Sunday, July 18, 2010

Macros in a rainforest















I haven't really tried macros since I moved from the S5Is to the D90. This was an ideal trip to learn a few things. I had gotten a Raynox DCR 150 for about 35 pounds. It is a poor man's macro and when attached to the 70-300, it gives a magnification of 2:1 to 1:2 depending on the zoom used. Did carry the 150-500 as well but that was never even taken out of the bag.
Was supposed to be a trip with Sandeep, Arun and me but when Arun dropped out, Hemant flew over from Mumbai at a notice of half an hour. Funny thing is he got to Majestic for the bus before we did. We had a cottage booked over at the Agumbe Rainforest Research Station (ARRS). At 1000 bucks a person including food, it was comfy. Walked from the bus stand to the station in some really heavy rain with considerable luggage as autos were not really available. After we were refreshed, the first trek through the river was unexpected. I ended up with my 18-105 and cam fogged up, while Sandeep's cam just refused to start up. Needless to say rain and river dips don't agree with electronics. Managed to dry the cam but was left with the 70-300 and macro to shoot for the remaining 2 days.

Thanks to Gerry, we managed quite a few shots of a pit viper, and we did find a couple of vine snakes, the second one considerably smaller and quite easy to agitate. Ben, who was researching frogs, managed to spot a variety of interesting frogs, caecilians and insects (a foot long stick insect and a whip scorpion were the pick of the day). Managed to experiment quite a bit with the raynox and Joshua also lent me his 60mm macro to try out which also provided me with a perspective. Lessons learnt from the trip: I need an external flash, the nikon on-board flash is much better than the canon one but it is of almost no use while shooting macros.

Did get plenty of reasonable shots whenever the camera defogged, especially of the malabar flying frog but with the pit viper, was mostly restricted due to the camera fogging. My observations on the raynox vs dedicated macro, the image quality may not be spectacular on the raynox but it is pretty good however usability is severely restricted due to limitations on the focusing distances (maximum). One advantage though was the adjustable magnification on the 70-300 which gave me quite a varied perspectives.

The butterfly shot on the blog is using the 60 mm macro with a vivitar external flash, the rest are using 70-300 with or without the raynox dcr-150 and the stream shot was the last shot I took with the 18-105 on that trip.

Remaining pics on picasa at a better resolution

2 comments:

  1. nice brief report.. Good shot of flying frog.. lovely one of the pit viper

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  2. Was just comparing the macros of raynox and the 60 mm macro... Send me my shots of the vine snake... wanted to see how they came up...

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