The Turtle Journal team gets close to the action to bring you inside the critical natural moment with vivid imagery and compelling video clips.Â
Sue Wieber Nourse Snaps Close-Up of Emerging Hatchling
The Sony DSC-F828 serves as our workhorse research camera with a high quality Carl Zeiss lens and a manual zoom ranging from macro to ~ 135 mm telephoto. We have two F828s, one that shows all the signs of several years of salt water and sand dunes, and a second one with only a single research season under its belt. The F828 produces excellent digital stills, but also provides the capability to switch quickly to medium quality video to document important research events.
Terrapin Hatchling Pips through Its Eggshell
If the F828 is our workhorse, the Pentax Optio W30 with its built-in underwater capability is our pocket miracle maker. The underwater housing serves double duty. Surprisingly, not every field day is sunshine and light. More days than we wish to remember are filled instead with rain, wind and storms. For instance, the leatherback necropsy last Sunday was done outdoors (obviously) in a driving rain storm. The only camera present that could document the post mortem was the Optio W30. Â
Don Lewis Zooms In on Emerging Duo for a Close-Up
Having lost three previous digital cameras to salt water, the Optio W30 is perfect to document all action near, above and below the water line. Its compact shape and light mass allow the camera to slip comfortably into field pockets and even bathing suit pockets. This camera takes excellent macro video clips in QuickTime format and good quality stills when the F828 isn’t around.
Close-Up of the Emerging Duo
The one drawback with the Optio W30 is the LCD screen. The camera fell from my swimming suit pocket about 12 inches onto sandy soil during our June field school. The fall appears to have jarred the LCD screen which has dropped to about 10% functionality. In essence, the camera now is a point and guess. Still, the Optio W30 brings home some sweet imagery … when pointed in the right direction and in the right mode of operation.
The most important instrument for capturing the right shot at the right moment has nothing to do with digital anything. If you can’t get yourself to the perfect spot at the perfect time, your top quality camera will capture a whole lot of sea gulls, sand dunes and fiddler crabs.