Archive for June, 2008

Off to Papua New Guinea

meThis is a photograph of me taking a photograph of me with silly goggles on. Actually, the goggles aren’t so silly. They’re rather practical for the fishermen who use them. It’s more me who looks silly with them on, so perhaps the adjective “silly” is more applicable to me than the goggles.

The point of posting this image is to illustrate that despite the long, arduous journeys, equipment hassles, tussles with airlines, “interviews” with customs officials, etc., there’s always time to have a little fun. This photo is from my recent trip to Sabah, when we ducked into a coffee shop for a much-needed caffeine infusion, and also to escape the heat and take a quick break.

sleepingOf course, travelling can also be quite exhausting. One of my travelling companions on the trip to Sabah took this photograph (one of a half dozen or so other photographs he took of me in less-than-elegant poses) on the way back from the trip.

Clearly, the psychological stress of enduring extended exposure to my immature companions took its toll on me, and I had no option but to collapse in relief once I was safely on the plane back…which to a large extent explains why I’m travelling alone to PNG today.

Despite the disadvantage of being unable to go to the toilet without dragging all my bags with me, it will, no doubt, be a less taxing journey :-)

So I’m off to the airport again, heading for the MV Golden Dawn. I will not have access to good internet lines, if any at all, so please don’t send any large attachments. It’s difficult to describe the intense frustration and rage of sitting for hours trying to download a single email with a multi-MB press release or photo attached.

Pasta Turns Thirteen

pastaIt was Pasta’s birthday a couple of days ago. She’s 13 years old now, which is getting up there for a golden retriever. Fortunately, she’s alert and active, which meant she was fully able to enjoy the custom “birthday cake” we prepared for her (dog food, bonito flakes and tuna).

In fact, Pasta was so aware of the fact that she was about to receive something truly yummy that she became somewhat impatient while we sang “Happy Birthday” to her (accompanied by my niece on the piano), so much so that she barked a couple of times (something she rarely does).

pastaOnce she worked her way through the cake (requiring all of 7.5 seconds, including licking the bowl clean), she got a few extra treats, as well as some nice presents.

One of the main presents was a new raincoat, since it’s still rainy season here. The raincoat has a little cap, and slots for her ears to fit in, which makes her even more cute than she normally is.

As it turned out, it poured rain the next day, so she was able to put this particular present to good use immediately.

As an aside, her left eye is much better now…nearly back to normal. Most of the time, you can’t tell that she had a problem with it. I’m really happy that we didn’t follow the first doctor’s recommendation and take her in for MRIs and invasive surgery.

Time and expense aside, the physical trauma and stress would have been significant…not something to take lightly at any age, but particularly not for a dog Pasta’s age.

pastaAfter thinking it through, we decided not to take the risk of putting her through such an ordeal, and elected instead to put her on medication to address low thyroxine levels in her blood.

As it turned out, treating her to bring up her hormone levels has worked like a charm, so at 13 years of age, Pasta is as fit and happy as ever.

A Day on Mabul Island

Instead of writing a long blog post about my recent trip to Sabah, I decided to put together a video essay, posted below:

The original file is posted at Blip.tv, which is one of the many online video hosting sites that have popped up in the past couple of years. I’m still trying them out, so I’m not sure if I’ll stick with this service or not. So far, I like the video quality and the layout of the Blip site. It doesn’t have the viewership of something like Youtube, but that’s not the right audience for this type of video anyway.

Like other video hosting services, Blip.tv provides functionality for cross-posting to other online sites. I’ve used the Facebook app to post the video to my Facebook account, for example. And there’s an email/ embed code, which makes it easy for anyone who wants to post the video to do so just by copying and pasting the automatically generated code.

I’ve also put up a smaller iPod-compatible version of this file available via my podcast.

I took most of the photos, along with Aey, who’s the Associate Publisher of FiNS, and the video footage was taken with a small, consumer Sony HDR-SR11 Handycam by Aey and Mean (FiNS’ graphic designer).

The music came from the podsafe music network, which is an amazing service for the podcasting community. The background/ mood music is a song called Amber by Dan Tharp. Dan also has a website with more beautiful acoustic music, and an album and songs available via iTunes.

Hope you like the video/ story.

Relevant links:
FiNS Magazine
Treasure Images
Borneo Divers
SilkAir
Podsafe Music Network
Blip.tv
Dan Tharp

Shooting with Compact Cameras

sea lionDuring my past few trips, I’ve had an opportunity to use compact cameras underwater. Clearly, using compact digital cameras isn’t something I’d normally do (as anyone who’s seen my mountain of SLR-related equipment will attest to), but I get asked often about how to take nice photos underwater using compact cameras, so it’s not a bad idea for me to have some experience with them.

Not everyone, after all, wants to spend rent and food money on cameras and lug around 60kg of photo gear (on a light day).

In the interest of full disclosure, I’ve been using compact cameras in conjunction with promotional efforts for Sony, so it’s not exactly like I woke up one day and decided to ditch my SLRs. No…glutton for punishment that I am, I’ll continue to lug around my big, bulky cameras for the foreseeable future.

General Thoughts
It’s perfectly normal to screw up photos the first time you use any new equipment, so I’m not ashamed to say that the first few shots I took with compact cameras were, let’s say, less than stellar and a bit frustrating. Within a couple of dives and with a bit of fiddling around, however, I found my groove and was snapping away.

In the course of using Sony compact cameras (most recently the W300), I’ve learned a few things that I thought I’d share. Many of you who’re using or have used compact cameras may know this stuff already, but it’s new to me.

hawkfish- First, it’s really liberating not to have to spend lots of time setting up equipment. Typically, it takes me 30 minutes or more to set up and test a housing plus lights. Multiply this by 3-4 housings with obligatory sanity breaks in between, and you’ll see it typically takes me a few hours to get ready.

I’m probably overly methodical and cautious, but it’s worth the effort to minimise chances of flooding or other issues (like leaving lens caps on, forgetting to put memory in, etc.).

Setting up the W300 plus a strobe took about five minutes. And that was after taking a break and double-checking everything several times over.

The first time I set the camera up, I literally had no idea what to do with the abundance of extra time and energy I had, so I ended up pestering my travelling companions while they set up their equipment (much to their annoyance no doubt).

- Second, I feel really “light” in the water. Normally I have at least two complete SLR set ups with me, so having a compact camera, even with a strobe, was almost like carrying nothing at all. I didn’t have to fin as hard to get around, which meant my air consumption was better than normal.

- Finally, shooting with a compact camera required, at least for me, an entirely different way of looking at things.

With my SLRs, I shoot mostly at the extremes…extremely wide (fisheye) and extremely narrow (super-macro). I tend to spend less time with “normal” lens perspectives.

It’s certainly possible to shoot wide and macro with compact cameras (particularly with the help of add-on lenses), but not to the same degree as I do with my SLRs, so I had to “adapt” my vision, so to speak, to seeing in normal lens perspectives…which isn’t easy after so many years of training myself to see what other people normally don’t see at the extremes.

Underwater Mode
Other than these general observations, which shouldn’t come as any major surprise, there is one specific function on my compact that was a revelation for me…the underwater mode. This is a function that’s built into many compact cameras, and it’s something I think is worth knowing about if you have a compact camera and don’t already use this capability.

The basic idea is that when you dive, you switch the camera to underwater mode, and the camera will adjust colours to make your images look less blue-green and “blah”…you know, the typical look you get if you shoot in automatic mode. Blues should look blue, and pretty fish and corals should look pretty instead of washed out.

Before I actually tested this function on my W300, I imagined that it would act like a colour filter…adding reds and other warm colours back at shallow depths, but perhaps not work so well at depth.

What I observed was that it does precisely this, but seems to do it in an “intelligent” fashion and adjusts…to a certain degree…for depth and other ambient conditions.

Here’s what I mean: When you use a colour filter, the colour-correcting capability of the filter is preset. In order words, the extent of “warmth” that you add back is pre-determined by the pigment mix of the filter. So the effectiveness of colour filters can be limited to specific conditions and circumstances. This was particularly the case during film days (Film? What’s that?).

With the advent of digital cameras, it’s been possible to improve the effectiveness of add-on filters, as popularised by Magic Filters, created by my friends Alex Mustard and Peter Rowlands. I’ve used magic filters with my SLRs and still do so on occasion.

What’s cool about the underwater mode in my W300 is that it appears to adjust white balance on-the-fly, without the need for filters, while achieving a pleasing effect similar to what you get with the use of filters.

The examples below show you some results obtained just by switching between P mode (programmed auto) and the preset underwater mode. No flash, no filters, no tricks, no special skills…but pretty dramatic differences.

soft coral

hard coral

I don’t know precisely how the camera adjusts the images, but from looking at the “before” and “after” histograms, it seems like the camera automatically uses the histogram to calculate and apply a white balance modification.

histogram

If you don’t know what the histograms mean, don’t worry. Basically what I’m saying is that I think the camera determines how much warmth (red/ orange/ yellow) to add back, and how much to amend the cool colours (blue, cyan, green)…giving you prettier pictures without the need for any extra equipment, filters, or other devices.

From the photos above, whatever the camera is doing, it clearly works. What this means in practical terms is that with just your compact digital camera and a normal housing, you can take nice, colourful photos. There’s no need to get fancy or invest in anything else. (Of course, if you do add extra stuff like lenses, strobes, etc., you can get even better results, but that’s another topic altogether.)

The underwater mode worked best for me at relatively shallow depths (though even at 22 metres, the colour adjustments were apparent), shooting with the light instead of against it (sun above or at your back, pointing the camera horizontally or down).

I’ve only tried it on a couple of dives in nice, tropical-blue waters, so I’m not sure yet how the function will perform under other circumstances…something I’ll explore further on upcoming trips.

Summary
So if you’re one of the many divers who has a compact camera, you might want to check to see if it has an underwater mode. As I mentioned above, the particular camera I was using was a Sony W300, but I’m certain that this function has also been incorporated in cameras produced by other manufacturers.

What I don’t know is how many people actually makes use of this useful tool. Judging from the many blue- or green-cast photos I see on web forums and photo-sharing sites though, I think most people don’t.

Give it a try, and let me know what you think.

Why I Need to Workout

Me At Work?

I’m still struggling to catch up with emails, work and life after my getting back from my latest trip. On my list of things “to do” (unfortunately very far down) is to write about some of the things that happened.

Hopefully I’ll have time to do so, but in the meantime, here’s a short video clip that pretty much sums up how hard I had to work while in Sabah.

Article: Persistence Pays

Perspective is an editorial column I write regularly for FiNS Magazine. This installment is entitled “Persistence Pays”.

Right click here to download the PDF file (92 kB).

The PDF file is also available as a download from my iTunes podcast.

Level 4.5

From an elevator in Fortune Town in Bangkok. I was tempted to take a look on Level 4.5, but decided not to risk getting stuck in limbo.

elevator

Panda Panda

I’m back in Thailand now, after a terrific but exhausting trip to Sabah. There was a lot that I wanted to post while I was there, but I just didn’t have the time or energy. The project I was working on required me to get up around 05:00 every day, even though I usually only got to sleep around midnight or after (thus putting me into an even more sleep-deprived state than I normally operate in). If things go well, I’ll be able to say more about the project later in the year.

Anyway, after unpacking and answering a tonne of emails, I decided I needed a break. Aey, Mean and I went to see the new Indiana Jones movie, which was the first time I’ve seen a movie in an actual theater for many years. We went to the new Siam Paragon complex in Bangkok (my first time there, since I hate despise shopping).

The movie was so-so at best. Characters weren’t well developed, and the alien-like inter-dimensional beings were cheesy. BUT, there was one good thing…the trailer for the upcoming movie Kung Fu Panda!

I’m a big fan of animated movies, with films like Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, Madagascar, Open Season, TMNT and others at the top of my list. Based on the trailer, Kung Fu Panda looks like it’s going to be really funny. There were really cool leaflets at the theater promoting the movie in Thai too. I had to grab one because it looks so cool.

So, mediocre Indiana Jones movie, but hysterical Kung Fu Panda trailer and cool leaflet.

panda