



I am now aware of mirror-less more than ever. Clients are using them, this year the most of all. In the past I have been fairly dismissive of the technology and with good reason; slow focus, bad in low light, clunky menus. However my wonderful guests and their cameras are changing my mind.
So I thought I would do a little test myself. I have a gh4 which I use for video and decided to use it for a shoot. Now this is an old camera and is being used with an adaptor on my canon glass - 300mm f4 and thus does not represent the recent upgrades in tech.
However even so I have devised a wee game for you. All the images of grey seals from our recent, amazing, trips to their colony are taken either with a gh4 300 f4 or a 1dx 500 f4 which gives similar fields of view. Your job is to guess which is which. I have kept the two sets of images roughly the same so it makes it a little harder. Answers at the bottom of the page.
The camera is so light and so easy to check focusing manually that it was a joy to use. However for me it is not quite robust enough and there is a quality that is not quite there yet. The new ones I think change this though. Answers here to which image is which from the top:
1 - gh4, 2- 1dx, 3 - gh4, 4 - 1dx, 5 - 1dx, 6 - gh4.
Where I am getting really really excited about mirrorless is no noise or movement. I do a lot of eagle camera trapping at the moment usually with out much success. The movement of the mirror and aperture and the clunky noise just does not sit well with a bird as sensitive as a white tailed eagle. I have manged to get it to work but I needed to keep the camera away and use longer lenses(see image above). If it goes closer in the bird always gets spooked by the noise. So, for me, mirrorless certainly will be used for this type of photography going forward (this will be my first winter so will keep you posted on how I get on and which camera I end up using).
Just had a guest who sent me there images taken on an Olympus. We were down to 1/4 second and she was almost hand held and still sharp! Pretty amazing in body stabilisation. See images here
Christmas is fast fast approaching. So for those of you who know someone who likes an adventure, has an interest in wildlife or photography then hopefully our vouchers can prove to be a nice gift for them. Click here for more information.
Also we are, I think, fully up to date with images that have been sent in. WOW is all I can say! You are all brilliant! Click here to see images.
I do a lot of volunteer work with various environmental restoration groups and rewilding organisations
and thought you might be interested in some of that. So from now on I will include a short, usually good, news story about some of the work/campaigns I am involved in.
Kelp dredging is not a thing yet, however a company has just applied to start doing this all around the west coast of scotland. This, in no uncertain terms is a complete disaster if it was given the go ahead. Luckily and quite amazingly so far it looks like our politicians have voted against it. However there is another vote in a few months so please write to your MP's and sign the petition on our local coastal group CROMACH facebook page (which has all useful links and info)
and any other petition you can do to stop this happening. It is very simple, kelp is the foundation of pretty much all of the amazing life we see, particularly our wonderful Otters!! It would be devastating to start destroying this amazing habitat.