Love it! Mesmerizing! I know this is a result of a ton of patience, diligence and hard work; you do things with such excellence. Well done as always, brother!
you make me remember Arizona.. It has been so many decades and it wasn't the best time in my life.. But there were times of beauty and splendor that just took my breath away... I especially remember it had not rained in the area I was in for at least two years then one day the rains came and the desert looked like a garden that next day.. That cheered me up greatly.. You have a way to make the weather look like a beautiful living thing Mike.. thank you for all the pleasure you bring to so many.. Carry on!
I'm not sure if I come for the weather and spectacular cinematography and stay for the music...or if I come for the music and stay for the incredible display of nature...either way. Thank you Mike O. and all your team for sharing this with us.
This is yet another beautiful experience that's been provided by Olbinski. Sometimes I get high and watch Olbinski's artworks whilst experimenting with different music. Those times are often very enjoyable.
Your Time Lapse video is simply awesome! I love the weather here in AZ! Monsoon season can bring beauty to the desert just as you have done in time-lapse Haboobs!
Having moved away from the valley in the last few months, these awesome live weather events are going to be missed. So glad that I, through your amazing talent, will still get to see them with the accompaniment of wonderful music. Thank you.
I loved this. It reminded me of when I was stationed in the Middle East. We would see the sand approaching in the distance from the windows in the side door of the clinic. Word would spread to make sure your car windows were rolled up. The sand never blotted out the sun. The view through the windows was just glowing yellowish beige. I’d forgotten about those memories from ‘95-‘96. Thank you. :)
Mike is - beyond any doubt - the best weather film maker today. His work has a cinematic and aesthetic quality that is the result of passion and incredibly hard work.
A man with a talent for being in the wrong place at the right time! You consistently captured beautiful blue and cloud formation skies turned into desolate, monochromatic dust; what labor of abject ugliness; well done!
@@MikeOlbinski You also are good humored! : ) Sometimes public comments on the Splinter Net can also function like a dust storm: What was once clear and beautiful left unspoken becomes hopelessly obscured in the dust of opinion. I should copyright that perhaps when it becomes a pop song lyric : )
Ah okay! Yeah, I compiled them earlier this year I think after I realized I had ten years worth of haboob footage haha...also to put a nice reel together of most of my best dust storms! Of course, new films coming out this year with a bunch more dust clips :)
I get it with the title you chose. Thought I recognized one shot at that curving intersection from a previous vid. Then it hit me that you must have been doing nostalgic flashbacks in this vid.
@@MikeOlbinski all is well. But we never get to see such amazing landscapes. So thanks for this. Your video's are inspiration to come and visit the USA, and take time to travel around there.
Always love your videos Mike! I'd love to see the haboob from an elevated position, so here's a new idea for a cool time lapse: get two or three hefty drones. Send one in the air and capture until the battery is about to die then send another up in it's spot and continue the shots, replace the battery in the first drone and repeat until the wind is too strong. I believe with good software, you'd be able to get the pictures to line up and to account for wind shake and slight movement.. I think the results would be spectacular. Ps: I lived in PHX for 30 years and was always memorized by the monsoons. Thanks for posting these!
I love it !! The music is absolutely perfect for this video. Greentings from Mendoza - Argentina, Hopefully one day, you can come to film the storms here.
Great montage, and incredible camera work! I just wish in the editing you would have waited for a few more seconds AFTER the sand and dust reached the camera before cutting to the next scene in each case, so we could see the blackout effect for a moment before the next segment started.
@@MikeOlbinski , good point. For some reason, I was thinking (hoping) it was a remote camera set up where you (and preferably the camera) were protected from the elements.
Saw this in Kuwait as we were driving into Iraq.... one of the most awe inspiring moments in my life. It was like something out of old tales,the vengeful God of the sands rising against us.