Panorama by Kathy Wheeler


smblksil
Wrinkle 2
1st synchronous shoot - 9am Australian Eastern Daylight Savings Time.

Panographer: Kathy Wheeler

wheeler

Company: Albury Local Internet
City: Lavington, NSW 2641
Country: Australia

Panorama title: "Flying Rainbows"
Location: Private aviaries, Lavington, Australia
GPS data: 36deg 2min 40.8sec S; 146deg 55min 7.9sec E
Size of window: 360x240

Personal Home Page: http://www.albury.net.au/~kathyw/
Company WWW Page: http://www.albury.net.au/

kathyw@albury.net.au

The morning dawned overcast. This shoot was to be inside a heavily planted aviary, so flash illumination was preferred, as long as it didn't overly disturb the stars of this shoot - the beautiful Australian Gouldian Finch. The Gouldian is also known as the painted finch, or the rainbow finch. Mother nature really excelled herself here. The colours you see are not re-touched, or created through human intervention or breeding. These are the naturally occurring colours of what has to be the most colourful and popular aviary finch alive in the world today.

These beautiful little flying rainbows are native to the Northern parts of Australia. They breed prolifically when the grasses seed and ripen. The young spend up to their first year in dull grey olive plumage, moulting to their adult plumage over 1 to 6 months depending on prevailing seasonal conditions. If you look closely at the birds in this panorama, you may identify the youngsters in dull olive/grey, adult females with slightly watered down colours and the brilliantly coloured males. Three head colour variations occur naturally - black, red and orange - although only two are captured here - the red head and the black head.

The Gouldian finch is endangered in the wild from habitat loss and a widespread parasitic air sack mite infection. They are, however, quite secure in aviculture where their beautiful colouring, bold, endearing nature and (under the right conditions) ease of breeding will save them from extinction.

Notes to the sound track:
The social calls of the Gouldian finches are a fairly short "tweet-tweet" - heard at the start of the recording, and again at the end. If you listen carefully, the soft "whurring" near the start of the recording is a bird flying past the recorder. The courting song of the Gouldian (unfortunately not captured here) includes sounds so high pitched they are outside the normal range for human hearing.

A gravelly "chrrrrrrrrr" "chrrrrrrrr" followed by the almost piercing, mournful cries, are the ground dwelling King Quail calling out to each other. The rather melodious series of "churrups" at the end of the soundtrack is a wild thrush, startled out of cover in the trees above.

The background babble is not recorder noise - it's over 100 budgerigars trying to out-do each other in an adjacent aviary.

Technical specs:
Equipment used:
Nikon F2, 35mm 100ASA Ektapress film,
Olympus 300DL (digital camera) at high res 640x480, autoexposure
Sony Pro8 Video recorder to record the soundtrack
Slik tripod with manual panoramic ring
Nikon Coolscan 35mm film scanner
Adobe PhotoDeluxe with Coolscan plug-in
Power Macintosh 6200/275
QFX for DOS on PC for hand stitching
QTVR Authoring Studio, QT3 Movie Player,
QTVR Converter and flattener extensions and MakeRefMovie
SoundEffects for Mac to record and edit the audio track.

This panorama was shot on both digital and conventional 35mm film. The 35mm results were chosen for better depth of field and better focus, particularly up close. Additional overlap frames were shot to allow for discretionary stitching as the main subjects moved between every frame. The negatives were scanned directly and stitched manually.

Personal Home Page
Company Home Page


Wrinklemeister's Note: This young lady gave up almost a week of her own time to help me with the horrendous task of assembling Wrinkle 2. She worked hours and hours to perfect our Navigation system and we kept in touch by email. It was truly one of the neatest experiences of my life to be able to work so well with someone so dedicated and driven and yet so far away. I'd like to thank her other half and her children and her co-workers for letting me steal Kathy Wheeler for a week.
Kathy also designed our logo, our wrinkling clock and our little navigation icons. Wrinkle 2 is as much hers as it is mine...thanks Kathy, from the bottom of my big sloppy heart! - rabbett

When can we do it again??? ;)

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Last ironed by Rabbett on: Friday, April 24, 1998.