Careers in the Marine and Maritime Field
Whale Watch Videographer by Christopher Hamilton I live in a little beach town on Cape Cod, and almost everyone I know here works in the tourism industry. Some work at restaurants, some sell t-shirts, and others work out on the water on charter boats that take people out for a few hours to sail, go fishing, or take a sightseeing tour. When I was a kid in this same town, we found all sorts of ways to earn money from the tourists-selling seashells, diving for coins at the pier, even using our bikes as taxis. Business is all about supply and demand. Somebody needs or wants something (the demand), and, if others can supply it, they can charge a fee for it. Sometimes the "it" is a thing, such as a t-shirt or a hotdog, and other times the "it" is a service, such as a taxi ride or providing entertainment. We have a special kind of sightseeing tour here, where the "sights" are the whales that come to feed just off rhe coast of 4 Cape Cod in the summer. Whale watching is a big business here. Almost everyone brings a camera and takes lots of pictures, but part of the thrill of seeing whales is watching them as they swim,
I started my business with a friend who knew all about videography; she taught me how to shoot video and we starred the business together. We made a lot of mistakes in the beginning, but enough people wanted our videos (the demand) rhar we kept doing it (the supply).
feed, and even leap all the way our of the water. The best way ro share rhar is with video, and that's what I do for a business-I am a whale watch videographer. When people go on a whale watch trip, I shoot a video of their experience, and rhe passengers can get a DVD of the whales they saw.
'" the Wild ProductiOHS, at
Chris Hamilton
We now film trips on several whale watch boats on Cape Cod, and I hire other people to work on these boats each summer. I look for three things in a person when I hire them: they have to be responsible (because they have to work hard and handle money), they have to be easy to get alongwirh (because they work with customers and the crew on the boars), and they have to be able to learn videograp hy. I can teach almost anybody good video skills, but I can't reach people to be responsible or be easy to get along with if that isn't rhe kind of person they are already. These two qualities can bring yo u many opportunities in life, regardless of what yo u decide to do. As a whale watch videographer, I get to work outdoors-on boars and with whales. Sometimes I feel lucky, but luck had little to do with it; I made this happen by taking a chance with a good idea, partnering with rhe right person, and working really hard. I am fortunate to be among the dwindling number of people in my town who sti ll get to work on rhe water. Years ago, !ors of people in my town worked on rhe water, fishing and-a long rime ago-whaling. Today, I go to sea with rhe greatgrandchildren of the m en who once hunted the great whales. When we find whales, however, we shoot them with video cameras instead of harpoon guns. J. Learn more about Chris's company,
SEA HISTORY 138, SPRING 2012
www.inrhewildproductions.com; and to go whale watching from Cape Cod, check our www.whales.net and www.whalewatch.com.