What's new

Does anyone use a 70-300 mm for bird photography?

Birders often like 500 and 600s...the longer lenses make up for distance. The 150-600 third party brands are popular. The Nikon 200 to 500 is also popular and is quite a value. Nikon also has a 500 mm PF ( PHASE FRESNEL) which is quite light.

If you really want to get into bird photography, then I think it would be wise to get a lens that is at least 500 mm.

What would you think about a 300 mm lens with a 1.4x converter ? Found one for sale with a lot of accessories for $475.00. The article says excellent condition.
 
I bet you could get a 150-600 Tamron SP VC for around $600 right now on ebay.
 
What would you think about a 300 mm lens with a 1.4x converter ? Found one for sale with a lot of accessories for $475.00. The article says excellent condition.

A Nikkor 300mm f/2.8 with dedicated 1.4x would be a fine match ... though I am guessing that is not what you found ?
 
The 300 f/4 AF-S + The Tc14e or tc14e-II would give you a 420mm f/5.6. But ONLY the 300 AF-S is worth buying....i think a 150-600 or Nikon 200-500 would be better options.Previous models of Nikon 300mm telephoto lenses are not that good.

I owned the Nikon 300 millimeter -f/4 AFS and when paired with the 1.4 TCe from Nikon it is an okay pair, but your limit is still F / 5.6 and your focal length is 420 mm. the zoom options give you focal length flexibility and also about the same aperture.
 
If you’re going with used, check out the buy/sell/swap groups on Facebook for your specific camera mount. Great deals and no middle man taking a cut.
 
I found out previously that my 70-300mm while decent was just not good enough for capturing wildlife away from a feeder. I purchased the Nikon 200-500 and absolutely love it. It has great vibration reduction. The lens is like 5 pounds alone, I found my normal camera strap just wasn't going to cut it as that is a lot of weight around your neck. Also check the weight limit on your tripod, with camera you are pushing 6 pounds and with that money in lens and body sitting on it you don't want to find out the hard way that it can't handle it.
 
I bet you could get a 150-600 Tamron SP VC for around $600 right now on ebay.

You are probably right about the lens and the price. I found a 200-500 Tamron for $400.00. Haven't made any purchases yet.
 
For wildlife photography, you will soon discover that 300mm is not enough....

210MM
QY7OyjE.jpg
 
Last edited:
I always bring my 75-300 with everywhere. Though there a been quite a few times I wish a had something a little longer.
 
I bet you could get a 150-600 Tamron SP VC for around $600 right now on ebay.

You are probably right about the lens and the price. I found a 200-500 Tamron for $400.00. Haven't made any purchases yet.


Don't waste your money on the Tamron 200-500. I never could get sharp pictures with it. No VC makes a big difference while hand holding. Look up the reviews and make your own decision. A used Tamron 150-600mm G1 would be a better investment. The Canon mounts are going for about 600.00, but the Nikon mounts are still about 700.00. Go figure.

Super impressed with the Sigma 150-500mm I recently picked up. Got lucky for 300.00 but, there are some deals out there. Was going to go with the G2 for the D7100 but, not sure it's worth all that money for another 100mm. Even with the tripod foot on, this combo weighs in right at 5 lbs.
 
Birders often like 500 and 600s...the longer lenses make up for distance. The 150-600 third party brands are popular. The Nikon 200 to 500 is also popular and is quite a value. Nikon also has a 500 mm PF ( PHASE FRESNEL) which is quite light.

If you really want to get into bird photography, then I think it would be wise to get a lens that is at least 500 mm.

What would you think about a 300 mm lens with a 1.4x converter ? Found one for sale with a lot of accessories for $475.00. The article says excellent condition.
If you think you aren't going to do much wildlife/bird photography, then that's an okay compromise. But if you want to shoot a lot of birdies, it's a bad option. Some of the best shots of birds are going to be in mediocre light (early morning, dusk, in the shadows of leaves). That teleconverter is going to add a couple of stops to your shot. You effectively won't be able to shoot a bird that is flying UNLESS it is sunlight. For instance, it will be way too slow to shoot a hummingbird's wings as they move even if you jack up the ISO.
 
I agree with what many have already stated..too much reach is not enough when photographing wildlife. Of course there is always the balance between price, performance, reach, and speed. I guess you could add weight to that list as well.

I have a Nikon 70-200 f/2.8 with a 1.7x tele-converter that gives excellent results and would give you quite a bit of equivalent reach on a crop-sensor. Both were purchased used on eBay.

I also have a Tamron 300 f/2.8 and a 2x tele-converter for it. It also performs well but there are situations where I have seen some color fringing on branches that are back-lit by a bright sky. That set-up was "stolen" at an estate sale.
 
I personally love my 70-300mm, it's a higher end 70-300mm. Do you shoot with a crop sensor body, if so you get 480mm from a Canon and 450mm on a Nikon. So there's your 500mm right their. Sure it's 20mm short but if you shoot with a high enough MP body, just crop in to the bird. Although if you are shooting very small birds like chickadees and finches, warblers ect... you will not be able to effectively fill the frame with the bird with only 480mm. Even if you crop it down their won't be enough resolution to get any kind of decently sharp image. But for ducks geese, cranes, hawks ect... in my opinion a good 70-300mm on a crop sensor body works just great. Plus it's way lighter than a 200-500 or 500 f4. Just my $0.02. Hope it helped.
 
I have a 100-400 and it really falls short most of the time. Hard to fill the frame with birds and even deer. Unless you use a blind or they are kind of tame. A lot of people recommend the Sigma 60-600 except the weight. I go between keeping what I have so I can walk around with it or getting a longer zoom but being limited because of its weight.
 

Most reactions

Back
Top Bottom