Archive for category Perching or Songbirds

Playing with the Rental Lenses – Part one: Canon 400mm f/5.6L



Before I start describing my experiences, I want to be clear that this is not a comprehensive technical review of this lens. There are countless reviews already on the internet, especially for these older model telephotos. In fact, I was not even planning to write about the two lenses I tried, the Canon 400m f/5.6L and the Canon 100-400 f/4.5-5.6L, but I developed such unexpectedly strong opinions about them, I thought it necessary. With that disclaimer out of the way, I can start!

Me with the 400mm f/5.6L



Look and Feel

From the first moment that the Canon 400mm f/5.6L arrived, I was impressed. The build is solid and it is immediately comfortable to hold. It feels like you are holding a two thousand dollar lens. This feeling carries to the field. Whether I was trudging through the mangroves or crawling face down in the sand of the Cairns Esplanade, my thoughts never turned to the welfare of the lens. Even though I am insured, I still find it difficult to feel at ease with a plastic, rattly and fiddly lens. The balance while on the camera is perfect. On my Canon EOS 7D, it felt at home hand-held and on the tripod.

This aspect is often overlooked by those searching for a new lens. It is all well and good to obsessively peruse reviews and sift through hundreds of sample images, but without holding a lens in your hand, especially heavy telephotos, it is impossible to be sure of which lens is right for you. Of course, I am not one to pontificate on this particular matter, as I have spent many hours doing the former! It was the advice of a friend that prompted me to rent some lenses and I am now more than ever, immensely grateful for it. I had all but decided on a lens prior to the arrival of the rentals, but that decision went out the window once I had them in my hand. There is no way to know how a lens holds up when trying to shoot fast flying birds handheld or little brown jobs in murky rain forests, until you try it for yourself.

In every regard, the Canon 400mm f/5.6L was a pure joy to use. During the research, I was concerned about difficulties I might have hand-holding this lens. Its balance and design is such however, that unlike any other telephoto of similar focal length I have tried, which admittedly is not an enormous number, it was downright easy to keep this thing rock steady. Its girth, weight and the positioning of its focus ring are perfect. In the hand this was the clear winner for me. The only place I could criticise its build quality was its sometimes rattly built-in lens hood. While it locks when fully extended, it does not do the same when retracted. I would love to be able to better secure the hood in whatever position I choose and I would love it to have a tighter feel to it. This is a minor nitpick with an otherwise excellently built lens.

Operation

Although initially I was apprehensive using a telephoto of this length without image stabilisation, my concerns were alleviated once I took this prime out for a snap. Due partially to the fact the prime is generally a sharper lens than the Canon zoom, also because of some other key functional advantages.

The greatest advantage as far as I was concerned was the 400mm f/5.6L’s lighting fast focus acquisition. Much is made of this prime as a flight lens, of which it is more than capable, although my contention is the advantage of fast focus acquisition extends far beyond flight photography. Birds, more than any other subject, are fidgety, quick moving and unpredictable. I can’t write for anyone else, but as I do most of my bird photography stalking, I am forever chasing birds around the scrub. AI servo helps, but on the majority of occasions I have to refocus after some feathered wonder repeatedly escapes my frame. If you are planning to shoot predominantly stationary or slow moving subjects, the prime has yet another advantage — full time manual focusing.

Little Egret (Egretta garzetta)



Another consideration for me once I got my hands on this prime was to examine the relatively high minimum focus distance of 3.5m. I was very concerned that this could make shooting smaller subjects such as small passerines, impossible. As it pans out, my concerns were once again not warranted. It is a safe assumption that most birders using this lens, like me, will be using cameras with APS-C sensors. As this renders an effective focal length of 640mm on this prime, at 3.5m I had no problems framing even the smallest of birds. I suppose there could be a situation where a bird lands too close to focus on, but I found the distance to be shorter in practice than it appears on paper.

Optical Performance

One of the real standout aspects of this lens is its sharpness, even wide open. It is difficult to appreciate the impact of sharpness until you get your hands on a particularly sharp lens and compare it to an inferior one. One of the cornerstones of wildlife photography is having that critical sharpness in key areas, usually the eye. Despite objections by many to this sharpness obsession, personally, I usually immediately identify sharpness problems in an image and it usually completely ruins it for me — particularly in print. I can’t write to the preferences of others, but sharpness, along with distortion, will always be my premier considerations when buying a lens. In this regard, the Canon 400mm f/5.6L well outperformed my copy of the Canon 100-400 f/4.5-5.6L. I found it produced that critical sharpness far more consistently than the zoom, although the zoom can produce sharp images under optimal conditions. When it comes to corner sharpness, the gap between the prime and the zoom becomes enormous. The prime wins, hands down.

Yellow Oriole (Oriolus flavocinctus)


Pacific Black Ducks (Anas superciliosa)



Unsurprisingly for a prime lens, the Canon 400mm f/5.6L produced no perceivable distortion or vignetting, particularly on my APS-C body. This reflects the more technical analysis provided in other reviews available such as Photozone’s comprehensive effort.

Verdict

The Canon 400m f/5.6L is one outstanding piece of glass for the money. It is sturdily built, ergonomically well designed, and optically impressive. When I first went to rent this lens, I was not really considering it as much as I should. When I had this lens in my hand, questions as to which telephoto I was going to buy flew right out the window. I can’t imagine this would be the same for everyone, as there are limits to its versatility. Although I did on a couple of occasions, I can’t imagine many people being comfortable with the prospect of walking around town snapping away with this beast, nor could I imagine it particularly useful photographing birds or animals in close quarters.
Just the same, the postman practically had to pry this lens from my hands. A wildly different experience than I had with the zoom. That’s all that matters in the end.

Beach Stone-Curlew (Esacus neglectus)


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Cuckoo-shrikes, Godwits and a Gerygone with the new tripod

So after much thought, by which I mean the fastidious perusal of countless review sites and forums like the frugal Scrooge I am, I settled and purchased a new Slik U8000 tripod. A nice entry level tripod, it suits my purposes as my gear is fairly light in weight. I have no complaints with it after a day of playing around, although I can see why so many people rave about ball heads. Pan and tilt heads do take a fair bit of time and patience. On thing they are good for however, is nice smooth panning when shooting video. Here are some of today’s efforts…

Feel free to switch the videos to HD 720p in bottom right hand corner of the videos if you have a faster connection.




This White-bellied Cuckoo-shrike (Curacina papuenis) was searching the foliage for food at the edge of the mangroves at the northern end of the esplanade.




The tide was at about 50% when I was out so I went to the most reliable place to find waders close enough to photograph and video them — the storm water drain. The birds often congregate around the freshwater runoff.




Not the best video, but this was the first time I have seen this species on the esplanade. It was incredibly hot and humid but I actually enjoy birding in the middle of the day. Usually, there are far fewer people which means less distractions and spooking of the birds. It is a good rule of thumb that birds are more active at dawn and dusk, but I am certain that this not the case for mangroves. In my experience, there is much more activity in the heat of the day. It could of course simply be that the mangroves I regularly visit happen to be a good day time feeding area.

All this video processing and uploading has taken a long time so I think I will put the rest up later!

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A strange bird and some interesting behaviour…

Today whilst wandering around the Esplanade I came across an unusual looking Common Myna (Sturnus tristis) with plenty of bare skin on its face. This is not the first Common Myna I have encountered with this feather loss problem, some even having no feathers on the head at all. Oddly, Cairns is the only place where I have observed mynas with any such problem. I have never seen this down south in the Sydney to Wollongong area. Is this a disease unique to the tropics?

Odd Common Myna (Sturnus tristis)

Another peculiar birding encounter today was watching two Yellow Honeyeaters (Lichenostomus flavus) diving into a drainage channel for prey near the Cairns Central Swamp on Gatton St. I have never observed any honeyeater behaving like this before. Although the birds were not ‘diving’ as such, they were slamming into the water with some force. I didn’t see the suspected prey, I can’t even be sure that it was prey the birds were pursuing. Perhaps these birds were diving in to simply wet themselves in the heat of the day?

YouTube Preview Image

In other news, I plan to have the review of Birder’s Diary up in under a week!

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