[embedplusvideo height=”371″ width=”610″ standard=”http://www.youtube.com/v/lIrtjVDhjQ0?fs=1″ vars=”ytid=lIrtjVDhjQ0&width=610&height=371&start=&stop=&rs=w&hd=0&autoplay=0&react=1&chapters=&notes=” id=”ep5239″ /]

 

During my recent two-week visit to the Masai Mara of Kenya, I took over 3,700 photographs. While several of the individual photographs are among my favorite that I’ve taken, I discovered, quite by accident, that the photographs could be combined into a video to achieve a cinematic effect.

This filmic quality is produced by the high frame rate of my camera (~8 fps), as well as my tendency to take way too many images of particular things (like hyenas and sleeping lions).  What’s most interesting to me is that, to my mind, the most beautiful parts of the film are often not the ones that contain the best photographs. I suspect that this is because each still image must carry the entire story of its corresponding moment, while the video format allows each story to play out over a few moments.

For more information about the hyenas in this video, please check out Queens of the Masai Mara, published in the Winter 2012 issue of Amherst Magazine.