Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/07/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Thanks for posting Doug, kayaking is one thing I've always wanted to try around here. There's plenty of swamp life to photograph! Chris ----- Original Message ----- From: "Douglas Herr" <telyt@earthlink.net> To: <lug@leica-users.org>; "LEG" <leica@freelists.org>; "LeicaReflex" <leicareflex@freelists.org> Sent: Tuesday, July 03, 2007 12:00 AM Subject: [Leica] Kayaking camera: demonstration of concept > For some time now I've wanted to take a camera with me while kayaking. > > Background: the kayak allows me much better access to the water side of > marshes, and when I'm in the kayak I don't look like a > human and can get much closer. > > more background: As most of us know, kayaks are supposed to float on top > of the water, but there's always the possibility of > turning turtle (flipping over) or becoming a submarine (taking on too much > water) so I've been hesitant to carry something like > the R8/DMR/280 APO combination in the kayak. > > My solution: About a year ago I picked up from an ebay auction a Novoflex > 400mm f/5.6 T-Noflexar very inexpensively, and on the > camera end of this lens I've fitted an very ugly but (thanks to DAG and > UPS) very functional Leicaflex SL. Total cost of the rig > is about US$375 including the SL, Novoflex lens, its shoulder stock, and > the LEA-R adapter for Leica-R. I won't be happy if it > gets dunked, OTOH it's not like I'd have the repair expense of the > R8/DMR/280 APO if they got soaked. On the DMR the Novoflex has > proven to be adequately sharp for a good 8x12 print. Not APO-Telyt sharp, > but adequate. > > The kayak is a fiberglass sea kayak, the Easy Rider Sea Hawk. It has a > covered deck, a big open cockpit so I can get legs or > camera in and out easily, and is known as a 'dry' boat, i.e., water > doesn't splash in easily. I've found that I can keep the > camera out of the kayak's bilge by balancing it on my legs as I paddle, > and far enough forward that it's out of the way of errant > splashes from the paddle. > > The location I chose to test the rig is a marshy backwater off Lake > Natoma, a reservoir just west of Folsom California. From > put-in to the backwater area there's a stretch of open water that can be > crossed in fifteen minutes or so and given the > unpredictable nature of winds and of other boaters this is probably the > riskiest part of the test. Once in the backwater area > there's very little boat traffic and the waters are sheltered from most > winds. > > Among the wildlife I spotted during the test was a river otter, several > Mallard families, a Common Merganser family, and numerous > landbirds. Alos spotted a Great Blue Heron and a Great Egret, but not the > Green Heron, the bird I was most interested in. > > The Great Egret provided the best photo opportunities, but only after I > figured out what to do with the kayak were the pictures > worth showing. I quickly found that photography while the kayak was in > open water was pointless: the kayak is always drifting > with the current or breezes or both, the birds are paddling a different > direction, and I've got only a limited range of motion > while seated in the kayak's cockpit. This plus the floation vest > interfering with the shoulder stock and keeping track of the > paddle while holding the camera ... clumsy and uncoordinated are the words > that come to mind. > > I found the best way to use the kayak as a photo platform was to run the > boat onto soft mud, jamming it in place, and to wait for > the egret to approach as it fed, leaning my elbows on the lip of the > cockpit for added camera stability. So without further > words, the result: > > http://www.wildlightphoto.com/birds/ardeidae/greg01.html > > technical stuff: SL, Novoflex 400mm f/5.6 T-Noflexar, Kodak Portra 170 NC, > kayak. All comments welcome. > > > Doug Herr > Birdman of Sacramento > http://www.wildlightphoto.com > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information