Welche Systemkamera für Einsteiger – Reisefotografie/Safari?
Hallo zusammen,
im November reise ich nach Südafrika wo unter anderem eine Safari auf dem Plan steht. Da ich nicht nur mit dem Handy Bilder machen möchte, würde ich mir gerne eine spiegellose Systemkamera + Objektiv zulegen.
Allerdings bin ich mit dem Riesen Angebot an Kameras überfordert und weiß nicht, welche die richtige ist.
Ich bin noch Einsteiger, allerdings bereit viel zu lernen und mich damit auseinanderzusetzen. Vorkenntnisse habe ich mit der Canon EOS 1100d.
Hat jemand einen Tipp, was für eine Kamera sich anbieten würde?
Vielen Dank im Voraus.
Hello
So my proposal would be
Designed with accessories by 4 kg for 18-800mm small picture
With the OM1 and the 12-100 IS and the 100-400 IS you don’t need a tripod. OM1 with 100-400 IS stabilizes a meadow ride with 50 km/h from the loading surface of a star axle/spring pickup, 400mm at light value 10
For most guided safaris rich smartphones, otherwise they are “photo safaris”.
A typical tourist safari is an air-conditioned Mitshubishi/Hyundai/Toyota/Tata, minibus that drives the lion almost over the feet at noon, one photographs/films through windows or from the roof hatch.
A photo safari takes place with an off-road car converted to theatre seating. You have a canopy as sun protection, there’s dirt, dust, lancing. It is possible to smell animals and their residues/excretions. The Geländwagen is open so you don’t have glass panes as a picture quality brake but you have to keep 5-10 meters escape distance so you need at least one light tele (135 to 200).
A “correct” photo-fari in free wildlife with guides takes several days without a guarantee of success. Most of the “wildlife photographers” take a maximum of 400/KB Tele, most want to get out with 100 to 150mm/KB. Photographing with a long tele is boring and what for Faulenzer or holidaymakers who want to work the Big 5 on a day. Long teles always have problems with the motif “compression” as well as dirt and streaks in the airline.
Now you can explain with the organizer what safari you can book/will and with photosafaris there is camera technology on site for rent. So you need to buy nix and fly 10000km through the world and then fault it unused in the closet.
Your cell phone and a bridgekammera for distance photography.
Bridge cameras are a good alternative for people who don’t know how to photograph. The lens changes are eliminated, the lens is fixed and offers up to 80x zoom plus additional digital zoom.
I own a Nicon P950, perfect enough for me.
There was only one B700 on the Namibia Tour. However, the P950 has the advantage that you can connect an external micro.
Do yourself a favor and don’t get a bridge camera, at least if the photos are worth it. Do not let high zoom ranges / focal length dazzle you. The already bad cameras don’t pack it, and apart from that, you can’t take a very high distance on heat anyway, because of heat whims. These are often pictures for the ton.
I advise you on an MFT camera and a lens up to 200 or 300mm. You have to see what Olympus and Panasonic offer and you can afford. And before that I would read and practice. Such cameras are not phones and you have to know what you’re doing.
The modern DSLM bodies are comparatively lightweight, and lenses make an exception. The total weight of the system is therefore crucial, but your budget too.
I can only recommend using the purchase advice in the DSLR Forum: https://www.dslr-forum.de/threads/fragebogen-fuer-kaufberatung.339424/
They have a detailed questionnaire that takes into account many aspects. You fill it carefully for you and open a new thread there.
Here’s an extract:
I used this at the time because I wished an upgrade from my EOS 200D. I still use the upgrade today and didn’t regret it.