Knowing that I will visit Taman Safari Indonesia next week, I managed to purchase the perpetually sold out Nikon zoom lens and wanted to give it some practice at our Singapore Zoo or Bird Park during the long weekend. Â I stared at the sky everyday and willed the rain to go away, without success. Â So one evening I took my Nikon D700 with my new lens and headed to Night Safari, alone.
I have totally underestimated the challenges ahead. Â Before I left home, I was very pleased to finally leave the flash gun behind since it is morally irresponsible to shoot these lovely animals with flash. Â Flash photography has been a steep learning curve for me; shooting moving wildlife hand held with no flash in near pitch dark and less than ideal light source is very hard. Â It is hard to describe unless you try it out yourself.
I have seen many visitors gave up after some test shots (all black, grossly under exposed). Â Looking at my LCD, they were amazed at what I took; but I was less than thrilled by the results of this trip. Â Sorry guys, I promise to do a better job next time. Perhaps with a monopod and a different setting. Â Below are 28 pictures selected out of close to 500 shots I took that one evening (no Photoshop, no cropping). Â I have put in some captions to better describe the condition. Â If the OVI player moves too fast, feel free to mouse over it, click pause, and manually forward the slide.
After the first few auto shots, I was stunned by the result (in a negative way no fault of Nikon). Â Bear in mind that I have just invested don’t know how many years of my future Christmas present budget into this one lens, I stood still trying to figure out what to do next. Â Auto focusing option is out because it was too dark for my camera. Â The animals kept moving and the shuttle speed could not be too low. Â Some animals kept moving towards and away from me and I had to keep changing the composition (i.e. zoom) and the focus. Â Basically my left hand was busy with the two rings on my lens. Â I have to go for full manual mode anyway because it is not a question of getting the right exposure, it is a question of how low you can possibly tolerate. I learned as I shot.
Most of the shots I was shooting at a focal length of 200mm (widest aperture of 2.8 for all). Â That works out to be an ideal shutter speed of 1/200s for hand held condition (please let me know if I talk rubbish)? Â VR – vibration reduction – can slow down the speed for 3 stops for those who have steady hands (I leaned towards stationary objects whenever possible) and I had to go even lower than that. Â Most of the shots, I used a speed of 1/15s. Â Some I manage to up it to 1/30s. Â Still, it is very hard to get a good shot with that speed at 200mm. Â I tried to get a better ISO whenever I could but rarely could I go below 3200.
I had no prior experience nor read anything on manual setting prior to this trip. Most definitely, I have committed a lot of laughable mistakes. Â My last manual focusing practice session was when I was a very small boy. Â I did the best I could and figured the above out through experiments on the spot that one moist evening. Â How glad my scientific mind kicks into action when I need to make my art works. Â As always, all online and offline feedback is welcome.