Nice pics!. I thought about doing that years ago but my killer instinct made me just carry my bow. Truely do appreciate those that are just as happy filming though.
You always get the best pics Flap. There's not a prettier animal than a bobcat in my opinion. Very nice.
I have a Nikon D5600 that my wife mainly uses. I’ve thought about taking it out but don’t want to mess it up. Not sure if I’d get as good of quality as you have here but man those really are cool shots
Great pics as usual. I really like the bobcat pics. I get pics of them on my trail cams and see them while driving but have never seen one from my stand. I've seen 3 of them this year when driving to "work".
Thanks for compliments. It is more good equipment with a basic understanding of photography rather than anything skillful in my abilities. If you want to dabble in photography, learn the basics and concepts of shutter speed, aperture, and ISO settings. Like many things, it can be overwhelming at 1st, but pretty basic stuff once you learn the fundamentals and how one affects the other and how to use them for your intended subject or shooting environment. Those three things and how they interact is all you really have to learn. I shoot a professional level Nikon camera, but it is secondary to the lens. Spend your money on a quality ‘low light” or “fast’ lens first. If you enjoy photography, it is an investment that will hold its value if you take care of it. Doesn’t matter whether you shoot Nikon or Canon. Both are good. Like Ford or Chevrolet. Canon most popular and Nikon second. The lens shown is about a $2000 lens. Was $1500 20 years ago when I purchased. It will last another 20 years.... it is a zoom 70-200mm but that’s not the criteria that matters. It is the 2.8 aperture that makes it expensive, heavy (because it contains a lot of glass), but also allows you to shoot in low light situations required for wildlife or take action shots such as sports. I can take this lens with a entry level camera body and take just as quality pictures before cropping. The advantage of the professional camera is size of the sensor along with pixels. But same pixels but smaller sensor, limits your cropping capabilities. The lens won’t wear out but the camera eventually will so again, spend your money on the lens. I am probably getting too detailed for this thread, but feel free to PM anytime. If you still have school age children or grandchildren, this same set up works great for sports as well. My son is grown, but I still shoot High School sporting events a few times a year for friends and is always fun and appreciated by athletes and parents alike.
I have seen a few from stand before but never this close with enough notice that allowed me to have camera in hand and ready. This is probably same cat I took a few pics of a month or so ago as it was in same area, but last time he was over 150 yards away. What a beautiful and smart animal.
Great pics! I use to take a video camera with me on every hunt for a few years. I never video myself, just the animals I would see. I like to share the videos with the family and friends. I enjoyed it, but I also missed alot of shots because it was the priority. Now with less time to hunt, I don't take the camera anymore, but hope to pick it back up some time in the future. It just shows your appreciation for the animals out there. Great job! Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
As usual, some amazingly good photos! Love it. Unless I just missed them, I have not seen you post pics for quite a while. More! More! Thanks for sharing.
Yes, all my lens are Nikon although there are plenty of good compatible non Nikon lens on the market as well.
Great picks and thanks for sharing the camera details. Quick question - I am assuming this is a DSLR - have you thought of going to Mirrorless. I am thinking of going to Mirrorless for the electronic shutter - no noise? The DSLRs give great quality video and photos, but the shutter noise has always been a concern of mine. Any thoughts?
I have a mirrorless camera and it has its place such as a backpacking trip. And you are correct, it is much quieter than a conventional camera, but i haven’t found one yet that will give me the “fast lens” of a 2.8 aperture needed for low light shooting with 200mm or more in distance. Also, the mirror less cameras that I have used don’t have a fast enough “frames per second” nor a big enough sensor to allow better quality photos after cropping compared to my conventional camera, but as I said, they do have some pros and quietness is definitely one of them.
Awesome info and really do appreciate it! I have a dlsr now and trying to decide if mirrorless is the way to go. I thought they would be very similar to dslr and then get the advantage of a quieter shutter. I may just spend the money on a good quality lens for now and wait a bit on the mirrorless. Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk