VelocAI logoVelocAI Blog

Dual Camera creator workflow

Dual Camera Garden Pest Inspection Workflow

Published June 04, 2026 | Topic: Dual Camera garden pest inspection

Plant problems are easy to misread from one camera angle. A close shot shows spots on a leaf, but not which plant row it came from; a wide shot shows the bed, but hides aphids, mildew, eggs, and dry soil crust.

TL;DR: Use Dual Camera for garden pest checks when the review needs two views at once: close leaf detail for symptoms and a wider plant view for location, watering pattern, sun exposure, and treatment notes.

Why use two views?

The close view shows the symptom: eggs, webbing, holes, yellowing, powder, or curled edges. The wider view shows whether the problem sits near shade, crowding, dry soil, or one weak section of the bed.

What should the first plant show?

Start with the plant name, row, pot, or bed corner. Then film the top leaf, underside, stem joint, soil surface, and neighboring plant so the later review can connect damage with location.

How should gardeners record?

Move plant by plant, not symptom by symptom. Keep the wide view steady enough to show row order, and pause the close view under each leaf before naming what changed.

When is one camera enough?

Use one camera for a quick bloom update or harvest note. Use Dual Camera when the clip may guide pruning, isolation, watering changes, or pest treatment.

MomentPlant viewLeaf view
First symptomRow, pot, bed corner, and neighboring plantsLeaf spots, holes, eggs, webbing, or mildew
Water checkMulch, drainage, shade, and crowdingSoil crust, stem base, and wilted edges
Treatment noteWhich plant was isolated or trimmedExact leaf or stem area treated

How do you make the clip useful?

  • Name the plant, row, pot, or bed corner before filming symptoms.
  • Show the underside of at least one affected leaf.
  • Keep the wider view steady enough to preserve plant order.
  • Record soil moisture clues before adding water or treatment.
  • End with one note about what to check again tomorrow.

What should users ask?

What should Dual Camera show in a garden inspection clip?
Show plant location in one view and leaf, stem, soil, or pest detail in the other.

Why is the wider plant view useful?
It shows whether symptoms cluster near shade, crowding, dry soil, or a specific row.

Should garden inspection clips be heavily edited?
No. Trim walking time if needed, but keep plant order and symptom close-ups together.

Useful references

Bottom line: Dual Camera helps gardeners keep plant location and leaf-level symptoms together before a small pest issue spreads across the bed.