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Thursday, December 27, 2007

Tripod Conundrums

Oh, how I should have listened to the wise photographers who told me to invest in a good tripod and ballhead from the get-go!

I have a few pressing issues that affect my tripod/head purchase decisions right now:

1. Limited budget. I really can't spend a whole lot of money on a good, professional tripod and head at the moment. I'd like to stay under $100, if possible.

2. I currently have two tripods: one is a cheap retail store tripod and pan-head. It appears that I could remove the existing head and mount another if I wanted to. The other is a 20 year old Slik Universal U212 (at least, that's what the leg says) whose head appears useless to me. However, the tripod itself may be useful. (It was my dad's old tripod that I think he used with a video camera, many moons ago).

I'm thinking of just getting a decent entry level ballhead and using one of the two existing tripods. The cheap tripod is light enough to carry with me hiking in search of birds, but is a bit flimsy. The old tripod looks sturdy as all heck, but weighs a ton and wouldn't work well from a portability standpoint - at least not for hiking.

I'd love to go for a Bogen Manfrotto tripod and head setup, but those run closer to $200 even at the entry level. At the same time, I don't want to spend $100 on something I'll end up throwing in the closet and not using.

I need something that will support at least 6 lbs. My spotting scope weighs close to 4 lbs. My camera weighs a little over a pound, plus the adapter and T-mount. 6 lbs gives me plenty of wiggle room. My cheap Sunpak does support up to 6.6 lbs, so I may be able to use those legs with a new head.

I think a good compromise may be to get an entry level Bogen ballhead and use one of my existing tripods. Then, if the existing tripods don't work out, I can cough up the rest of the cash and get a Manfrotto tripod to go with the ballhead.

Does anybody have any tripod advice for a struggling birder/photographer who wants to do some digiscoping on a budget? :)

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

The Digiscope Setup

Santa brought me a spotting scope and camera adapter for Christmas :) w00t!

There haven't been many birds out today to test it out, but I did get a few shots this morning. Here's a female house finch:

Female house finch

These small birds fill about half the frame with the magnification of the spotting scope, versus maybe 1/10th of the frame with my 300mm Canon lens. I think the shots are likely more crisp out of the 300mm lens, but with the extreme cropping required for close-ups, distortion occurs. It's nice to be able to preserve most of the detail of the shot even after cropping by using the digiscope setup.

I need to do some research on the best camera settings when using a scope. I'm currently using aperture priority mode, so that the camera chooses the correct shutter speed. The aperture shows as 00 on the camera, and of course it is manual focus as no lens is attached to the camera. Focusing is done via the scope.

The camera attaches to the scope via a camera adapter and a T-ring in place of the camera lens.

It's a little awkward trying to look downward into the camera viewfinder. I can see why people have said that it's easier to digiscope with a point-n-shoot camera, particularly one with the flip-out rotating LCD screen for those odd angles. I bought that adapter for the scope, too, and will try it with my Canon Powershot A70.

For working indoors (shooting through the window), I think the dSLR setup is OK. It's probably a bit clumsy in the field, but I'll have to try it. The point-n-shoot setup will likely be easier for field shooting.

The pictures I've taken so far have tended toward over-exposed. I'm shooting in RAW, so fixing that is simple in Adobe Lightroom, but I'd like to figure out how to get it right in-camera. Unfortunately, there are no test subjects in my tree right now, as landscapers are outside doing who-knows-what, scaring the birds away.

I'm very encouraged by the shots I've been able to get so far! It will take some practice to learn to maneuver the scope on the tripod (I also see now why all of the photography books I read encouraged spending money on a good ball-head tripod... my $35 3-way pan head is hideously clumsy and difficult to maneuver. It's fine for taking family portraits, but very difficult to use when trying to follow a bird moving around in a tree). A good tripod will likely be my next semi-major purchase.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Birds in Motion

"Hey there, rabbit."

Anyone recognize that from the movie, "Before Sunrise?" One of my favorite movies of all time.

Bunny!

Found a bunny checking out my yard this morning, which was fun because there weren't a whole lotta birds out today - maybe because the snow and ice had been melting overnight. Today was warm too (I think it might have hit 40 degrees!) Maybe that's why the birds were hardly around this morning. Mr. Rabbit was in my yard when I got home from work tonight too - he seems to visit at night between 11p and midnight. I've seen him a few times. I threw some bread scraps out there for him, as well as the rest of a 2 day old apple that the starlings didn't finish up. Do rabbits like apples?

Got a photo that would have been cooler if a) I had a longer telephoto lens and b) I could have gotten the focus right.

Fly away, hawk. Fly away.

This hawk was on the far bank of the pond in my back yard. This photo is cropped to insane proportions (thus my wish for a lens longer than 300mm) and is over-sharpened (thus my wish for having gotten the focus right). I had the camera on the tripod, aiming out my window at the hawk because my arms were too tired holding up the camera, and he was sitting on the shoreline for a LONG time - maybe half an hour! I really wanted to get a shot of him taking off to fly, so I sat patiently with the camera mounted on the tripod, holding the remote shutter cable. I got my shot, but I had a very shallow depth of field (another "learned my lesson for next time") and the hawk flew out of the plane of my preset focus.

Can't wait for the digiscope setup. :) I could have gotten a wicked close up of the hawk, I bet (though I don't think it would have helped with the flying shot. I hear that there's very little margin for movement when shooting photos through a spotting scope without getting awful blur). The anticipation of all that could be is killing me!!

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Birds

I'm still waiting anxiously for Santa to bring my new spotting scope and dSLR adapter! :)

In the meantime, I've been getting some winter bird shots:

White Crowned Sparrow?
White crowned sparrow, I think?

Napping Mourning Dove
Napping Mourning Dove

Still debating what kind of hawk this is.
The hawk that refuses to be identified. Cooper's? Sharp shinned?

Solved: European Starling
European Starling

Dark eyed junco (slate)
Slate colored dark eyed junco, during an ice storm

Ice coated window
Speaking of the ice storm...