View allAll Photos Tagged 360Video

A spring afternoon view from Yaquina Head on the Oregon Coast, including about 100 harbor seals on the rocks, April 3, 2020. BLM video: Meredith Matherly

 

Every spring, BLM rangers monitor all the normal sights and sounds at Yaquina Head, including the bright yellow of a swallowtail butterfly, the song of a white-crowned sparrow, and dozens of harbor seals hauled out on the rocks.

In this video, there were about 100 seals on the rocks, which they do for rest, predator avoidance, thermoregulation and for pupping, according to Meredith Matherly, a BLM education specialist.

Check out some more virtual adventures from one of the most popular destinations on the Oregon Coast ⤵

 

🌐 Virtual lighthouse tour: youtu.be/vR3p4p2FKNU

💙 Sea lion rescue at Yaquina Head: ow.ly/9rvs50yH4aW

📲 Google Street View on Lighthouse Drive: goo.gl/KWi6wi

Waterspout seen at Yaquina Head: ow.ly/akHw50yeLCe

🐋 Gray whale feeds near Yaquina Head rocks: ow.ly/NlBV50xCkNr

☁ Drone flyover at Yaquina Head: bit.ly/2oypbjw

😮 Rescued seal pup released: goo.gl/Y8gPFs

Seabirds vs. birds of prey gallery: goo.gl/KWxbsH

🌅 Sunset #360video timelapse: youtu.be/mn5UmqRdQMQ

🌐 360° inside tide pools: youtu.be/1cm8f53qFXs

♻ 10 ways to help the oceans in 2020: ow.ly/5cKs50xVBRR

Photo archive: bit.ly/2KotkOG

Snow on the Alvord Desert with Steens Mountain in the background, Jan. 17, 2020. BLM photos: Dory Seeley

The Alvord Desert in southeast Oregon gets about 7 inches a year in precipitation, including the occasional dusting of snowflakes.

Sometimes the moisture on the playa freezes over and visitors can slide around on their shoes, according to Tara Thissell, the BLM public affairs officer in the area.

Of course, moisture on the playa can also make sections of the desert soft and impassable for vehicles.

 

📍 Visit the Alvord Desert: on.doi.gov/2IhcUaS

📞 541-573-4400

Land speed record attempt—via rocket car—on the Alvord: goo.gl/A3Afg7

Take off in a glider from the Alvord and fly high above Steens Mountain! goo.gl/HCRv6G

🌐 #360video drive on the Alvord: goo.gl/Q9tfdL

🚵‍♂ Bikepacking over Steens, Alvord: goo.gl/WKDYrY

Photo archive: goo.gl/Rzmron

Google Maps: bit.ly/2l8RseI

A close-up look of the ironwork on Yaquina Head Lighthouse during a drone inspection, Sept. 29, 2019. BLM photo: Shannon Bradley

 

The BLM frequently checks the exterior of Oregon’s tallest lighthouse, built in the early 1870s, to make sure the cast iron brackets are holding up to the harsh coastal conditions.

Normally, employees or contractors are forced to use binoculars for their inspections, or dangle over the edge of the 93-foot-tall lighthouse using ropes.

“We don’t have a ladder to get that high,” said Matthew Betenson, manager of the Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area.

This was the first time the agency used an aerial drone for the inspection. The flight was first thing in the morning on Sunday and only possible this time of year when it wouldn’t affect wildlife like seabirds or seals.

Use of drones, or even kites, by the public at Yaquina Head is prohibited.

This was also the first time inspectors were able to inspect the roof.

Overall, everyone was happy they didn’t see any cracking or excessive rusting on the iconic Oregon Coast lighthouse, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

“We have a duty to protect it,” said Betenson.

 

📍 Visit Yaquina Head: on.doi.gov/2G2Jmfo

📲 Virtual lighthouse tour: youtu.be/vR3p4p2FKNU

Photo/video archive: bit.ly/2MsH2TA

🚙 Google Street View on Lighthouse Drive: goo.gl/KWi6wi

 

BLM #drone stories ⤵

- Drone flights doubled in 2018 for Department of Interior: bit.ly/2AJSDFE

- Taking flight: BLM drones go local goo.gl/eDea2p

- See a prescribed burn from the air: bit.ly/2mhgU2x

- Infrared drone video from above an Oregon wildfire goo.gl/qjJjPZ

- 4 ways drones are being used to fight wildfires: goo.gl/BaK85w

 

More Yaquina links:

👏 Rescued seal pup released: goo.gl/Y8gPFs

😮 Gray whales come close to shore at Yaquina: bit.ly/2zkum8J

Seabirds vs. birds of prey gallery: goo.gl/KWxbsH

🌅 Sunset #360video timelapse: youtu.be/mn5UmqRdQMQ

🌐 360° inside tide pools: youtu.be/1cm8f53qFXs

Snowfall and chilly winter weather make for great pile burning conditions in central Oregon, Jan. 17, 2020. BLM video: Nate LeFevre

BLM staffers burned more than 200 acres of juniper tree piles near the Prineville Lake Acres subdivision.

Despite the falling snow and cold conditions, the dried juniper piles burn easily and the fires don’t move.

“It’s a great demonstration of the weather that’s perfect for pile burning, especially when you’re burning next to homes,” said Lisa Clark, public affairs officer for the BLM Prineville District.

Thinning the juniper and burning piles is all part of reducing summer wildfire risk, a main goal of the Crook County Community Wildfire Protection Plan.

 

🔥👨‍🚒 Local news coverage on prescribed burning:

- The Oregonian: Controlled burns in Oregon: Can more fires create less smoke? ➡ goo.gl/R8D64K

- OPB: Oregon makes case for prescribed fire smoke ➡ goo.gl/UQSNVN

- Travel Oregon video: Living with wildfire: An Oregon story ➡ youtu.be/6BEBPtz8o-0

 

🔥🚒📲 Related:

- See a prescribed burn from the air: bit.ly/2mhgU2x

- Juniper economy: How to profit off an Oregon tree’s overabundance: goo.gl/XGr4NK

- #360video from inside a prescribed burn: youtu.be/nIyxTX7EEqw

- More firefighters using drones on wildfires:http://bit.ly/2DQXnew

- Women and wildfire training camp: ow.ly/WN0650xmspy

At 20.00 hours we keep two minutes silence.

for all, who pareished in wars of the past.

 

Waalsdorpervlakte herdenkt oorlogsdoden #360video

www.youtube.com/watch?v=iAER7Ngwm5Y

The common murre colony begins to lay eggs on the rocks at Yaquina Head, April 13, 2020. BLM video: Meredith Matherly

 

The common murres return to Yaquina Head every spring, making the annual trek from winter at sea to reconvene with mates for breeding and nesting season.

Yaquina Head is home to around 60,000 to 80,000 common murres during the breeding season, one of the largest murre colonies on the West Coast, according to Oregon State University research.

Before settling on the rocks to lay their single egg, they form rafts, or densely packed groups, floating together on the ocean looking for food.

Common murre are excellent swimmers and can dive up to 150 feet while foraging, but are somewhat labored in flight, according to the National Audubon Society.

These videos, captured in mid-April with a spotting scope and smartphone camera from various Yaquina Head observation decks, show the density of living conditions and the occasional tussles over positioning.

“It’s a huge colony,” explained Meredith Matherly, the BLM education program coordinator at Yaquina Head, “When you're living that close to each other, you might start to get annoyed with your housemates.”

There are more serious concerns for such a large congregation of seabirds and eggs, however.

A joint, multi-year research study at Yaquina Head found that the bald eagle resurgence was heavily impacting the murre’s ability to reproduce. During an eagle’s attack run, the distracted colony leaves eggs available for “secondary predators” like gulls, ravens and pelicans, according to research from OSU, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the BLM.

In addition to the nesting common murre colony, seal pups are beginning to appear on the rocks down below and a pair of peregrine falcons have most likely laid eggs in the cliffs above the Yaquina Head interpretive center.

These are just a few of the wildlife signs of spring the team at Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area continue to monitor.

 

Check out some more virtual adventures from one of the most popular destinations on the Oregon Coast:

- Virtual lighthouse tour: youtu.be/vR3p4p2FKNU

- Sea lion rescue at Yaquina Head: ow.ly/9rvs50yH4aW

- Google Street View on Lighthouse Drive: goo.gl/KWi6wi

- Waterspout seen at Yaquina Head: ow.ly/akHw50yeLCe

- Gray whale feeds near Yaquina Head rocks: ow.ly/NlBV50xCkNr

- Drone flyover at Yaquina Head: bit.ly/2oypbjw

- Rescued seal pup released: goo.gl/Y8gPFs

- Seabirds vs. birds of prey gallery: goo.gl/KWxbsH

- Sunset #360video timelapse: youtu.be/mn5UmqRdQMQ

- 360° inside tide pools: youtu.be/1cm8f53qFXs

- 10 ways to help the oceans in 2020: ow.ly/5cKs50xVBRR

- Photo archive: bit.ly/2KotkOG

 

#Oregon #OregonCoast #PacificNorthwest #PNW #wildlife

🏆Charlotte’s Elite Photo Booth Events Company

🎈Balloons💡Marquee Sparklers 💨Fog 🎶DJ

Photography 🎥Cinematography 🚀Drone

📍N.C.📱704-726-2124 @360PhotoBoothEvents

 

360PhotoBoothEvents.com

instagram.com/360PhotoBoothEvents

facebook.com/360PhotoBoothEvents

tiktok.com/@360PhotoBoothEvents

👰‍♂️ Weddings | ‍💼 Galas | 🎂 Birthdays

🏢 Corporate | 👩‍🏫 School | 🍼 Showers

🏆 15+ Years Experience in Video Production 🎥

O Parque das Fontes com suas 18 nascentes forma o maior conjunto de águas quentes correntes naturais do mundo. É a base e o berço do incrível complexo Rio Quente Resorts.

Localizado entre o Hotel Pousada e o Hotel Turismo fica o Parque das Fontes, um espaço de grande infra estrutura em meio a uma...

 

comerdormirviajar.com/parque-das-fontes-rio-quente-resort...

BLM volunteer Mike Popa explains what it was like to be a blacksmith on the Oregon Trail during an exhibit at the BLM museum outside Baker City, Aug. 31, 2019. BLM video: Larisa Bogardus

“Iron was a very valuable commodity at the time, especially on the trail,” said Popa while hammering away.

The blacksmith shop, a new structure built on the grounds of the National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center near the millhouse, will be open daily with live demonstrations on the museum’s calendar.

The anvil, assortment of tools and bellow came from a family in Tennessee that wanted to return the blacksmithing equipment to the West, where it originated.

The blacksmith shop had a soft opening in May of 2019. The development of the shop is thanks to support from the nonprofit Trail Tenders and the Leo Adler Foundation.

The permanent home for a blacksmithing exhibit is yet another way for visitors to experience what life was like on the frontier, said Sara LeCompte, BLM manager for the National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center.

“It’s a really good way for people to look today at how technology shapes their lives,” she said.

 

📍 Visit NHOTIC: on.doi.gov/2Jbxpqo

📅 Events calendar: on.doi.gov/2Mvbf5h

📲 Learn about the Oregon Trail: goo.gl/N8K7wf

💥 Firing a flintlock rifle: goo.gl/9Bxx63

🌐 #360video from wagon camp: goo.gl/ETRB5F

Photo/video archive: goo.gl/3gCL4q

 

You're supposed to be able to drag the view around, as opposed to having a circular video. I'll figure this thing out! This is my first video with it. :-)

An overhead view of the Yaquina Head Lighthouse roof during a drone inspection, Sept. 29, 2019. BLM photo: Shannon Bradley

 

The BLM frequently checks the exterior of Oregon’s tallest lighthouse, built in the early 1870s, to make sure the cast iron brackets are holding up to the harsh coastal conditions.

Normally, employees or contractors are forced to use binoculars for their inspections, or dangle over the edge of the 93-foot-tall lighthouse using ropes.

“We don’t have a ladder to get that high,” said Matthew Betenson, manager of the Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area.

This was the first time the agency used an aerial drone for the inspection. The flight was first thing in the morning on Sunday and only possible this time of year when it wouldn’t affect wildlife like seabirds or seals.

Use of drones, or even kites, by the public at Yaquina Head is prohibited.

This was also the first time inspectors were able to inspect the roof.

Overall, everyone was happy they didn’t see any cracking or excessive rusting on the iconic Oregon Coast lighthouse, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

“We have a duty to protect it,” said Betenson.

 

📍 Visit Yaquina Head: on.doi.gov/2G2Jmfo

📲 Virtual lighthouse tour: youtu.be/vR3p4p2FKNU

Photo/video archive: bit.ly/2MsH2TA

🚙 Google Street View on Lighthouse Drive: goo.gl/KWi6wi

 

BLM #drone stories ⤵

- Drone flights doubled in 2018 for Department of Interior: bit.ly/2AJSDFE

- Taking flight: BLM drones go local goo.gl/eDea2p

- See a prescribed burn from the air: bit.ly/2mhgU2x

- Infrared drone video from above an Oregon wildfire goo.gl/qjJjPZ

- 4 ways drones are being used to fight wildfires: goo.gl/BaK85w

 

More Yaquina links:

👏 Rescued seal pup released: goo.gl/Y8gPFs

😮 Gray whales come close to shore at Yaquina: bit.ly/2zkum8J

Seabirds vs. birds of prey gallery: goo.gl/KWxbsH

🌅 Sunset #360video timelapse: youtu.be/mn5UmqRdQMQ

🌐 360° inside tide pools: youtu.be/1cm8f53qFXs

Video of this model, rotating on this turntable.

 

It was tough to get this thing to rotate properly since it's so heavy, let alone getting it mounted on there and balanced.

Localizada em Canela, na Serra Gaúcha (RS), a Pousada Cravo e Canela é uma hospedagem exclusiva e charmosa ao estilo europeu. São apenas 12 suítes divididas em quatro categorias na histórica mansão que pertenceu à Ildo Meneguetti ex governador do Rio Grande do Sul.

A vontade de conhecer os luga...

 

comerdormirviajar.com/pousada-cravo-e-canela-rs-brasil/

This is a short clip, as I'm not sure how it will be viewed on Flickr. The full clip can be viewed on YouTube here: youtu.be/T7wm-K02ZBQ

 

***VIEWING NOTES:

*View using highest resolution possible, 1080HD.

*YouTube 360 videos are supported by Google Chrome browser and Android smartphones, and iOS 8.0 and above devices.

*Computer viewing: click and drag your mouse inside the video to navigate around it as it plays, or by touching and moving around the screen, if your monitor is touch-enabled.

*Phone/tablet viewing: By using a recently updated YouTube app on a newer device, with or without a Google Cardboard viewer. As you move the phone, if in your hands or viewer, the scene will change accordingly. Very cool!

 

This is a 360 video, first 20 minutes of a 35 minute San Antonio riverboat tour. The tour was on Dec. 29, 2015, at dusk, with Christmas lights still up and lit all along the riverfront.

I shot this video with my Ricoh Theta S camera. Other than injecting 360 metadata, it's not post processed. It's interesting to see how the camera deals w/changing light conditions.

I was sitting in the front of the boat. That's me signing to my boys, two of whom are deaf w/additional special needs. I kept looking at the Theta S as it was swaying. It was clipped to a seat, up on a selfie-stick pole.

I shot this video on a whim. Next time I would attach the stick/camera to the boat more securely, so the camera wouldn't move with the wind, or as we went over river wake. UPDATE: After rewatching the video, there's less camera shake than I expected. The camera must have self-corrected a bit.

I would also sit closer to the tour guide, to hopefully catch more of the tour narration. Even better, I'd record the narration separately and add back to the video in post, likely with Adobe Premiere. UPDATE: I'm actually surprised the audio isn't too bad. I can hear the narrator through most of the video, even over noise from my son and others. Interesting history!

The video is a bit long, but the technology is fascinating to me! Lessons learned, I look forward to making more 360 videos with the Theta S, maybe with a bit more planning. ;)

  

This is a 360° Video.

Motorcycle ride on a beautiful autumn sunny day.

Have Fun! :-)

 

#Motorcycle #Motor #Cycle #Ride #360 #360° #360Video #Beautiful #Autumn #November #Sunny #Day #Retouch #Fast #x5 #SpeedUp

A young sea lion makes its way back to the ocean after getting stuck on a pedestrian platform at Quarry Cove, part of Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area, March 8, 2020.

BLM video: Meredith Matherly

 

A young sea lion ventured to a pubic viewing platform Sunday at Yaquina Head before being gently ushered back towards the ocean.

Of all the wildlife viewable at Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area, sea lions are a rarity and more commonly seen near the Newport bayfront, according to Meredith Matherly, a BLM staffer who captured video and helped with the operation.

“We’ve never seen one walk up the ramp and be all the way up there,” said Matherly, referring to the pedestrian access area for Quarry Cove.

The normal strategy for marine mammal interaction at Yaquina Head is to put up clear signs and do nothing, said Matherly.

“We usually just leave them alone, see what they do,” she said.

Unfortunately on Sunday, some visitors did not heed the signs and ventured very close to the sea lion.

Due to the human interaction and receding tide, Yaquina Head staffers decided to call the Oregon Marine Mammal Stranding Network for help.

A stranding coordinator with the network, part of Oregon State University’s Marine Mammal Institute, responded and was able to coax the nearly 1-year-old sea lion back to the beach.

From there, onlookers could watch as it made its way back to the water.

Marine mammals are protected by federal law and it is illegal to disturb, handle or feed them.

Sea lions are capable of biting and certainly could harm a person, said Matherly. Another concern is that the wild animals become too accustomed to people and begin frequenting human-populated areas more often.

With seal pup season approaching in May for the Oregon Coast, it is a good time to remind everyone to steer clear of all marine mammals.

Seal mothers, in particular, often leave their pups unattended on beaches while foraging. If the seal mothers see humans near the pups, they may abandon them.

To report an injured, stranded or dead marine mammal on the Oregon Coast, call the Oregon Marine Mammal Stranding Network: 541-270-6830.

To file a report for the entire West Coast, call the West Coast Marine Mammal Stranding Network: 1-866-767-6114.

 

- More information from OMMSN: ow.ly/QA6850yH2H9

- What is a stranding, via NOAA Fisheries Service: ow.ly/xdPM50yH2IO

 

📍 Visit Yaquina Head: on.doi.gov/2G2Jmfo

🌐 Virtual lighthouse tour: youtu.be/vR3p4p2FKNU

📲 Google Street View on Lighthouse Drive: goo.gl/KWi6wi

 

More from Yaquina Head:

Waterspout seen at Yaquina Head: ow.ly/akHw50yeLCe

🐋 Gray whale feeds near Yaquina Head rocks: ow.ly/NlBV50xCkNr

☁ Drone flyover at Yaquina Head: bit.ly/2oypbjw

😮 Rescued seal pup released: goo.gl/Y8gPFs

Seabirds vs. birds of prey gallery: goo.gl/KWxbsH

🌅 Sunset #360video timelapse: youtu.be/mn5UmqRdQMQ

🌐 360° inside tide pools: youtu.be/1cm8f53qFXs

♻ 10 ways to help the oceans in 2020: ow.ly/5cKs50xVBRR

Photo archive: bit.ly/2KotkOG

🏆Charlotte’s Elite Photo Booth Events Company

🎈Balloons💡Marquee Sparklers 💨Fog 🎶DJ

Photography 🎥Cinematography 🚀Drone

📍N.C.📱704-726-2124 @360PhotoBoothEvents

 

360PhotoBoothEvents.com

instagram.com/360PhotoBoothEvents

facebook.com/360PhotoBoothEvents

tiktok.com/@360PhotoBoothEvents

👰‍♂️ Weddings | ‍💼 Galas | 🎂 Birthdays

🏢 Corporate | 👩‍🏫 School | 🍼 Showers

🏆 15+ Years Experience in Video Production 🎥

O fluxo de dinheiro que flui para as startups de realidade virtual ganhou um novo impulso. A Jaunt, startup sediada em Palo Alto (Califórnia), acaba de receber um investimento de 65 milhões de dólares da Walt Disney Company e investidores da Europa e da China. Mais do que ser uma boa notícia para...

 

mestredo360.com/disney-investe-us-65-milhoes-na-jaunt-e-e...

S3DA Design delivered this house interior design project from concept to completion. In a Brief with the client from Santa Barbara, CA

#interior #design #360video #architect #architecture

s3da-design.com/projects/house-interior-design-360-video-ca/

I purchased a proper bicycle handlebar mount. So much better than having to hold the improvised mount in the previous photo. I'm still working through some technology issues to upload a proper video where you can pan around as it goes.

🏆Charlotte’s Elite Photo Booth Events Company

🎈Balloons💡Marquee Sparklers 💨Fog 🎶DJ

Photography 🎥Cinematography 🚀Drone

📍N.C.📱704-726-2124 @360PhotoBoothEvents

 

360PhotoBoothEvents.com

instagram.com/360PhotoBoothEvents

facebook.com/360PhotoBoothEvents

tiktok.com/@360PhotoBoothEvents

👰‍♂️ Weddings | ‍💼 Galas | 🎂 Birthdays

🏢 Corporate | 👩‍🏫 School | 🍼 Showers

🏆 15+ Years Experience in Video Production 🎥

Moon close-up seen through a spotting scope at Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area on the Oregon Coast, May 3, 2020. BLM photo: Meredith Matherly

 

Check out some more virtual adventures from one of the most popular destinations on the Oregon Coast:

- Virtual lighthouse tour: youtu.be/vR3p4p2FKNU

- Sea lion rescue at Yaquina Head: ow.ly/9rvs50yH4aW

- Google Street View on Lighthouse Drive: goo.gl/KWi6wi

- Waterspout seen at Yaquina Head: ow.ly/akHw50yeLCe

- Gray whale feeds near Yaquina Head rocks: ow.ly/NlBV50xCkNr

- Drone flyover at Yaquina Head: bit.ly/2oypbjw

- Rescued seal pup released: goo.gl/Y8gPFs

- Seabirds vs. birds of prey gallery: goo.gl/KWxbsH

- Sunset #360video timelapse: youtu.be/mn5UmqRdQMQ

- 360° inside tide pools: youtu.be/1cm8f53qFXs

- 10 ways to help the oceans in 2020: ow.ly/5cKs50xVBRR

- Photo archive: bit.ly/2KotkOG

A rare sight on the Oregon Coast: Snowfall and slight accumulation at Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area, Feb. 9, 2019. BLM photo/video: Meredith Matherly

📍 Visit Yaquina Head: goo.gl/FVw1pA

Seabird breeding season drama at Yaquina Head: goo.gl/KWxbsH

🌐 #360video inside tide pools: youtu.be/1cm8f53qFXs

📲 Virtual lighthouse tour: youtu.be/vR3p4p2FKNU

🚙 Google Street View on Lighthouse Drive: goo.gl/KWi6wi

👏 Rescued seal pup released: goo.gl/Y8gPFs

😮 Gray whales come close to shore at Yaquina: goo.gl/opHgAi

🌅 Sunset #360video timelapse: youtu.be/mn5UmqRdQMQ

1 3 5 6 7 ••• 60 61