Gear put to test in faraway places...

Gear put to test in faraway places...
Flood refugees in Pakistan

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Sony HXRM C50E professional camcorder - Pakistan Tribulations



By Brigitte Gardner - March 2010

This is Brigitte Gardner and I am an aid worker assisting on the relief operation for Pakistan’s 2010 floods. An estimated 20 million people have been affected. I am employed to organise the distribution of food to some of the millions of people displaced from their homes. Most flood affected people moved to tent camps wherever a piece of dirt could be found off the rising waters. Others remained beside or near their villages on the highest points [often roads or dykes] on “ islands” in the Indus River.



Relief work is seven days a week and often up to 15 hours of work per day. It is demanding yet extremely rewarding and you eat and breathe it. Being an emerging filmmaker in my other life, I was keen to capture what life was like for the flood victims and the local Pakistani people in the Sindh province, considered the poorest in Pakistan. Spare moments to have time to video were rare and having a tight 20kg baggage limit being a relief worker on the move, my only option was to find a robust and lightweight video camera for the job. The Sony HXRM C50E professional camcorder is proving to be a winner.



I spend most of my time living in a camp about 300km northeast from Karachi, where the longest lasting effects of the flood occurred. Being a tall foreign woman I stand out amongst the crowd despite my baggy Pakistan style clothing and head shawl.
I don’t enjoy attracting too much attention when video-graphing and find this Sony camera far less intimidating for my subjects after the larger Sony cameras I have used on location before.



With this size camera it seemed easier to build trust and gain permission to film with local people. The flood victims have been through enough trauma already so sensitivity is key. My translator/fixer explains to my subjects the importance of showing the western donors the important work that is being done with flood donations and the people were very obliging and receptive. The small size of the camera meant I could hide it under my shawl when moving between locations.



My baggage limit doesn’t permit me to carry my Miller tripod and I do seriously miss it. Instead I am impressed shooting a lot of handheld scenes with the Active Steadyshot function or on a cheap lightweight tripod that is half broken already. The small camcorder works well in this kind of environment where I am moving around between trucks and helicopters, in and out of tents and warehouses, grabbing quick colourful moments in the camps, along the riverbanks and on the streets.

Having spent a lot of my previous video-graphing time working meticulously to read and record audio levels, I was a little dubious about the inability to set recording levels on this camcorder and what the quality of the shotgun microphone supplied would be like. However I am very impressed with the quality of audio this camera produces! I also brought an extra length of 10m lead with me so I can conduct close up recording maximising audio quality when interviewing with the shotgun.

Before leaving Australia, I made a little windstopper-like piece to velcro over the inbuilt camera mike if I ended up catching moments on the run and not having time to fit the shotgun microphone. I generally always use the windjammer on the shotgun when working outside, as much for reducing the impacts of dust into the microphone as for wind.



I enjoy not having too many controls on the exterior of the camera as it is easier to keep it clean in this dusty environment. However my large sized paws meant using the touch menu on the screen can be a little frustrating at times as I almost crowd over two control options with my one finger [solved with a little pen to point at items]. The eyepiece is also too small to be useful. However the manual control wheel on the front of the camera is excellent and easy to use even with my large fingers. It gave easy access to adjusting manual settings such as exposure, focus or shutter speed.

I bought the Sony polariser and UV filter customised for this camera but am disappointed to find no lens cap was supplied or could be fitted with these on. Also when a filter or polariser is on the camera the lens hood could not be fitted. It would be great to be able to use these in combination.

Much of the time I leave the camera on automatic exposure and focus and am very impressed with what the camera produces. I work in very harsh light settings at times with lots of reflected light off the floodwaters or bright midday sun. The camera’s auto functions adjust admirably and I also enjoy the efficiency of the Face Detection and Spot Meter /Focus functions ensuring subjects looked good for spontaneous action segments. The GPS function is brilliant for mapping out the locations visited though be aware in some troubled countries border searches may be suspicious of electronic items with GPS functions, phones included.



I filmed footage in of flood victims in camps, big aerial views from helicopters, donkey and camel carts on the streets, food distribution programs with plenty of flying bags of wheat and other commodities and the Mohuna people living on traditional boats on the sides of the Indus. At the end of the day I loved the ease of previewing my fresh clips with the simple on screen menu. This camera is perfect for my aid mission and will accompany me on more relief operations to come.






All photos on this blog were taken with the extract photo from video function of the camcorder. For security reasons, pictures of the camcorder in operation are not available.

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