ business family and my dad always taught me the conservative ways of being a responsible outdoors man. Being a responsible outdoorsman means you do your best to make a clean kill by practicing with your weapon. You also have to eat what you kill and give back more than you take away to be a responsible hunter. I was raised with all of these ethics from the age of 4. If there where more outdoorsman like myself hunters wouldn't be shunned as much as they are today.

I don't know why hunters get so much grief online? Maybe it is because people simply where not raised the same way that I was growing up to live off the land. I post a lot of youtube videos about hunting and hunting related topics and there are many people that are offended by it labeling me a redneck just because I enjoy being able to put food on my table if needed. I wonder if those people go to Mc Donald's and order burgers because they are just as guilty of killing animals as I am. In fact the people who eat fast food are essentially hiring assassins to kill their food for them and sometimes it can be in a very brutal way in those slaughter houses!

I don't want to get off topic. I really just want more people to understand hunting is a way of life all over the world. I was born to be a hunter just as you might have been born and raised to be a vegan. I don't go onto vegan videos and bash them for being to sensitive to eat meat so why do they come to me and bash on me for my way of living? I WAS BORN TO BE A HUNTER and that is the way I will be for the rest of my life. If you say hunting is wrong just read the bible... If you don't believe in the bible then it wouldn't matter anyway one way or the other!

Acts 11:7

Stuart Edward's Heros:
Bill Gates, Daniel Boone, Warren Buffet, Donald Trump, and his dad.