That is taller than One Franklin Square in Washington, DC, which stands 64 metres (210 feet) high.
Consider those proportions. Now consider the brave man -- photographer Ryan Deboodt -- who explored it with a DJI Phantom 2 quadcopter, a Canon 6D DSLR and EF 16-35mm f4 wide-angle lens, and a GoPro Hero4 Black to create a breathtaking video of this natural wonder for Oxalis, the company that will be taking guided tours into the cave.
He took his equipment to film at three different locations -- the entrance of the cave, and two dolines -- sinkholes that have formed into natural skylights -- at 2.5 kilometres and 3.5 kilometres into the cave.
That is taller than One Franklin Square in Washington, DC, which stands 64 metres (210 feet) high.Consider those proportions. Now consider the brave man -- photographer Ryan Deboodt -- who explored it with a DJI Phantom 2 quadcopter, a Canon 6D DSLR and EF 16-35mm f4 wide-angle lens, and a GoPro Hero4 Black to create a breathtaking video of this natural wonder for Oxalis, the company that will be taking guided tours into the cave.He took his equipment to film at three different locations -- the entrance of the cave, and two dolines -- sinkholes that have formed into natural skylights -- at 2.5 kilometres and 3.5 kilometres into the cave.
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