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kerry_grim

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Posts posted by kerry_grim

  1. Ding Darling is part of the National Wildlife Refuge System administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife

    Service, not part of National Park Service.

     

    But that brings up a whole new area where you can find information. I am not familiar with Florida but

    suspect there are numerous Nation Wildlife Refuges. They all maintain lists of wildlife.

  2. I am not sure it really matters what lens you use if your focus is not dead-on. Use live view and highest

    magnification for focusing.

     

    My preference is to include something other than just a moon, preferably something natural, but I really like

    Shun's moon photos, a lot more interesting than just the moon.

  3. Laura's comments were excellent.

     

    I do think people should enjoy nature and wildlife on its own whether you get a shot or not. I don't feel the

    must-have need for photos so do not mind watching instead of pushing the animal to flee.

     

    Ask yourself "would I be there enjoying the wildlife if I did not have a camera?" If you are there only for the

    photos, maybe you should be doing something else. Don't let your camera be a crutch. Nature first, photos

    second.

  4. They do look sharp and probably would be a little sharper with a tripod. But I think the main thing is the

    depth of field is very shallow at f2.8 and the lens may not be its sharpest at near maximum aperture

    either. Use a tripod and shoot f8.

     

    Don't necessarily believe the so called handheld rule that would suggest 1/100 second is acceptable for

    sharpness of an 85mm lens. Even 1/200 might not be enough. But you need a tripod to prove that to

    yourself.

     

    However, as suggested, lack of apparent sharpness may be in processing so you need to share that

    detail with us. Or, perhaps make the RAW file available and have someone process it to see the results.

     

    Sometimes my pictures do not look very sharp. It is likely the monitor because when I process to be a

    full screen background on my 21.5 monitor, much more detail is visible and they are extremely sharp.

  5. I agree with Ed Avis 24 f1.4 and 35 f1.4 are great lenses, too big and expensive for use as a general

    purpose single focal length lens.

     

    The 24 f2.8 pancake is a much better selection. My choice, hands down would be the very excellent EF 28

    f2.8 IS lens (with a crop camera). The IS is very useful, excellent quality lens and about one-third the cost

    of the two f1.4 lenses.

  6. I believe you are saying...buying an older body as a spare. Then you have two old bodies. Seems it would

    be better to pony up to a new body you like and can afford and then consider the 7D as your back-up.

  7. I recall Galen Rowell saying he could have used just a 24 and 85 for almost all his photos. He did

    adventure and climbing photography so that was appropriate to his situation. I often carry just a 24 and 100

    macro both with IS and I would not do without IS.

     

    It does seem that the 24-105 would be an ideal range in one lens. Having returned from Olympic National

    Park, that would have been the perfect lens for scenics.

  8. I would look at the new Tamron lenses which appear to be excellent, a bit slower, but more compact than

    faster lenses and cost is very reasonable. One particular lens I am thinking of is: Tamron SP 35mm f/1.8 Di

    VC USD. See canon rumors.com for an excellent comparison wth the Canon 35 f2 IS lens.

     

    The Sigmas do excellent. They are excellent quality, but, as a result are much larger and more expensive.

    To me, even at f2...with IS...it is a fast lens. You really, really pay to get that maximum amount of light or

    minimum focus for a 1.4 lens. Fine if you need it, but with todays excellent lowlight cameras, i don't see it necessary. But,

    I speak only for myself. Your mileage may vary.

  9. I would suggest going with a full frame body (lower-end full frame would be excellent) and open your world to a variety of prime lenses and zooms. Shoot RAW to get the most out of photos, particularly shadow and white balance. HDR may not be necessary. You can straighten crooked walls, doorways, windows, or buildings themselves in a post processing program such as Lightroom.

     

    Equally important would be a tripod, not only to allow you the sharpest photos but also to slow you down to carefully frame you photos.

  10. At this time of the year, in Alabama you would have only one species...Ruby-throated. In winter you are

    likely to have at least the western-nesting Rufous Hummingbird.

     

    Typically, here in Pennsylvania, there are a fair number of hummingbirds that visit feeder during

    migration, then many people will say "where are all my hummingbirds". They are here, just in lower

    numbers and there are wild flowers in bloom plus insects, so there is less of a need for nectar.

    Additionally, when hummingbirds migrate, they will drink and drink from a feeder as their metabolism is

    very high. Put these combined reason together and it adds up to less feeder visits during the nesting

    season which is now.

     

    I've read about one hummingbird banded in Pennsylvania and was recaptured in Alabama less than a

    day later. That is incredible!

     

    Visit the American Birding Association http://birding.aba.org/ in click on a state to see a listserv about

    birds. To post questions to a forum, you have to join the listserv.

  11. Low light: mirror lockup, manual focus, live view, remote release or self-timer in a pinch. Keep ISO low.

    Use tripod at minimum height.

     

    I've used a 40D with 70-200, ISO 100 in very low light, manual focus (didn't even use live view) and nearly

    all of these photos come out tack sharp.

     

    It does should like you are doing everything correctly, but the focus may be off. Auto-focus is supposed to

    make things easier, but for this kind of photography it is making it more difficult. Try live view and low ISO.

    There is NO reason to use ISO 800 if you are using a tripod unless you have a moving subject.

     

    The 7D should be fine and certainly better than my 40D. Can you post a couple of photos?

  12. Always thought it interesting that a person is in a cult for using a Mac. I heard the same thing when I

    owned a Honda Accord.

     

    My dictionary in my iMac gives (other that religious cults) two definitions:

    1. a misplaced or excessive admiration for a particular person or thing.

    2. a person or thing that is popular or fashionable, especially among a particular section of society.

     

    I bough an iMac because I thought they were better. I never by anything because of being fashionable. So

    if someone says I am in a cult, so be it. I don't take that as an insult or complement.

  13. L.L. Bean Traveler Vest:

     

    http://www.llbean.com/llb/shop/63716?feat=vest-SR0&page=l-l-bean-traveler-vest

     

    I searched for months and months for a decent vest and found little but cheaply made Chinese vests.

    Some looked designed well but poorly made, did not hold up well. Cabela's has many, I live near their

    store and they have crap. Custom made vests are overly expensive and (at least for my purposes)

    unnecessary.

     

    So I found this vest at $100 at Beans and exactly what I was looking for. More expensive than China manufactured

    vests. it is made in Vietnam but extremely well. I have used it almost daily for a year and it has held up

    perfectly. A few zippered pockets and others with buttons. It looks like it has gone up $19 since last year,

    but I would buy another in a heartbeat.

  14. I use Canon 6D (full frame) but would use similar gear if I used nikon.

     

    Outdoors, if using minimum equipment I will carry a 24 and 100 macro both with image stabliization.

     

    Outdoors scenic location (like national parks in Utah), hiking: 24, 50 macro, 17-40, 100, 70-200 in a

    backpack and RRS carbon fiber tripod I hand carry.

     

    The 70-200 is a beast, weighs 3 lbs and I carry in field only when a good chance of using it. Otherwise,

    usually carry in the car.

     

    Depending on the type of outdoor photography I do (like events), a 24-70 or 24-105 would be very

    useful, but I would not not use it enough to justify the cost.

     

    I also carry 8x42 Leica binoculars as I am a very did birder. They are heavy and I may eventually get a

    lighter pair (8x32) when doing more photography than birding.

     

    Galen Rowell, world-reknown adventure photographer said he could have done almost all his

    photography with just a 24 and 85 lens. However, he did own many lenses.

     

    Everyones choice is personal. There is a lot to be said for the statement that the best lens is the one on

    the camera. On a personal level, I would not carry three zoom lenses…two zooms max and supplement

    with primed lenses. Some people think ever single millimeter must be covered and I don’t go along with

    that idea at all.

     

    A good tripod is essential in my opinion. If it gets in the way of enjoying the outdoors, leave it in the car.

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