Not quite 2 years ago my wife and I went to Laguna Seca Ranch and South Padre Island with Jeff Wendorff having just upgraded our Nikon D-7200's and Sigma 150-600Cs to D-500s and 500pfs. Boy was that combination one sweet setup. Jeff and one lady in our group were shooting the Sony A1 200-600 combinations and if they produced images at Laguna Seca Ranch better than my D-500/500pfs I didn't see them.
If disaster had not struck, I would still have those awesome 500pf's, now bolted to a Z-8, keeping my D-500's as backup.
Unfortunately, disaster did strike. Jeff advised me that the 500mm would be perfect for the Ranch but on the South Padre Island Birding Center and the SPI Convention Center boardwalks the birds would either be a "ways-off" necessitating 500mm or "right-there" requiring a shorter lens.
No problem I thought. I purchased two additional D-500s and two 300pfs and a couple of dual Black Rapid straps to easily carry them. I saved some money getting the two additional D-500s and the 300pfs used and figured that I was fixed for a couple of years at least. Jeff questioned "why didn't I go mirrorless". I gave him some mumbo-jumbo, but the real reason was that I was simply a Nikon guy. Buying Sony, or horrors, Canon was turning to the dark side.
Disaster struck on the boardwalks. While the other members of the group were all using zooms (Sony, Canon and a Nikon 200-500) and happily adjusted the reach depending on the situation, I found that simply couldn't carry my two-camera solution! The problem was simply too much weight.
I left South Texas for Los Angeles telling my wife we needed a single camera-lens combination, a zoom. In fact, it was just me who had the problem. My wife could handle the Nikon two-camera solution just fine, but her strategy was to have a kit identical to her husband.
I started researching a single camera-lens solution. Nikon didn't have an acceptable solution. One member of the group had a D-500/200-500 which was heavy, cumbersome and did not take pictures anything like my 500pf. Nope, not Nikon. I sold or gave away all my Nikon gear. Dark side, here I come.
Fast forward almost two years.........
This Wednesday I fly to Texas and repeat exactly the same trip, 3 days at the Ranch and 3 days on South Padre Island. Hopefully, the Spring migration will be in full swing. No Jeff. He has gone on to bigger, better, more expensive trips.
I didn't really go to the dark side. Canon is the dark side, Sony less so but still betrayal. OM Systems? Well, is just weird.
At the Ranch I will be using an OM Systems 300f4 coupled with an upgrade OM Systems camera, the OM-1 mark II. On the boardwalks I will be using an OM Systems 100-400 zoom.
My story continues.
Yours?
Tom
If disaster had not struck, I would still have those awesome 500pf's, now bolted to a Z-8, keeping my D-500's as backup.
Unfortunately, disaster did strike. Jeff advised me that the 500mm would be perfect for the Ranch but on the South Padre Island Birding Center and the SPI Convention Center boardwalks the birds would either be a "ways-off" necessitating 500mm or "right-there" requiring a shorter lens.
No problem I thought. I purchased two additional D-500s and two 300pfs and a couple of dual Black Rapid straps to easily carry them. I saved some money getting the two additional D-500s and the 300pfs used and figured that I was fixed for a couple of years at least. Jeff questioned "why didn't I go mirrorless". I gave him some mumbo-jumbo, but the real reason was that I was simply a Nikon guy. Buying Sony, or horrors, Canon was turning to the dark side.
Disaster struck on the boardwalks. While the other members of the group were all using zooms (Sony, Canon and a Nikon 200-500) and happily adjusted the reach depending on the situation, I found that simply couldn't carry my two-camera solution! The problem was simply too much weight.
I left South Texas for Los Angeles telling my wife we needed a single camera-lens combination, a zoom. In fact, it was just me who had the problem. My wife could handle the Nikon two-camera solution just fine, but her strategy was to have a kit identical to her husband.
I started researching a single camera-lens solution. Nikon didn't have an acceptable solution. One member of the group had a D-500/200-500 which was heavy, cumbersome and did not take pictures anything like my 500pf. Nope, not Nikon. I sold or gave away all my Nikon gear. Dark side, here I come.
Fast forward almost two years.........
This Wednesday I fly to Texas and repeat exactly the same trip, 3 days at the Ranch and 3 days on South Padre Island. Hopefully, the Spring migration will be in full swing. No Jeff. He has gone on to bigger, better, more expensive trips.
I didn't really go to the dark side. Canon is the dark side, Sony less so but still betrayal. OM Systems? Well, is just weird.
At the Ranch I will be using an OM Systems 300f4 coupled with an upgrade OM Systems camera, the OM-1 mark II. On the boardwalks I will be using an OM Systems 100-400 zoom.
My story continues.
Yours?
Tom
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