Monday, February 6, 2012

Bird Watching Binoculars & Field Guides : Picking a Spotting Scope for Bird Watching

June 26, 2010 by  
Filed under spotting scopes


When buying a spotting scope for bird watching, look closely at the zoom factors on the eyepiece. Learn how to pick a spotting scope in this free bird watching video about how to begin to bird watch. Expert: Cary Salter Bio: Cary Salter has been bird watching for the past twenty five years. He currently teaches many seminars on bird watching, particularly in the field of optics and binoculars. Filmmaker: Todd Campitelli

Comments

6 Responses to “Bird Watching Binoculars & Field Guides : Picking a Spotting Scope for Bird Watching”
  1. quacker1964 says:

    Fair comment, but I find using a Scopac and evenly distributing the weight leaves both hands free for binoculars etc. I guess it depends on whether the primary aim is birding or photography lol. I know I’d never have seen those eagles with a camera and big lens. I’d love to see some comparison photographs of cropped DSLR v digiscoped though. Would be interesting. We’ll agree to disagree my friend :-) I have both and depending on my needs is what goes out with me – it’s all good, as they say.

  2. sonofthedestroyer says:

    Not for me, i have done alot trekking and even having a light backpack can be a real nuisance. Expensive, heavy spotting scope? No way

  3. quacker1964 says:

    Have you looked through a high quality scope? Have you used a top notch piece of kit such as Leica, Swarovski, Nikon, Zeiss, Kowa etc. – if you did you will KNOW it is no different than looking through a camera and large lens. Except the scope has anything up to 10x more reach and much better stability when tripod mounted. Check out articles on eye relief if headaches are a problem. I have both scopes and SLR kit up to 600mm lenses. Scopes win hands down.

  4. sonofthedestroyer says:

    Spotting scopes are also bad for eyesight and will cause headache.
    Best scenario is a camera.

  5. quacker1964 says:

    Yep I thought this too until I saw my first Golden Eagle feeding a chick in the nest from several hundred yards away magnified at 60x – my 8×32 binoculars could not even find the vicinity on the mountain!

  6. sonofthedestroyer says:

    spotting scopes are too big and expensive. Not all practical to carry around when trekking. A small binoculars is much better.

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