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Posted By: 1minute Great condition coyote - 12/09/16
Cookie had some fair luck with the dogs this fall. Thought this was a good looking specimen. Don't care for the background fence, but one has to take what Mother Nature offers.
Canon EOS 70D, Canon 500 mm, f5, at 1/400
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Canon EOS 70D, Canon 500 mm, f5, at 1/1600
[Linked Image]

Caught these guys wading the creek as well.

Canon EOS 50D, Canon 100-400 at 170mm, f5, at 1/500
[Linked Image]

Have a good one,
Posted By: ingwe Re: Great condition coyote - 12/09/16
Nice!
Posted By: Nebraska Re: Great condition coyote - 12/09/16
Beautiful pics! I'm still green so can you tell me why she switched from 1/400 to 1/1600 for the second shot? Also, which 100-400 lens is she using and now does she like it?
Posted By: 1minute Re: Great condition coyote - 12/09/16
Did not shoot the pics, but I suspect just a bit more sun and the automatic metering did the compensation. Don't see any shadow effects in the upper image, while the second has some obvious shadow. I.e. the sun was coming out. With wildlife, one rarely has time to do much in the way of manual work so she pretty much lets the camera do it's thing.

With the 100-400, she's using the older (like 4 or 5 yrs) EF 4.5 to 5.6 L IS that telescopes to zoom. Probably her favorite lens for wildlife. With something like the prime 500mm one often ends up too close to fit a critter into the frame, and that actually became an issue when the coyote came within 20 ft or so. Similarly, she started after the river deer with the 500, but came racing back to switch because the 500 could not even fit in the buck.

I believe the newer 100-400 does it's zooming internally as opposed to telescoping.

She can also get by hand holding the 100-400, but has to find a rest of some kind for the 500 prime. It's a pain in the butt chasing critters with big tripod in hand, although they are quite handy if one's working out of a blind. I can hand hold the prime, but I'm 6'4" with knuckles that near drag the ground. Lots of reach.

Also, remember the crop sensor cameras give one a 1.6 multiplier effect. I.e. Optically 100mm is equal to a 160mm and at 400mm it's the same as a 640mm on a full frame unit.

The 500 is essentially a fixed 800mm with a crop sensor. There are probably some folks around here that can explain things a bit more eloquently than I.
Posted By: AZ Southpaw Re: Great condition coyote - 12/17/16
Nice! That dog is in good shape, and those mulies seem to be doing well also. Thanks for sharing.
Posted By: FAIR_CHASE Re: Great condition coyote - 12/17/16
I will sometimes put the 7dii 500/f4 on the tripod beside me when I call but usually hit the other trigger first.
Posted By: WendyK Re: Great condition coyote - 12/18/16
great pics!
Posted By: 257Rob Re: Great condition coyote - 12/20/16
She HAND-HOLDS a 100-400 on a crop-sensor camera??? shocked What other superpowers does she have? wink
Posted By: 1minute Re: Great condition coyote - 12/25/16
It is a telescoping lens, so one has a pretty wide grasp on things with one hand on the camera and the other griping the lens hood. Probably an 16-18 inch span.

I have smaller 250mm kit lens on a Canon 70D and have to bed down to get anything sharp when it's stretched out.
Posted By: dye7barrel Re: Great condition coyote - 01/02/17
Nice mulie
Posted By: jaguartx Re: Great condition coyote - 02/04/17
Originally Posted by 1minute
Cookie had some fair luck with the dogs this fall. Thought this was a good looking specimen. Don't care for the background fence, but one has to take what Mother Nature offers.
Canon EOS 70D, Canon 500 mm, f5, at 1/400
[Linked Image]

Canon EOS 70D, Canon 500 mm, f5, at 1/1600
[Linked Image]

Caught these guys wading the creek as well.

Canon EOS 50D, Canon 100-400 at 170mm, f5, at 1/500
[Linked Image]

Have a good one,


Was a time i would have given a finger to stick an arrow in that buck.
Posted By: hanco Re: Great condition coyote - 02/24/17
Good picture
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