In article <. com>,
Scott W <> wrote:
> On Apr 1, 8:24 am, Ken Lucke <k...@glass-stones.com> wrote:
> > In article <1175451309.325039.259...@o5g2000hsb.googlegroups. com>,
> >
> > Scott W <biph...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> > >http://www.pbase.com/konascott/image/76489187/original
> > >http://www.pbase.com/konascott/image/76489188/original
> >
> > > This is a myna bird and to me they seem to always have bad attitude
> > > look about them .
> >
> > > I put an order in to B&H for the 300mm f/4 lens before they close down
> > > for the first part of April
> > > The lens came Friday so I am out this weekend having a good time with
> > > it. The bird shots are all 100% crops and were all taken hand held.
> >
> > > I must say so far I am delighted with this lens, although with the IS
> > > on it does drain my battery pretty fast.
> >
> > You might consider getting the battery grip for the 350D - it holds two
> > batteries instead of one, and also gives you identical shutter/etc.
> > buttons on the grip for when you are shooting in portrait orientation.
> > It also (to me) stabilizes the camera a little better with a little
> > more weight, and gives you a bigger gripping surface.
>
> Yup, there are a few more toys needed to go with it.
There are ALWAYS toys you need :^). A boat is a hole in the water to
throw money into. A camera is a hole in the wallet for money to drain
out of. <g>
> I will most
> likely also pick up a
> 1.4X teleconverter for it at some time. And I will be getting a few
> more batteries and possibly the grip as well.
Go with the less expensive batteries you find on eBay - they work fine,
if you don't expect their claims of almost double the mAh ratings of
the Canon batteries to be true... In reality, they are just about equal
(possibly slightly better) in life than the Canons, BUT they are less
than 1/3 the price, so you can afford more of them, and therefore shoot
longer for the same $$$. BTW, I've had no trouble mixing and matching
them in my battery grips with the true Canons, although at the
beginning I tried to keep them in distinct pairs, worrying about the
differeing mAh ratings. Now I don't worry abot that.
Get the batteries sold with a charger, preferably a combination
household/car charger - the charger is your bottleneck when you are
trying to get back to shooting with flat batteries, especially with a
baterry grip that takes a pair of batteries. If you have at least two
chargers, you can always keep your battery grip full of charged
batteries :^). And by getting one that works on 12v, you can charge on
the go.
I actually hve 4 chargers - two in the house, for charging after I come
in from a day shooting, and two (12v versions) hardwired and velcroed
on the inside wall of my truck canopy. If I come back to the truck
with low batteries, I can swap them into the chargers, put fresh in
from my bag, and never miss a beat - and the batteries are usually
charged back up in under an hour... I've never run out of batteries in
under an hour!
--
You need only reflect that one of the best ways to get yourself a
reputation as a dangerous citizen these days is to go about repeating
the very phrases which our founding fathers used in the struggle for
independence.
-- Charles A. Beard