#1
Posted 15 November 2012 - 03:34 PM
Randall
www.randallbenton.com
#2
Posted 15 November 2012 - 08:31 PM
As for holding the camera down....a tripod, and lots of lead!
#3
Posted 16 November 2012 - 01:17 AM
One of the first lessons you learn from any sort of remote or pole cam photography is that if you can possibly be in the water with the camera - then be in the water.
Alex
Alexander Mustard - www.amustard.com - www.magic-filters.com
Nikon D4 (Subal housing). Olympus EPL-5 (waiting for housing).
#4
Posted 20 November 2012 - 03:44 PM
Randall
www.randallbenton.com
#5
Posted 21 November 2012 - 03:16 AM
Appologize for the bad quality of the following shots, very dark conditions with an old camera that could harly go over 400 ISO.
But maybe you can use some of these :
I did a few salmon shot back in 2008. I did not have any specific equipment and could not get one. So simply with housing, no adds.
I stayed just in the water (naked feet, was hard...) but with a small rock bridge behind me, allowing me to get some sort of camouflage.

and did manage to get a lot of shots. I'm a bit sad my camera (and skills/technique) was so bad back then, but I'd love to go back with better settings ! : )



Could even manage to get somehow close in a lake further up. It hurted.

Some are tired enough so you can get close.
For the other you either have to rush in dirty water, trying to get a shot,

or to get on the bottom and stop breathing for a few minutes. It is hard in such a cold water !

hope you can do more, it's so cool to have them close to where you live ! : )
Edited by Autopsea, 21 November 2012 - 03:17 AM.
#6
Posted 21 November 2012 - 12:27 PM
I’m interested in trying to do something similar here in NZ with brown trout (not spawning). Thinking I’ll do the good old bicycle brake cable setup. A few questions if anyone can help me: Is it best to preset focus? Planning on using my 10-17 - is this the best lens to use? (I also have a 1.4 teleconverter) do fish scare when they hear the shutter etc etc.
Thanks
#7
Posted 21 November 2012 - 10:58 PM
I would really be suprized if they would be afraid of the shutter, especially with all the sounds there is naturally in rivers with some current. Salmon didn't fear shutter, or flash / strobes firing / charging etc... or me speaking loud outside.
#8
Posted 22 November 2012 - 01:05 AM
FYI, because water is much denser than air, sound doesn't really travel well from air to water and you can pretty much shout all you like without scaring fish. Usually it is movement or the crunching of stones underfoot that scares fish (here anyway)
#9
Posted 22 November 2012 - 04:14 AM
good luck with your operation : ) think about water clarity too for choosing the lens.
#10
Posted 22 November 2012 - 10:28 AM
Tom
Edited by Tom_Kline, 22 November 2012 - 10:29 AM.
Thomas C. Kline, Jr., Ph. D.
Oceanography & Limnology
Canon Eos-1Ds MkII and Nikon D1X, D2X, D2H cameras. Lens focal lengths ranging from 8 to 180mm for UW use. Seacam housings and remote control gear. Seacam 150D and 250D, Sea&Sea YS250, and Inon Z220 strobes.
www.flickr.com/photos/tomkline/
#11
Posted 27 November 2012 - 12:53 PM
Composition is great – do you have a remote monitor with your seacam system? I don’t so I thought I would take a few photos and pull it back out to check the composition then try and place it in the same spot? Maybe set the zoom (10-17) a bit wider to allow for cropping?
Having the log in the photo looks great – does it often help to have some other features in the photo rather than just fish & riverbed/surface?
No flash?
Do you preset focus/aperture/exposure?
Sorry if these are silly questions - I’m a total novice so any additional advice would be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Julian
#12
Posted 27 November 2012 - 07:03 PM
This shot was one of many taken with the camera at the same spot for many hours in one day. I have a few more with me from the same day on my HD (currently traveling) which I am attaching. The previous day I had the camera positioned downstream of the fallen tree and was less successful. It took to day 2 to figure out what was going on. It was the end of sockeye and at the start of the coho spawning seasons. So there was some interesting inter-species interaction. Up to 3 (just 2 in one of the pix) sockeye males thought the rather worn out female may have been trying to spawn from her feeble swimming motions. More likely she was just guarding her clutch. Meanwhile a coho female was trying to spawn on the same site. You can see it got late so the background is dark later on. I hope you can look at the EXIF data - the exposure was set manually so not changed all day. I used the E-finder with the E-glasses sold by Seacam to set up and observe this shot. However I have done most of my salmon shots without this system. Once I set up the camera I do not move it to allow the fish to do their thing without disturbance. I find that they ignore the camera going off as well as the strobe - used a Seacam 250D. Have been able to get over 900 shots in a day with it set at 8% power.
Tom
Tom that is a fantastic shot. It it's not rude to ask would you mind sharing some more info as to how you got it? I guess you saw the fish lying in this spot and decide to photograph them - presumably they scatter when you placed the camera, then it’s a waiting game until they come back?
Composition is great – do you have a remote monitor with your seacam system? I don’t so I thought I would take a few photos and pull it back out to check the composition then try and place it in the same spot? Maybe set the zoom (10-17) a bit wider to allow for cropping?
Having the log in the photo looks great – does it often help to have some other features in the photo rather than just fish & riverbed/surface?
No flash?
Do you preset focus/aperture/exposure?
Sorry if these are silly questions - I’m a total novice so any additional advice would be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Julian
Thomas C. Kline, Jr., Ph. D.
Oceanography & Limnology
Canon Eos-1Ds MkII and Nikon D1X, D2X, D2H cameras. Lens focal lengths ranging from 8 to 180mm for UW use. Seacam housings and remote control gear. Seacam 150D and 250D, Sea&Sea YS250, and Inon Z220 strobes.
www.flickr.com/photos/tomkline/
#13
Posted 28 November 2012 - 04:05 AM
How do you setup the remote? I have a Nauticam housing. Is it easy to rig up? I want to try this with rainbow trout near my home.
Canon 7D, Nauticam NA-7D, 2x Inon z240, Tokina 10-17, Canon 60mm
Flickr: http://www.flickr.co...tos/andydeitsch
#14
Posted 29 November 2012 - 12:54 PM
I've finished making my polecam now (can post photos if anyone is interested) and it seems to be working so just need to try it out in the water and see if I can find a cooperative trout or two. Will post some photos once that happens.
Cheers
#15
Posted 29 November 2012 - 09:21 PM
Here is the set up I used: http://www.seacam.co...e-system/system
The difference is that I left the camera on the stream bottom (was not holding it). The Seacam Power Pole handle was not attached to the pole but I was holding it in my hand with 10 or 15 meters (I don't recall which) of cable between the housing and it. I was wearing the E-glasses shown on the linked web page.
Tom
Thomas C. Kline, Jr., Ph. D.
Oceanography & Limnology
Canon Eos-1Ds MkII and Nikon D1X, D2X, D2H cameras. Lens focal lengths ranging from 8 to 180mm for UW use. Seacam housings and remote control gear. Seacam 150D and 250D, Sea&Sea YS250, and Inon Z220 strobes.
www.flickr.com/photos/tomkline/
#16
Posted 29 November 2012 - 09:24 PM
I really like that last photo too.
Note how the female got shoved to the bottom by the male poking at the other male.
Thomas C. Kline, Jr., Ph. D.
Oceanography & Limnology
Canon Eos-1Ds MkII and Nikon D1X, D2X, D2H cameras. Lens focal lengths ranging from 8 to 180mm for UW use. Seacam housings and remote control gear. Seacam 150D and 250D, Sea&Sea YS250, and Inon Z220 strobes.
www.flickr.com/photos/tomkline/
#17
Posted 03 December 2012 - 01:18 AM
No flash but just as well as the water wasn't as clear as I had hoped. While it didn't scare, this fish definately reacted to either the release lever moving or the vibration from the shutter activation. At one point I thought it came closer to the camera to check it out but after a few passes it had had enough and it shot off down the river.
Anyway, not the greatest photo but enough to convince me it can be done and that it's worth trying again. Thanks for all the advice and any comments on how to improve would be most welcome.
Julian
