I need to find a relatively inexpensive (as I doubt I'll use it that much)
underwater camera, something that I can use diving in the Caribbean - I've
never dived before so the depths will be shallow I guess - I might do a PADI
course while I'm there but don't anticipate anything too adventurous
Oh and bearing in mind there have been handbags swinging in
rec.travel.caribbean over reef diving etiquette I'd like to say I'm reading
up on it
http://www.sailhawaii.com/coral.html
http://www.american.edu/ted/SCUBA.HTM
I've not had much luck Googling so far, found the links below the Sea & Sea
seems like a good option and the price is in budget but the Fuji looks like
a good option too although it's about £200 more than I really wanted to
spend :-(
http://www.greatdigitaldeals.co.uk/product_info.php?cPath=52&products_id=677
Can anyone help me with some ideas please?
Oh and will I even need a strobe if all I'm doing is swimming in shallow
Caribbean water?
Thanks
Tim
Fuji's F10 would be a good choice I guess. If the light is low down
there.
The colour cast of the underwater environment invites noise and the
Fuji
should be good at supressing it when you use higher ISO settings.
Of course, if your diving is confined to the shallows, reefs at depths
of around
10-25 ft, light shouldn't be an issue. A P&S camera would be a must
owing to the LCD,
no need to put your eye up to a viewfinder.
> I need to find a relatively inexpensive (as I doubt I'll use it that much)
> underwater camera, something that I can use diving in the Caribbean - I've
> never dived before so the depths will be shallow I guess - I might do a PADI
> course while I'm there but don't anticipate anything too adventurous
I snorkle in the Caribbean and use an Ewa Marine bag on my existing
Nikon CoolPix. I don't much like the bags, but they're a cheap
compromise when you snorkle once a year for a couple of weeks. :->
Check their website for depth limitations - not a problem for
snorkling, but may be for SCUBA.
Get one well ahead of time and check to confirm your camera fits. My
first bag would not hold the camera, so I exchanged it a different one,
and the camera fit. :-| C'est la vie.
--
Phil Stripling | email to the replyto address is presumed
The Civilized Explorer | spam and read later. email from this URL
http://www.cieux.com/ | http://www.civex.com/ is read daily.
EWA bags are generally rated to 10m - I've had mine to a little under 15m,
but the squeeze may press more buttons than you had intended!
Deep.
Couple of points in addition to what others have said:
1) don't take anything into the water you can't afford
to replace if it floods -- salt water does baaaaad things
to electronics.
2) From the sounds of your post, you are not overly
experienced in the water -- the simpler the camera is
to operate the better off you are.
3) Sun block on the back of your legs in particular -
real easy to have so much fun floating around on the
surface looking at stuff and taking pictures to not
notice very severe burning of the backs of your knees
in particular (been there done that - not a pleasant
experience).
4) best time of day is around noon where the sun is
overhead and gives the best light - as the angle goes
away from 90 degrees, light drops quickly and your
colors also start to fade and shift -- of course, that is
the worst time for #3 above ;-)
5) have fun !!!
mikey
I would advise to first learn how to dive, and worry about uw-photography
later. Remember that man isn't made to be under water, first get used to the
new environment, then worry about camera and pics.
When I first started diving about 12 year ago, I took a camera with me, and
made lousy pics and didn't do a good job of diving either. Now, after about
750 dives without camera, I'm ready to try all over.
Good luck!
Lucas
Yep! Will be taking a D70s with me but have decided against an underwater
housing for it as it puts all my eggs in one basket - risky!!!
> 2) From the sounds of your post, you are not overly
> experienced in the water -- the simpler the camera is
> to operate the better off you are.
You're right, I swim a lot but that's not diving, as Lucas pointed out there
is the danger of doing both things badly, another reason for not taking the
Nikon. Although I'm anticipating that most of the underwater photography
will be when I'm swimming/snorkeling. JimKs suggestion of a disposable isn't
a bad idea if all else fails but something digital would be nice.
> 3) Sun block on the back of your legs in particular -
> real easy to have so much fun floating around on the
> surface looking at stuff and taking pictures to not
> notice very severe burning of the backs of your knees
> in particular (been there done that - not a pleasant
> experience).
Wise wise words, I hope I remember them.BTW can anyone recommend a good
waterproof sun block while we're on the subject
> 4) best time of day is around noon where the sun is
> overhead and gives the best light - as the angle goes
> away from 90 degrees, light drops quickly and your
> colors also start to fade and shift -- of course, that is
> the worst time for #3 above ;-)
Thanks for the tip
> 5) have fun !!!
Thank you I'll do my best
Thanks everyone for your advice
Tim
>> Couple of points in addition to what others have said:
>>
>> 1) don't take anything into the water you can't afford
>> to replace if it floods -- salt water does baaaaad things
>> to electronics.
>
>Yep! Will be taking a D70s with me but have decided against an underwater
>housing for it as it puts all my eggs in one basket - risky!!!
>
>
>> 2) From the sounds of your post, you are not overly
>> experienced in the water -- the simpler the camera is
>> to operate the better off you are.
>
>You're right, I swim a lot but that's not diving, as Lucas pointed out there
>is the danger of doing both things badly, another reason for not taking the
>Nikon. Although I'm anticipating that most of the underwater photography
>will be when I'm swimming/snorkeling. JimKs suggestion of a disposable isn't
>a bad idea if all else fails but something digital would be nice.
>
I gave my daughter an underwater camera that's good down to about 50
feet but it is a film camera - I think it is a Cannon. But I think
for someone just learning to dive, a camera is a mistake and a
distraction. And I say that as someone who is never without a camera
and who takes pictures of everything all the time and who feels naked
without a camera with her.
>
>> 3) Sun block on the back of your legs in particular -
>> real easy to have so much fun floating around on the
>> surface looking at stuff and taking pictures to not
>> notice very severe burning of the backs of your knees
>> in particular (been there done that - not a pleasant
>> experience).
>
>Wise wise words, I hope I remember them.BTW can anyone recommend a good
>waterproof sun block while we're on the subject
>
I don't rely on sunblock. First of all I hate it. I wear a dive skin
whenever I'm in the water. If I'm going to go twice in one day and
the dive skin is too wet to put back on, then I'll wear a very big
long T-shirt type beach coverup - goes down to my knees and to my
elbows.
My hair covers my head - my husband has to worry about his bald spot
and the back of his neck in addition. I don't know if that's a
problem for you or not.
Thanks I hear what your saying, still need a camera to take sailing,
swimming etc though.
Do you have a website of your pictures??
BTW here's mine if you're interested, mainly stuff I shot in SF last year
with a Sony P&S
www.timdenning.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk
>>> 3) Sun block on the back of your legs in particular -
>>> real easy to have so much fun floating around on the
>>> surface looking at stuff and taking pictures to not
>>> notice very severe burning of the backs of your knees
>>> in particular (been there done that - not a pleasant
>>> experience).
>>
>> Wise wise words, I hope I remember them.BTW can anyone recommend a
>> good waterproof sun block while we're on the subject
>>
> I don't rely on sunblock. First of all I hate it. I wear a dive skin
> whenever I'm in the water. If I'm going to go twice in one day and
> the dive skin is too wet to put back on, then I'll wear a very big
> long T-shirt type beach coverup - goes down to my knees and to my
> elbows.
>
> My hair covers my head - my husband has to worry about his bald spot
> and the back of his neck in addition. I don't know if that's a
> problem for you or not.
Thanks for the info - I think I'll start a new thread and see what people
recommend.
Thinking of dive skins, what is the risk of bumping into jellyfish, and how
bad exactly is that???
Cheers
Tim
You can use the disposable for the swimming stuff too.
For sailing, I use either the regular digital or a film camera that is
water resistant (point and shoot type)
This is a link http://www12.virtualtourist.com/m/4a9c6/ to my travel
pictures. Most of what I have taken with underwater disposable
cameras is a copy of a copy but you can get an idea from this
http://p.vtourist.com/668757-Snorkeling_at_Hol_Chan-Belize.jpg
and this is to my boat pictures
http://home.mindspring.com/~gmbeasley/id1.html
Anything prior to about 2002 is film
Hi
OK forgeting the diving photography bit I've been looking for a camera that
I can use on the beach, windsurfer & in the shallows etc and found the
Olympus Mju 720SW which seems to fit the bill nicely
Anyone have any bad things to say about it?
TIA
Tim
I had a Canon S50 (nice Point & Shoot) and found that Canon also offers
an underwater case for it. I suspect the S50 is no longer available,
but you can probably find somethign equivalent. Nice thing about this
is that, away from the water, the S50 makes a perfectly good general
purpose camera. You can see some shots using the S50, including some
underwater, at my web site. www.hammocktree.org/ms/trips.html Check
the photo album from the Sept 2004 trip to Turks & Cacios. Tne
'dryland' phots were taken witn a Canon 20D, the water born wer the S50.
The blue tangs were shot with a disposable on a snorkeling trip in St.
Croix and the photo of me swimming with the sea turtle was shot by a
friend with a Sony T-something - everything else was taken with the
Sea&Sea on my Mexico trip. I like the camera, I wanted a new compact
sized digital anyways and I now use it topside many times as well. It's
great to have the housing for snorkeling, boating, the beach, wet
weather, and such. The disposables do ok for shallow and sunny, but
it's always nice to get the immediate gratification of a digital.
IMO, If you have less than 20 to 40 dives under your belt, it is far
better to leave the camera on the boat. Concentrate instead on learning
perfect buoyancy and feeling at ease with all of your scuba equipment
before you add a camera to the works. Shallow dives don't necessarily
equal safer dives. It would have been great to do at least the "written
part" of a dive course at home before heading off to the caribbean.
Keep in mind that the quickest/least expensive dive course is not always
the best bargain in terms of quality or safety in the long term.
Thanks for the link - wasn't familiar with the term Lampworking so Googled -
then spent ages looking at work by Roger Parramore so I now don't have time
for a decent reply!!!
Thanks for the post - more later
Tim
http://www.alandsuejohnson.com/caye%20caulker%20snorkeling%202006.html
The link at the top of the pictures will take you to a short discussion
about the camera.
Amazon has some customer reviews here:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...lance&n=502394
Thanks Zia and everyone else for your ideas & suggestions
The Amazon reviews pushed me towards an Olympus 720SW
Hopefully the shock resistance and extra water resistance will mean it's
money well spent
With any luck I'll let you know in about 5 weeks
Cheers
Tim
Ter
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