Xenedis
28-11-2012, 8:14am
Will Burrard-Lucas, a wildlife photographer in Africa, has conceived something he calls the BeetleCam Project.
Simply put, he built a remote-controlled buggy on which he could mount a DSLR in order to get "unique close-up, ground level photographs of African wildlife".
More information and photos here:
http://www.burrard-lucas.com/beetlecam
Here's one of his images, depicting a lioness at very close proximity to the camera:
http://500px.com/photo/15445449
And one of his first BeetleCam images, depicting a nine-month-old leopard cub:
http://500px.com/photo/13215789
More of his images are here:
http://500px.com/wildlife
Very cool indeed.
I wish I had one of those when we were recently in Africa. It would have been fantastic to plant a camera right in front of a leopard and get a wide-angle shot from the ground.
Simply put, he built a remote-controlled buggy on which he could mount a DSLR in order to get "unique close-up, ground level photographs of African wildlife".
More information and photos here:
http://www.burrard-lucas.com/beetlecam
Here's one of his images, depicting a lioness at very close proximity to the camera:
http://500px.com/photo/15445449
And one of his first BeetleCam images, depicting a nine-month-old leopard cub:
http://500px.com/photo/13215789
More of his images are here:
http://500px.com/wildlife
Very cool indeed.
I wish I had one of those when we were recently in Africa. It would have been fantastic to plant a camera right in front of a leopard and get a wide-angle shot from the ground.