Test Firing the Canon EF600mm f/4L IS + 2x

So, now that I have added the Canon EF600mm f/4L IS to the lens lineup, I just couldn’t resist trying it out with my Canon 2x TC.  Of course, I lost autofocus on my 7D due to the 2-stop light loss, but I figured “Hey, I used to focus manually way back in the olden days, so why can’t I do it now.”

All I have to say is “WOW”!  Canon really knew what they were doing when they built this stuff.  I was shooting at ISO 800 and 400, and considering I was manually focusing at 1200mm (with my almost 50 year old eyes), I’m pretty impressed with the outcome.

These are just simple birds from my back yard, but they really show off the power of this lens.  Thank you Canon!  These shots, while having been resized for the Web, have not been cropped in any way.  The EXIF data is intact on these images if you are at all curious of the settings.

To begin, I focused on my feeder and waited.  Eventually, along came one of my local House Finches.  I have lots of these guys around the house and they are always willing to model for me.

Wow, not bad.  Not quite as clear as at the native 600mm, but not bad, especially when it comes to posting on the Web!

Listening, I could hear chirping coming my neighbor’s yard, so I turn to find another one of the little fellows up in the top of one of their trees!  A distance shot!  Great test!

Not too shabby.  Looks like I might take this 2x with me to Yellowstone next month!  Might help out with those long shots of the wolves in the Lamar Valley!

Next up was a local Mockingbird that landed on my bird bath.  This was the first time I have seen him/her there so I fired away.  (One of these days I need to figure out how to tell the guys from the gals for this species.)  You can certainly tell that the depth of focus is really narrow shooting at this range.  Still, very clear! 

As I’m sitting there enjoying the early afternoon, I hear my buddies the Bluejays approaching.  They always announce their approach and all the other birds scatter.  Funny thing is though, these guys really are bullies!  They make a lot of noise and scare other birds, but they are about the most skittish birds that visit my back yard.  I have the hardest time luring them out for a photograph.  They will hide in the trees, swoop down to be a peanut or two, and then right back to the safety of the tree before the camera can even focus on them.  But not tonight!  With the big gun, I can get him even when he is hiding in the tree!  I’m really liking this lens!  (I’m starting to get redundant.)

And last but not least, there are always a few doves around sitting on the fence, all made up with their blue eyeshadow.  They seem to be able to sit there for hours, just watching me and the other birds.  Then sooner or later, a whole flock of them will descend to the ground and start picking up the seeds that the finches have knocked out of the feeders.  These guys are good models because they don’t move much, so even as the sun is setting, you can still use a pretty slow shutter-speed with them.

So that was it for the evening.  I didn’t see my Northern Cardinals around, but they can’t be far away.  Maybe by Saturday morning I’ll be able to catch the “early birds” as they are rooting around looking for those fabled worms.

Morning Walk

So, Karen has finally figured out a way to get me to walk around the neighborhood with her on the weekend mornings.  She started telling me about all the birds, squirrels, and other critters she has been seeing.  So today, I got up and “exercised” with her and took my camera along.  I didn’t see a lot of critters, but for sure I saw more than if I had stayed in bed with my eyes closed.

The first one I got a shot of was one of the local Mockingbirds.  These guys seem awful camera shy.  Every time I get close to them in the back yard, they fly away.  And if ever two of them get close to each other, look out because feathers are going to fly.  This one figured he was safe since he was in the tree, but I still got him.  Of course, as soon as I took the shot I realized I should have brought my flash along as well.  Being in the shadows of the tree branches, he was a tad underexposed.  Thankfully, I have Adobe Lightroom which can help out in just such an occasion.  I made minor touch ups of exposure and cropping today to bring out the subjects (in the interest of full disclosure).

Mockingbird

We continued around the block and finally came to a stream.  Okay, it is more of a ditch really.  It runs from our neighborhood and according to the maps, it finds its way all the way to Lake Lewisville.  It is the last area of wilderness in my neighborhood that hasn’t been gobbled up by houses…yet.  It’s not a very big patch of land, but there is still some wildlife on it amongst the scrub brushes.  I hear rumors of a coyote that lives around here but I haven’t seen him yet.

While taking a breather on the bridge, I got a few shots of this little House Finch eating some seeds from the plant (or weed) it was perched on.

House Finch

And then as we turn to the other side of the road, we find something new to add to my growing collection of bird photographs; my first shots of a Killdeer.

Killdeer

There was also an American Robin in the water catching bugs, but he was so underexposed the pictures weren’t worth saving.  Sad smile

So, was it worth it?  Absolutely!  Not only did I get to spend time with Karen, but I got shots of the elusive Mockingbird, the cute little House Finch, and the Killdeer.  And we made it back home before the temperature started climbing into the triple digits!  I’ll be glad with autumn gets here.