45 Days in the Himalayas - A Time-Lapse Film

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Uploaded by on Jan 16, 2012

http://www.findinglife.ca
A stunning timelapse film from the Himalayas. Be sure to watch it in HD!

Imagine living in a tent at 5700M above sea level for weeks on end. Your goal is to ascend the 6th highest mountain in the world. You've recently evacuated your climbing partner who battled pulmonary edema. He survives because of you and your team's efforts and you remain alone in the Himalayas with a small team of Sherpa men to support you. While trying to stay warm in your little yellow North Face tent, all that you hear is the silence of the Himalayan skies...and the incessant clicking of your DSLR cameras!

'45 Days in the Himalayas' was shot this past October in Nepal and Tibet.

Music by: Unknown (I'm sorry!) I'm digging it up.

Shot and edited by Elia Saikaly
elia@findinglife.ca

Special thanks to my Sherpa team and Jeremie Stall Paquet
for helping with some of the set-ups.

GEAR:

Canon 7d and T3i
Canon 70-200mm 2.8
Canon 24-70mm 2.8
Canon 28mm 1.8
Tokina 11-17 2.8

Images processed (while sitting in a tent in a down jacket) using Adobe LightRoom. Edited in FCP7 on a Macbook Pro.

It is difficult for people understand what it is like to shoot high above the clouds in these low oxygen environments until they experience it for themselves.

At 1:57 you can see the climbers attempting the 8201M summit at 3am in sub-zero temperatures. Yes, those little floating lights are people!

In the end, I remained alone with my Sherpa climbing partner and stood on top of the 6th highest mountain on Earth. We were the only one's to make the summit that day. My oxygen bottle failed and I struggled for 7 hours before realizing I had a defective bottle. Relentless, I carried on until we reached the top at 8201M above sea level. Glorious sight of Mt. Everest from the top just 20 km away.

Here is the blog: bit.ly/prytXB

The final timelapse of the setting moon is of the The Nangpa La, a traditional trade route between Tibet and Nepal. My tent was situated across from the pass.

My work is in support of my non-profit organization called Findinglife. Check out some of the work we do to inspire youth to create positive change.

http://www.findinglife.ca
http://www.findinglifefilms.com

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Uploader Comments (eliasaikaly)

  • How does this only have 218 views?! It's great!

  • @KoltMekka Thanks! We're asking ourselves the same question. No idea...

  • when you find the music please let me know!!!

    btw.... amazing video.... i hope that one day i get the privilege to see the himalayas in person

  • @lennyjudd123 Data Romance - Seasonal section is the song. All you have to do is book a ticket and plan your trip. That's the only thing stopping you from seeing them in person. ;)

  • The movement is done in post production. It's hundreds of still images put together as quicktime movies. Those images are individually processed (in this case) and made into movies which are then imported into an editing program. Because the resolution is so high, you can digitally 'move around' in editing while retaining the quality. The other way is to use a motorized slider which I did not have unfortunately. Do you shoot?

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  • its probably best video so far about himalayas.... i can't help myself watching it again and again..great job guys! keep it Up! I could see planets at 1:51 :D.. proud to be Nepalese :)

  • How do you make the setting move ?? is that an edit after having shot all those photos??

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