Camera for Masai Mara Safari in Africa
Hi All-
I'm going on a 3-day safari in Masai Mara in Africa and looking to buy a new camera. Suggestions on which may be the most suitable for this trip? Currently, I am leaning toward the Canon SX1 is which has 20x zoom and can get me to 580mm. I like the idea that is less bulky than bringing multiple lenses with an SLR. I am a photo enthusiast, but not a professional photographer. Thoughts?? Thanks in advance! |
Camera for Masai Mara Safari in Africa
On Tue, 16 Jun 2009 04:07:20 +0100, pinklife wrote:
I'm going on a 3-day safari in Masai Mara in Africa and looking to buy a new camera. Suggestions on which may be the most suitable for this trip? Currently, I am leaning toward the Canon SX1 is which has 20x zoom and can get me to 580mm. I like the idea that is less bulky than bringing multiple lenses with an SLR. I am a photo enthusiast, but not a professional photographer. Thoughts?? Thanks in advance! I think you're on the right way. A long zoom is about the first requirement I would have mentioned. A 20x zoom is difficult to handle and most likely requires something to lean the camera against, so test it thoroughly before you go and take a bean bag along, so you can squeeze the camera against it in the corner of an open car window. If you are familiar with a polarizing filter, that may be the only extra piece of equipment you need. If not, you might as well forget about it, as it is somewhat difficult to understand and use. Hans-Georg |
Camera for Masai Mara Safari in Africa
"Hans-Georg Michna" wrote in message ... On Tue, 16 Jun 2009 04:07:20 +0100, pinklife wrote: I'm going on a 3-day safari in Masai Mara in Africa and looking to buy a new camera. Suggestions on which may be the most suitable for this trip? Currently, I am leaning toward the Canon SX1 is which has 20x zoom and can get me to 580mm. I like the idea that is less bulky than bringing multiple lenses with an SLR. I am a photo enthusiast, but not a professional photographer. Thoughts?? Thanks in advance! I think you're on the right way. A long zoom is about the first requirement I would have mentioned. A 20x zoom is difficult to handle and most likely requires something to lean the camera against, so test it thoroughly before you go and take a bean bag along, so you can squeeze the camera against it in the corner of an open car window. If you are familiar with a polarizing filter, that may be the only extra piece of equipment you need. If not, you might as well forget about it, as it is somewhat difficult to understand and use. Hans-Georg i didnt realise you could put a filter on a point and shoot. also, you might need some wide angle as landscapes are stunning in kenya. personally i would go with an DSLR system, but dont make the mistake most photographers make when they go on safari.. and thats to see africa through nothing but a viewfinder. also, take LOTS and LOTS of memory cards and batteries..electricity is not always available. |
Camera for Masai Mara Safari in Africa
On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 01:58:39 +0100, the_niner_nation wrote:
i didnt realise you could put a filter on a point and shoot. Depends on what is meant by point-and-shoot. Quite a few compact (i.e. non-SLR) cameras have a filter ring. Mine does. also, you might need some wide angle as landscapes are stunning in kenya. The super-zooms go a bit into wide angle, but for the rare extreme wide-angle panorama I just take several photos side by side and stitch them with one of the automatic stitcher programs. This procedure also yields a higher resolution. personally i would go with an DSLR system, but dont make the mistake most photographers make when they go on safari.. and thats to see africa through nothing but a viewfinder. My experience is that photographers see more, even if they spend some time looking through the viewfinder. The opposite mistake would be to see wonderful things, but not photograph at least some of them. I've made that mistake in my early Africa days and always regretted it. Hope I made up for it later. also, take LOTS and LOTS of memory cards and batteries..electricity is not always available. Another alternative is to use an inverter on the car battery. Depending on circumstances that can be a very good solution, particularly if you drive and camp. Hans-Georg |
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