Your show was the best. Your tutorials were the absolute finest. But, I do know that you can't let this keep you from your family and kids; that is your hart and soul. I do understand that. Maybe one day when they get old enough you can bring them out with you; that's if it's safe. You're a good dude Doug, and we miss you. Peace
Hey, Doug - what a great video! The Bighorn ram at 23:26 is exceptional. I honestly didn't know that the Tetons produced rams of that class. He's at least 10 inches (Boone & Crockett score) larger than any other ram I have seen in the greater Teton ecosystem. What a great find!
Lucky if most of us could afford a trip to our local county Park..... never mind one of those bucket list locations, but still awesome to see this on film. Thanks for posting this.
Am I allowed to dislike because I’m totally jealous? The only place I regret not going to before I was told not to fly is North America, thankfully people make these amazing videos for me to see. True gratitude and a subscribe from me!
Hi.. I really love all these videos you do, amazing info. I’m into wildlife photography, I got a Canon M50, and I’m looking to get a zoom lens, I was looking for 150-600mm sigma, do you know if is okay or any advices suggestions for me?
I feel like I’m out there with you guys. Love the whispering and commentary! How hilarious would it be if this commentary were recorded after the fact in studio ?? ;)
Love this format. A killer combo of great natural history, photography, with a similar format to hunting videos which I feel like hopefully will convince folks that shooting with a big lens is more rewarding than with a rifle. Really looking forward to seeing more content like this.
I cannot get over just how close so many of those animals allow you to get. Here in Wales if you were that close all you would see is a rear end flying away from you.
My exact thoughts...and I see this all the time from the big US national parks. Try doing this in Hungary. Good luck with it, even tho we have shitload of critters.
Bison are quite habituated to people being in close proximity in GNTP and Yellowstone. Things do happen, but out of 4.5 million visitors a years, only about 5 people get gored every year. These guys are not in danger.
I have a Canon Powershot SX60HS and my teleconverters are built in but of course they're digital not optical. But if you close your aperture as much as possible you can get an OK shot. I have X1.6 and X2.0 .
I am always surprised that in these American national parks the critters are tame and chilled as F. Really, try doing that in our eastern European forests. Good luck with that.
If you think about it, lens hood on most big telephoto lenses are for two main reasons. 1. To protect the front element 2. To avoid unwanted flares hitting your sensor when sun is right in front of you. Otherwise there is no such real advantage of using it especially when the sun is in your back! Now the disadvantage is the lens hood makes your overall setup longer which magnifies the camera shake due to the crosswinds causing your pictures be unsharp at times. It might be windy so he probably not using it.
It looks like you two are using different lenses. Can you do a video on what you use and if you get similar quality photos?? Looks like one is a 500mm but the other looks smaller.. I can’t afford a 500 but maybe something smaller if I could get the great shots of a smaller lens.. thanks
Only guessing but is the Cannon lens a 600mm and the Nikon a 200-500mm. Hard to tell with the Blah Blah about how great the location is an we are not there, (jealous). If you dont have a truck load of cash like the rest of us meer mortals get a Tamron 150-600mm, cheap by comparison.
Looks like you are manually focusing most of the time. Why not use autofocus? Concern about battery life? Does that particular lense not have autofocus?
perfect timing Doug. we're leaving next week for a month in the Tetons trying to find and photograph the Great Gray Owl. wish us luck and any advice on finding the GGO. i noticed you had your converter on the camera before attaching to the 600. i shoot Canon too and they recommend attaching the tc to the lens first. what do you think? check out my sight, www.500px.com/whisp. BTW-love your videos. take care. danny
Canon recommends putting t.v. on lens then conect to camera but I have the 600. And 2x tc and have mounted to camera body using both methods for decades with no problems.
I understand what you were doing manual focusing but you spent thousand and thousand of dollars on the best camera body canon makes why not trust the AF that you spent all that money on . Why ?
Auto focus on moving subjects. Manual focus stationary, and if you have keen eyesight manual focus is great. No worrying about focus hunting or focusing on objects in your foreground. I always shoot manual exposure,Kelvin degrees,spot reading as well as manual focus on stationary subjects.
Your show was the best. Your tutorials were the absolute finest. But, I do know that you can't let this keep you from your family and kids; that is your hart and soul. I do understand that. Maybe one day when they get old enough you can bring them out with you; that's if it's safe. You're a good dude Doug, and we miss you. Peace
Another "bucket list " area for me! Thanks for sharing guys!
Absolutely outstanding photography. Thanks a lot.
Sure wish you would make some more of these. great video and great information. I think I've seen them all. Thanks so much.
Amazing works guys!!!
Wow. Great explanations Doug and Jared, I love your technical advise, they are so helpful. I hope to visit Yellowstone and Teton very soon.
wou amazing video and great shots congratulations.
This is what it's all about, gentlemen.. great work! I hope to get out there one day!
I can't begin to tell you how good these videos are.
Hey, Doug - what a great video! The Bighorn ram at 23:26 is exceptional. I honestly didn't know that the Tetons produced rams of that class. He's at least 10 inches (Boone & Crockett score) larger than any other ram I have seen in the greater Teton ecosystem. What a great find!
I have seen a little bigger than that in the park as well. Not much but bigger for sure.
Lucky if most of us could afford a trip to our local county Park..... never mind one of those bucket list locations, but still awesome to see this on film. Thanks for posting this.
Living and working here has been one of the highlights of my life. Daily I encounter wildlife that some people never get to experience.
Another great upload.... Ty.
very interesting to protect nature so we can enjoy its beauty
Very refreshing channel, great footage and tips guys!! Subscribed
Great video. Thanks for sharing the tips and techniques .
Am I allowed to dislike because I’m totally jealous? The only place I regret not going to before I was told not to fly is North America, thankfully people make these amazing videos for me to see. True gratitude and a subscribe from me!
VERY COOL VIDEO KEEP IT UP !
Hi..
I really love all these videos you do, amazing info.
I’m into wildlife photography, I got a Canon M50, and I’m looking to get a zoom lens, I was looking for 150-600mm sigma, do you know if is okay or any advices suggestions for me?
I feel like I’m out there with you guys. Love the whispering and commentary! How hilarious would it be if this commentary were recorded after the fact in studio ?? ;)
Great videos.
Love this format. A killer combo of great natural history, photography, with a similar format to hunting videos which I feel like hopefully will convince folks that shooting with a big lens is more rewarding than with a rifle. Really looking forward to seeing more content like this.
I cannot get over just how close so many of those animals allow you to get. Here in Wales if you were that close all you would see is a rear end flying away from you.
My exact thoughts...and I see this all the time from the big US national parks. Try doing this in Hungary. Good luck with it, even tho we have shitload of critters.
Bison are quite habituated to people being in close proximity in GNTP and Yellowstone. Things do happen, but out of 4.5 million visitors a years, only about 5 people get gored every year. These guys are not in danger.
Great channel, wounderfull content. - I subscribed!!!
Video Natur I agree, incredible content
Oh. wow! I would like to be out there in your companies :) I cannot wait to see what the new RF 400 can do...
wow ,so beautiful
What is the video shot on?
what tripod set up where you using ?
Great video
I just found your channel. I absolutely love your videos. I did have one question for Doug. What tripod are you using in this video?
I have a Canon Powershot SX60HS and my teleconverters are built in but of course they're digital not optical. But if you close your aperture as much as possible you can get an OK shot. I have X1.6 and X2.0 .
I am always surprised that in these American national parks the critters are tame and chilled as F. Really, try doing that in our eastern European forests. Good luck with that.
I noticed you don't use the lens hood, why is that?
If you think about it, lens hood on most big telephoto lenses are for two main reasons. 1. To protect the front element 2. To avoid unwanted flares hitting your sensor when sun is right in front of you. Otherwise there is no such real advantage of using it especially when the sun is in your back! Now the disadvantage is the lens hood makes your overall setup longer which magnifies the camera shake due to the crosswinds causing your pictures be unsharp at times. It might be windy so he probably not using it.
It looks like you two are using different lenses. Can you do a video on what you use and if you get similar quality photos?? Looks like one is a 500mm but the other looks smaller.. I can’t afford a 500 but maybe something smaller if I could get the great shots of a smaller lens.. thanks
Only guessing but is the Cannon lens a 600mm and the Nikon a 200-500mm. Hard to tell with the Blah Blah about how great the location is an we are not there, (jealous). If you dont have a truck load of cash like the rest of us meer mortals get a Tamron 150-600mm, cheap by comparison.
@@Gee-Wizz Nikon 200-400 vr 1...I think
Looks like you are manually focusing most of the time. Why not use autofocus? Concern about battery life? Does that particular lense not have autofocus?
Look at all those cedar waxwings! @18:44
I think they may have been Bohemian Waxwings based on the white spots on the wings.
@@User-od8dz Oh, you may be correct sir.
Distance from that whitetail buck?
for a second i thought woody harrelson was walkking towards me.
perfect timing Doug. we're leaving next week for a month in the Tetons trying to find and photograph the Great Gray Owl. wish us luck and any advice on finding the GGO. i noticed you had your converter on the camera before attaching to the 600. i shoot Canon too and they recommend attaching the tc to the lens first. what do you think? check out my sight, www.500px.com/whisp. BTW-love your videos. take care. danny
natpark182 check this guy out, he is local to the area. ruclips.net/channel/UCDIr0UgrBJ3lGfs0eeKV6Tw
Canon recommends putting t.v. on lens then conect to camera but I have the 600. And 2x tc and have mounted to camera body using both methods for decades with no problems.
which camera do u use?
Canon 1d mark IV
☕😍😊🙏
Why are you not putting new content out
I understand what you were doing manual focusing but you spent thousand and thousand of dollars on the best camera body canon makes why not trust the AF that you spent all that money on . Why ?
Auto focus on moving subjects. Manual focus stationary, and if you have keen eyesight manual focus is great. No worrying about focus hunting or focusing on objects in your foreground.
I always shoot manual exposure,Kelvin degrees,spot reading as well as manual focus on stationary subjects.
Great
why are we whispering?
Great, but too much talking!
😂