
I’ve had a fair few enquiries about the equipment used for photos in the blog and in the book South West Sea Kayaking. So humour me, I’ll try to cover this stuff in a single blog post.
Basically, I now always use a digital SLR. I carry it in a Watershed Ocoee drybag with internal padding. Watershed drybags are 100% dry (if sealed properly), but not cheap. Whilst paddling, the bag lives between my knees and is quickly opened/closed for photos.

The only protection for the camera whilst in use is a rubber Camera Armor cover; this at least protects the camera from damp salty fingers. Incidentally, ignore the lens condom thing that comes with the rubber case – this is useless and looks ridiculous, it goes straight in the bin.

The photos for South West Sea Kayaking were mostly taken with a secondhand Olympus E500. It’s conveniently small and light.


I subsequently decided to go a bit more seriously down the SLR route, and spent far too much money on toys from Nikon. For the last two years I have owned a Nikon D80 (Nikon have now replaced this with the improved D90)… this is a fantastic camera which does a much better job of exposing colour and light effectively (compared to the Olympus E500), and (something of a Nikon speciality) handles low light and high ISOs very well. If I were only ever to own one ‘decent’ camera for everything, it would be this one.


Late last year, I went temporarily insane and acquired a Nikon D300s; this expensive housebrick of a camera doesn’t really do anything new that my D80 doesn’t (apart from video, which I don’t want/need), but it is a noticeable step-up in certain respects, e.g. really fast accurate focusing and blisteringly fast frame rate (7 shots per second). I’m currently trying to get my head around this camera, but I’m sure that it’ll produce some great pics once I figure it out.


Like any camera geek, I have all sorts of lenses, not all of which I am entirely sure I understand what they do. However, pretty well all my on-the-water shots are taken using the awesomely versatile Nikon 18-200mm VR lens … the zoom range covers pretty well all possibilities, and the VR (image stabilisation) is obviously of benefit whilst your boat is moving up and down.


For wildlife/close-up shots, I was lucky enough to acquire a Nikon 80-400mm VR lens on eBay. This hefty lump of a lens is only really practical for use on dry land, and I’ve spent many happy hours lying on rocks and sand, pointing it at obliging seals and seabirds.


Hopefully that’s useful, for those who want to know the technical side of things. At some point I might find time to pen something about how I take photos, but I admittedly know a lot more about buying toys than using them …
PS If you feel a sudden desire to buy any of this gear for yourself, please use the links on this page – I get a small commission, enabling me to waste even more money on camera gear!























I use that watershed bag under the spraydeck for my video camera. Never seen that rubber armour for the camera body though – it looks very handy!
Simon
Or even armor. (Armour… what was I thinking? French perhaps?)
Armour is perfectly ok, Simon.. if you’re British anyway.. Armor is the American equivalent.
Mark, great blog and superb book by the way!
SIC – http://www.cameraarmor.com/
Mark
This is all very well for the enthusiast, but does not help the people like me who I would describe as an enthusiastic snap shooter and want a reasonable record of where I have been and what I have seen.
For several years I have been using an Olympus Stylus 770 SW, it is waterproof, drop proof and crush proof. It is small enough to go in my PFD pocket and comes up smiling after getting splashed by surf, rolling or swimming.
See http://picasaweb.google.com/robpealing/NewZealand# for some of the dry land results. (the over exposed ones of the runner and the bus shelter were my fault not the camera’s)
Hi Rob – I wasn’t pretending to tell others what to use, just explaining the equipment that I use. I’m not a great fan of waterproof cameras myself (waterproof or not, any camera needs to be totally dry before you use it) but if you’re looking for advice for ‘enthusiastic snapshooters’ (or anything related) then a search through http://www.ukriversguidebook.co.uk/forum is recommended.
Hello,
Sorry about the misunderstanding. Thank you for the link.
Best wishes,
Rob
Thanks for the ideas! What size is you Watershed Ocoee drybag?
Ocoee drybag – 15 litres