Trumpeter Swan Courtship and Family in Spring
Outdoor Ontario

Trumpeter Swan Courtship and Family in Spring

Charline

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This video has been revised on April 10: https://youtu.be/nNWpzU-IXhM
« Last Edit: April 10, 2025, 12:53:18 AM by Charline »


Charline

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Explore the fascinating courtship and family dynamics of Trumpeter Swans in their natural wetland and beach habitat at Toronto's Tommy Thompson Park this spring.

This captivating video showcases the swans' mating rituals, family bonding, and the beauty of their environment.

The video also highlights the mating behaviors of other water birds, including Goldeneye Ducks and Mallards, providing a rare glimpse into the springtime rituals of these stunning creatures.
Discover the wonders of wildlife and spring in one of Toronto's most beautiful natural parks.
« Last Edit: March 22, 2025, 10:37:00 PM by Charline »


Shortsighted

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Another good presentation.  In many ways this idea of featuring a specific species reminds me of CBC Who's who, Hinterland shorts, which still give me goosebumps (even though swans are au courant), partly by that haunting flute solo.  It was a good idea back then, and it remains a fetching concept even now, even though we are all awash in videos.  Even comparing Trumpeters with Tundra and Mute swans would be cool.  As for flute music, it's hard to deny its impact, although there might be some strident quality when mixed with the trumpeters, a rowdy lot.   Just imagine all the short films that are possible, even considering the limited species that migrate through, or settle in the GTA.  When I nostalgicate ( my word) over the Hinterland shorts I also recall the Dan Gibson films (more glorious flutes) but I can't remember the nature series that featured his recordings, wielding his Plexiglass parabolic dish + microphone and miniature Nagra tape recorder.  Please, keep them coming!  No pressure though.


Charline

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Thanks for your comments.


As you can appreciate, it is a lot of hard work, even though some clips were over-exposed.


Last fall, I got a new MacBook Air with the largest RAM possible. It still can not handle the longer video if I want to use many overlaying video features. Oh well, I can only do what I can.


Shortsighted

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Just contemplate the amount of effort and expertise needed back in the day of filming those Hinterland shorts.  Nothing was digital!  You needed a heavy, expensive film camera, often requiring a team and a blind, as well as an extra sound crew.  Those film captures were under-exposed, over-exposed and grainy (due to fast film), which had little exposure latitude to deal with contrast and lots of film noise.  The kind of sharpness and detail even amateurs can achieve today couldn't even be imagined back then unless the production involved Hollywood and 35mm film cameras.  Editing and commentary are still what makes the video once you've found a subject and formulated an idea for its presentation.  I have no knowledge of videography because it's too big an undertaking for me to pursue.  I barely manage still photography ... I know my limits.  Maybe, if I was 50 years younger, I would use the energy and creativity of my twenties to tackle such a complex modality.  Back then though, 8mm filming didn't turn my crank and the cost of a good film camera would have been out-of-reach.  I was lucky to have a 35mm SLR camera ... very lucky!  Did I mention that I love a flute prelude in a nature video?


Charline

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I was not happy with the sound quality of the original video so I revised it.


I replaced a lot of my narrations with relaxing piano music. Hopefully, it will make the viewing experience more pleasant.


This is the new link: [size=78%]https://youtu.be/nNWpzU-IXhM[/size]


Shortsighted

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Personally, I prefer this serene solo piano music for accompaniment when filming swans, much as I fondly recall melancholy flute music for CBC's Hinterland Shorts.  The trick is to MIX the site audio with the accompaniment and using the faders to modulate the mix.  In other words, either the site recording, or the accompaniment predominates at any one moment in the production, therefore providing a give-and-take, a shifting balance to suit the bird behaviour.  A third channel on the mixer allows for your narration, when needed, without gating everything else on the score.  Nature shorts generally don't need foley, so then all you would need is three audio channels.  My gut reaction is that no one audio component should predominate for too long because of the steep profile of attention saturation, which leads to a short attention span.  Change in audio keeps it fresh and therefore helps support the change in characters appearing on the screen.  Even in the movies, different actors get different music.  We always know when Darth Vader is about to enter the picture by the prelude.  Who would be the Darth Vader of waterfowl?  I don't rightly know.  OMG, that's it ... a black swan!  Quick, go find Casting.  I'm so excited.


Charline

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Thanks.


I get your point, that's why I re-made the video.


Glad you like the music better.