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On Location
Elbow Cay, Abaco, The Bahamas
Tiny Elbow Cay (pronounced "key"), just off
the eastern coast of Great Abaco Island in the Bahamas,
set the stage for filming Dolphins. Located in the Bermuda
Triangle and surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean and Sea
of Abaco, Elbow Cay's crystalline, turquoise waters were
ideal for filming Atlantic spotted dolphins in the large-format.
The clear waters are also ideal for observing and studying
dolphins. Even though the Bahamas are relatively flat,
the shallow waters surrounding the islands offer some
protection from storms. These shallow waters also provide
dolphins with a place for socializing, rest, and protection
from deep-water sharks and the whims of oceanic waters.
Often the dolphins are seen heading out in the late afternoon
to feed in deep water. |
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Following are notes from the film
crew:
We should be on vacation! Working in the Bahamas? We must
be nuts! This location is spectacular. The three-mile
long and narrow island absolutely sparkles in the blue-green
waters of the Little Bahamas Bank. Only 350 people call
Elbow Cay's Hope Town home, and it wasn't long before
everyone in town knew we were here. Nineteenth century,
pastel-colored cottages line Hope Town's very narrow streets.
Charming, unless you need to transport five tons of camera
equipment through streets that only permit bicycles and
electric golf carts! Fortunately, our production crew
wrangled help from the locals on foot and even secured
use of the garbage trucks on their days off. We didn't
go to film school for nothin'!
It's not the heat, it's the humidity! Nope. It's the heat.
Did we mention the heat? We're experiencing record temperatures
here. 100 degrees Fahrenheit! Fortunately, our cooperative,
energetic and smiling scientists are keeping their cool.
Out there in that beautiful water they don't look uncomfortable
at all.
We got some great shots of dolphins leaping behind and
next to the boat. We shot super slow-motion -- up to 96
frames per second -- so the audience should really be
able to see how amazing and beautiful these animals are.
If we can't be dolphins playing in the water, or scientists
happily studying dolphins, maybe being a sweaty film producer
isn't so bad after all. |
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Patagonia,
Argentina
For the final sequences of Dolphins, the MFF film crew
journeyed to Puerto Piramides, located in the Patagonia
region of Argentina, to film scientists studying dusky
dolphins in the waters of Golfo Nuevo. An old fishing
town, Puerto Piramides is a small village with one main
road, about 200 residents, one motel and a few cabanas
for rent. Visitors can take tour boats for dolphin-watching
trips but there is no public swimming allowed with the
dolphins. Our film crew and scientists obtained a special
permit to film and study the dolphins and were accompanied
by a conservation officer from the area.
Puerto Piramides proved to be an incredible location,
but it was affectionately referred to by our crew as "two
hours from nowhere" for its remote locale. It was
a challenge to film because of the winds, which were more
like hair-raising gales capable of making a placid sea
fraught with foam in under thirty minutes. Between the
wind and the cold water, the location proved a stark contrast
to the shoot in the Bahamas. |
Following are notes from Dr. Kathleen Dudzinski:
Patagonia reminds me of west Texas...very dry and flat with
short and spiny-looking bushes. I very much enjoyed the scenes,
especially since we were on the water each day.
The dusky dolphins are FAST! The spotted and bottlenose dolphins
I have studied seem like old folks compared to the speedy
duskies. The anchovies were not as prevalent as expected but
the team did observe feeding on several fish groups -- just
not gigantic aggregations that seem to invite not only dolphins
but sea lions, penguins and birds of a variety of species
numbering in the thousands. Being able to chat with Bernd,
Alejandro and others about the duskies' underwater actions,
immediately after observing their behaviors, made what I do,
my work, feel much less isolating as compared to the work
of my colleagues. The dusky dolphins were very inquisitive
and came very close. Many have at least some sort of body
marking or scarring to facilitate individual identification.
WAY COOL! I definitely can gather lots of data on communication
among individuals and already have data to compare with my
work on spotted and bottlenose dolphins...my trip was a complete
success!
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