Last minute question here. Never been to a zoo, will my 70-200 be enough on the long end or should I pack the 400mm. Trying to stay as light as possible. Thanks
P.S. It's the San Diego Zoo if that matters...
Laramie Still livin' the cowboylife 3,220 posts Joined Nov 2006 Location: Inland Empire, California More info | Aug 02, 2008 16:53 | #1 Last minute question here. Never been to a zoo, will my 70-200 be enough on the long end or should I pack the 400mm. Trying to stay as light as possible. Thanks 5DIII | 40D | 17-40 f4L | Tamron 28-75 2.8 | 50 1.4 | 70-200 2.8L | Oly Zuiko 50 macro | Tamron 1.4x
LOG IN TO REPLY |
tomslens Member 63 posts Joined Aug 2007 Location: Oxford, MA More info | Aug 02, 2008 17:12 | #2 My experience has been that for most of the animals, my 70-300 has been fine. You'd probably be okay with the 70-200. The hitch is the bigger cats and other elusive animals. Anything with a big enclosure often stays pretty far out of range. They're the ones you wish you brought the big guns for. www.tomslens.com
LOG IN TO REPLY |
tonylong ...winded More info | Aug 02, 2008 17:13 | #3 "Packing light" is tough! On a rectent zoo visit with my son, he was shooting with the 100-400 and the 400 came in very handy. There will be plenty of times when if you didn't have a 400 reach you will wish you did. Tony
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Laramie THREAD STARTER Still livin' the cowboylife 3,220 posts Joined Nov 2006 Location: Inland Empire, California More info | Aug 02, 2008 17:15 | #4 Thanks guys...this will be a casual trip for those going with me, but it's a photographic trip for me! Might as well just back the long ones and keep other stuff light as possible. Thanks! 5DIII | 40D | 17-40 f4L | Tamron 28-75 2.8 | 50 1.4 | 70-200 2.8L | Oly Zuiko 50 macro | Tamron 1.4x
LOG IN TO REPLY |
sf1 Goldmember 2,021 posts Joined Mar 2007 Location: Calgary, Canada More info | Aug 02, 2008 18:35 | #5 It depends on the zoo. At the Detroit zoo, the animals are the main attraction and they are front and center so the 70-200 is basically all that is needed. At the Toronto zoo, more concern is given to the animals and they have larger enclosures, so they are most often times farther back from the crowds, so the 400mm is needed. Canon 5DII, Canon 1D Mark II N
LOG IN TO REPLY |
pos Senior Member 436 posts Joined Nov 2006 Location: kentucky More info | Aug 02, 2008 19:27 | #6 How about a extender for the 70-200, I have one and it comes in handy when you need the reach. pos
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Jimmer411 Thank god Im green. 866 posts Likes: 2 Joined Sep 2007 Location: Pacific, WA More info | Aug 02, 2008 19:27 | #7 At the woodland park zoo I found that my 70-200 was enough for 95% of the zoo. There were a few instances where 300mm would have been great, and 400mm would have been helpful. 70-200 + a 1.4TC would be perfect for the zoo, I know I wish I had one sometimes. 5D3 | Sigma 30mm f/1.4 HSM | EF 85mm f/1.8 USM | EF 24-70 f/2.8L II | EF 70-200 f/2.8L IS II | 430EX | YN-568EX II | YN-622c | YN-622-TX |
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Bubble Goldmember 3,382 posts Joined Jul 2006 Location: Yorba Linda , CA More info | Aug 02, 2008 19:41 | #8 Permanent ban70-200 is ok. However, at some area, 400 will benefit for you. I've used 500IS at SD zoo and it is not too long either. Canon 5D II, 7D | 16-35L II | 24-70L | 24-105L | 50L | 85L II | iMac 27 | Redrock Micro DSLR Cinema Bundle | Elinchrom Ranger RX-AS Kit| Elinchrom Digital Style 1200RX/600RX | Turbo SC |
LOG IN TO REPLY |
timelapseforum Junior Member 21 posts Joined Jun 2008 More info | Aug 02, 2008 19:42 | #9 I love the San Diego zoo. Had some good times there lol. But I would go for more zoom.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
DDCSD GIVIN' GOOD KARMA 13,313 posts Likes: 3 Joined Jun 2007 Location: South Dakota More info | Aug 02, 2008 20:04 | #10 When I went to the Jacksonville Zoo a few months ago I used a 200mm and 2x TC. Only took the TC off for a couple of shots. I'd personally take the 400mm before the 70-200. Derek
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Aug 02, 2008 23:27 | #11 I would bring the 400mm along with the 70-200mm for the San Diego Zoo. You will need the reach for some of the exhibits.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Sports_Dude Goldmember 1,112 posts Likes: 5 Joined Feb 2008 Location: California More info | Aug 02, 2008 23:30 | #12 Just visited the SD Zoo last weekend. IMHO, 70-200 will be fine. If you plan to go to the SD wild animal park, then bring the 400. Sports_Dude
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Aug 02, 2008 23:37 | #13 I took my 70-200 to the zoo for the first time and found that it was pretty decent for many shots, but there were time when I wish I had more reach. I would take both, ha but thats just me. Best of luck! SCOTTY BWEDDING & LIFESTYLE PHOTOGRAPHY
LOG IN TO REPLY |
D_CeLiRaToR Member 220 posts Likes: 1 Joined Aug 2007 Location: Racine, WI More info | Aug 02, 2008 23:41 | #14 i shot this at the zoo with a 70-200. depends on the size of the habitat mostly. unfortunately this guy didn't have much room to roam:
-Mike
LOG IN TO REPLY |
bbulldog Goldmember 1,158 posts Likes: 8 Joined Dec 2005 Location: Germany but born in Woolwich, London More info | Aug 03, 2008 06:06 | #15 these were shot with my 70-300 as was said it depends how far away the animals are. Canon EOS 50D gripped
LOG IN TO REPLY |
![]() | x 1600 |
| y 1600 |
| Log in Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!
|
| ||
| Latest registered member was a spammer, and banned as such! 2939 guests, 139 members online Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018 | |||