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General Photography
Wild Life
Your ideal wildlife set up
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<blockquote data-quote="cbay" data-source="post: 482163" data-attributes="member: 35177"><p>I pretty much set out to accomplish those goals at the beginning of the year. I started from scratch and built what i consider a good setup. D7000, D7200, Tokina 11-20, Nikon 18-140, Tamron 150-600, A decent tripod (Oben 1411 with BA111 ball head), Oben monopod, Manfrotto RC128 fluid head, Lowepro flipside 400 backpack, remote, cleaning stuff, hood/loupe for video, Rode video mic pro, extra batteries, good uv filters for all lenses, 4 stop nd & 9 stop nd for the 18-140, and a 9 stop for the 11-20.</p><p>I feel like i got what i need and that it's capable of doing a lot more than i am able to do. I would have to check but pretty sure i'm still under six grand for everything.</p><p>I'll be getting another tripod in the future and come up with a way to pack the Tamzooka with body in some sort of ready bag -probably end up padding a duffel bag. It would have been nice to have a pack that will carry both bodies with lenses attached (one with the Tamzooka attached). Ameristep doghouse blind would be a good idea for a wildlife photographer.</p><p>Other than all that a reflector and some flash stuff is somewhere in the future then stick a fork in me cause I'm done!! </p><p>I got some pics on flickr for examples if you want to see what ive done with the gear. Link at the bottom of my posts.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cbay, post: 482163, member: 35177"] I pretty much set out to accomplish those goals at the beginning of the year. I started from scratch and built what i consider a good setup. D7000, D7200, Tokina 11-20, Nikon 18-140, Tamron 150-600, A decent tripod (Oben 1411 with BA111 ball head), Oben monopod, Manfrotto RC128 fluid head, Lowepro flipside 400 backpack, remote, cleaning stuff, hood/loupe for video, Rode video mic pro, extra batteries, good uv filters for all lenses, 4 stop nd & 9 stop nd for the 18-140, and a 9 stop for the 11-20. I feel like i got what i need and that it's capable of doing a lot more than i am able to do. I would have to check but pretty sure i'm still under six grand for everything. I'll be getting another tripod in the future and come up with a way to pack the Tamzooka with body in some sort of ready bag -probably end up padding a duffel bag. It would have been nice to have a pack that will carry both bodies with lenses attached (one with the Tamzooka attached). Ameristep doghouse blind would be a good idea for a wildlife photographer. Other than all that a reflector and some flash stuff is somewhere in the future then stick a fork in me cause I'm done!! I got some pics on flickr for examples if you want to see what ive done with the gear. Link at the bottom of my posts. [/QUOTE]
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Your ideal wildlife set up
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