NTP66
New member
My wife and I are going back to Maui in a month during peak whale season, and I'll be bringing along my DSLR gear - Nikon D5200, Nikon 35mm f/1.8G, Nikon 16-85mm f/3.5-5.6G, and Tamron 70-300 f/4-5.6 Di VC USD. While I do plan on testing out some settings from the beach, I'm curious to know what settings others have used for taking photos of whales/dolphins from a boat.
I'm hoping that it's sunny enough that I can shoot around f/8 and 1/500th @ 400 ISO (as a starting point), probably in shutter priority. Aside from a minimum shutter speed, I was wondering about the focus mode, AF-area mode, and metering.
Metering:
Most of the time I use spot metering, but I was thinking of using matrix metering while out on the boat.
Focus Mode:
I thought that maybe AF-C with continuous shutter would be a good choice due to the whales constantly moving.
AF-Area Mode:
I'm considering using either 39-point dynamic or Auto-AF.
My biggest concerns are really with the last two. I think that maybe AF-C and dynamic/auto-AF could cause the focus to shift to something like waves, rather than the whale itself. I guess if I can get the shutter speed high enough, AF-S and single point AF could work out well.
Long story short, I'm all ears for any advice those of you with many more years in this hobby (or profession) than I do.
I'm hoping that it's sunny enough that I can shoot around f/8 and 1/500th @ 400 ISO (as a starting point), probably in shutter priority. Aside from a minimum shutter speed, I was wondering about the focus mode, AF-area mode, and metering.
Metering:
Most of the time I use spot metering, but I was thinking of using matrix metering while out on the boat.
Focus Mode:
I thought that maybe AF-C with continuous shutter would be a good choice due to the whales constantly moving.
AF-Area Mode:
I'm considering using either 39-point dynamic or Auto-AF.
My biggest concerns are really with the last two. I think that maybe AF-C and dynamic/auto-AF could cause the focus to shift to something like waves, rather than the whale itself. I guess if I can get the shutter speed high enough, AF-S and single point AF could work out well.
Long story short, I'm all ears for any advice those of you with many more years in this hobby (or profession) than I do.