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whale pictures
Next week I am going whale watching out of Ventura, CA. Any
suggestions? I will be using a Canon S2Is with 12x zoom. |
#2
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whale pictures
"Gordon" wrote in message ... Next week I am going whale watching out of Ventura, CA. Any suggestions? I will be using a Canon S2Is with 12x zoom. I suppose you should set it to a sports/action setting to make sure the shutter speed is fast enough for they jump out of the water at you. |
#3
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whale pictures
Make sure you go on a wale watching tour with a sizable boat. We took
a small sail boat to Catalina Island from Marina Del Rey, the trip was great, stayed the night at the Harbor in Catalina. It was on the way back that almost killed us. High winds, Massive waves cresting over the boat, sails flowdered and we almost lost stearing. In fact we almost colided with a big container ship. Man those things are huge close up. Just make sure your on a big boat! |
#4
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whale pictures
In article ,
Gordon wrote: Next week I am going whale watching out of Ventura, CA. Any suggestions? I will be using a Canon S2Is with 12x zoom. I haven't gone whale watching, but when I was trying to catch some dolphins playing off a Sanibel Beach I learned: 1. Need to use the burst mode, because they don't stay visible for long. 2. Need to manually prefocus, because autofocus will be too slow. 3. Polariser may help if it's sunny. 4. Even with 12X zoom, they were pretty small in the field. 5. I need to add a red-dot finder to my FZ30, so I can get the subject in view asap. |
#5
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whale pictures
Kent Clarke wrote:
In article , Gordon wrote: Next week I am going whale watching out of Ventura, CA. Any suggestions? I will be using a Canon S2Is with 12x zoom. I haven't gone whale watching, but when I was trying to catch some dolphins playing off a Sanibel Beach I learned: 1. Need to use the burst mode, because they don't stay visible for long. 2. Need to manually prefocus, because autofocus will be too slow. That's why people get DSLRs. 3. Polariser may help if it's sunny. 4. Even with 12X zoom, they were pretty small in the field. Again the reason for a DSLR: then you can add a decent telephoto lens, and IS too for working from moving platforms, like boats. Roger 5. I need to add a red-dot finder to my FZ30, so I can get the subject in view asap. |
#6
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whale pictures
"Kent Clarke" wrote in message
... 1. Need to use the burst mode, because they don't stay visible for long. If the whales are playing, they burst thru the surface and the window of opportunity is small. Anticipate - you'll miss the first one, but that first one tells you where one is and it will probably jump nearby again. If the whales are feeding, their forward movement is very small. They surface enough to breath thru the blow hole several times in a row in almost exactly the same spot, then dive to feed. That dive is when the tail breaches and is usually the most interesting shot. The whale will stay down 2-4 minutes (longer sometimes, but rarely) and will exhale strongly when surfacing the first time - causing a burst of water into the air. That's what the boat crew will be watching for and steer toward. They surface near where they dive - they don't move forward much while feeding. 2. Need to manually prefocus, because autofocus will be too slow. My personal preference is to meter and focus, and then switch to manual for most shots - I don't care for the lag of the autoexposure and autofocus (I'm an old manual kind of person). Your autofocus MAY be fast enough, but prefocusing ALWAYS works. You know your camera best, but timing is everything for these shots. 3. Polariser may help if it's sunny. True, but this is a personal decision about what it does to shutter speeds, ISO needed, etc. Whales and boat crews don't concern themselves with your angle with respect to the sun, so anytime the angle isn't right for the polarizer effect, you're using a neutral density filter for no reason. Again, a personal decision. 4. Even with 12X zoom, they were pretty small in the field. The whale watching tours that have been in the business for a while are better at locating individual whales and getting close. How close they can get is limited by law and based on boat size - larger boats aren't allowed as close as small ones (based on safety for the whales and the boat in case of a collision). My last effort was using a 200 mm on a 35 mm film camera (about 4X normal), and the boat crew was very good at getting as close as the law allowed, and stll the whales are small in the photos. 12X is a lot better - be prepared to use it. 5. I need to add a red-dot finder to my FZ30, so I can get the subject in view asap. One more - a tripod probably won't have the intended effect. The vibration from the boat's engine(s) will transmit thru the tripod and cause unsharp images (how would I know this?). A monopod works better if you rest the bottom of the monopod on your foot - this insolates the monopod from the vibrations. This might also work with a tripod if your have three or more feet and unusually good balance. Bob in Las Vegas |
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