Wow, what fantastic photographic adventure in Costa Rica. The colorful spectrum of magnificent varied bird species, frogs, insects, and other jungle wildlife was a pleasure to watch and your dialogue was easy to follow, very informative. Thank you for sharing.
Just amazing. I watched your earlier videos and bought the same camera and lens. I am new to wildlife photography and so far I am impressed with the setup. Your photos are just amazing and have inspired me to visit Costa Rica someday. Thank you!
Very nice. It would be difficult, and the bird eye focus on the a6700 would win that battle, but some comparison shots of the same subject with the RX-10 M4 with it's faster lens (but less light sensitive 1" sensor) would be valuable in pushing me in jumping to your new setup. By the way, at 19:46 I think you mean Streak-headed Woodcreeper
I am not trying to push anyone :) I brought back a lot of keepers from Costa Rica on my trips with the Sony Rx10iv. Looking back at them, I can see that they are not as clean or as clear as the shots from this trip…and the ratio of “really good shots” was considerable higher this trip. For instance I might have brought back one really good shot of Shinning Honeycreeper on previous trips…on this trip I brought back a dozen. The best camera in the world is the one you have with you when you see the picture. :)
Wow, what fantastic photographic adventure in Costa Rica. The colorful spectrum of magnificent varied bird species, frogs, insects, and other jungle wildlife was a pleasure to watch and your dialogue was easy to follow, very informative. Thank you for sharing.
Thanks for the kind words!
Just amazing. I watched your earlier videos and bought the same camera and lens. I am new to wildlife photography and so far I am impressed with the setup. Your photos are just amazing and have inspired me to visit Costa Rica someday. Thank you!
That’s great to hear, Costa Rica is a truly inspiring place to photograph wildlife.
Very nice. It would be difficult, and the bird eye focus on the a6700 would win that battle, but some comparison shots of the same subject with the RX-10 M4 with it's faster lens (but less light sensitive 1" sensor) would be valuable in pushing me in jumping to your new setup. By the way, at 19:46 I think you mean Streak-headed Woodcreeper
I am not trying to push anyone :) I brought back a lot of keepers from Costa Rica on my trips with the Sony Rx10iv. Looking back at them, I can see that they are not as clean or as clear as the shots from this trip…and the ratio of “really good shots” was considerable higher this trip. For instance I might have brought back one really good shot of Shinning Honeycreeper on previous trips…on this trip I brought back a dozen. The best camera in the world is the one you have with you when you see the picture. :)
on the boat, did you use a monopod with beanbag? also, how many Sony batteries did you use per day?