chadmcm wrote in post #10142563
It's amazing how huge that valley is, and how small (relatively) the Dall sheep can be...
This is the main problem. If you want to take pictures of the wildlife on the road system, you need some pretty big guns, but at the same time i use the term "road system" VERY loosely, as it consists of 1 road, that forks for a few hundred miles into 2 roads, which then re-merge into 1 as you approach Canada.
What this means to you is, you won't be getting very close to ANYthing without a whole lotta walking, hiking, or waiting. And the closer you are to the road, the fewer animals there are (oddly enough moose, bears, and everything else have learned that cars hurt when they hit you, almost as much as people on hunting expeditions, which incidentally also emerge from cars from time to time). If you're up here for a few weeks on a honey moon, i dont think you want to be setting up a tripod and waiting for 5 hours, though i could be wrong.
For wildlife up here you almost need at least 500mm of reach if not more, faster is better, as i wouldn't recommend baiting a bear to pose for you (first, its illegal, second, it will likely charge you & or kill you this time of year as they will have new cubs with them) The same goes for Moose, they have calves, and they don't like ANY other animals around them, esp. humans when they have calves.
Our wildlife kit is:
400mm 2.8L IS
70-200 2.8L IS
100-400L IS
1.4X TC (for long lenses)
85 1.2L II (for the less dangerous variety we can get close too)
mp-e 65 (for the smaller variety)
twin lights and a 580 EX II to "bring the light" if you will
gitzo tripod with a gimble head for the 400
and a small bag/can of dog food (for foxes, wolves, etc)
and by far the most important,
Mossberg 500 with no fewer than 25 black magic 3" mag slugs and 25 OOO Buckshot alternating in the bandoleer/tube.
most common lenses used is the 400 2.8, and the 70-200 withe the TC and lens hood (whatever you do, you will need a lens hood)
"Evidently the photo shop at the college I go to is one of the best in the country. They actually have a handful of digital medium format cameras for students to use; Haliburtons, or hasslehoffs, or something like that."
-name withheld to protect dignity.
Toys