If you can afford it go for Zeiss Terra. I saved up all the profits from a months jam selling and splashed out. Especially good if you are in climate that is humid or with salty spray when checking out sea birds nesting. Make sure you wear decent camouflaged gear to as otherwise can scare off parents and leave young birds vuneralbe to predators. Not light at 720 grames (it will be in ounzes when Saint Teresa triggers artical 50 though) but extra size allows more light in.
Ive had some great cormorant and petrol shots with them, just disappointed Ive never had a shag/
Regards
DR
If you can afford it go for Zeiss Terra. I saved up all the profits from a months jam selling and splashed out. Especially good if you are in climate that is humid or with salty spray when checking out sea birds nesting. Make sure you wear decent camouflaged gear to as otherwise can scare off parents and leave young birds vuneralbe to predators. Not light at 720 grames (it will be in ounzes when Saint Teresa triggers artical 50 though) but extra size allows more light in.
Ive had some great cormorant and petrol shots with them, just disappointed Ive never had a shag/
Regards
DR
Worth looking at the Nikon 'Monarch' range.
Had a pair for several years - compact, lightweight, durable with decent lenses / spec and there is a reasonable range to suit different budgets, especially if you look for a deal. From a practical 'point of view' they're not heavy for wearing around the neck or for prolonged in hand use. Handy for tucking 'out of sight' in the car.
Like DSLR cameras 'the sky's the limit' with bino's when it comes to 'up-specing' and price. You could easily pay 3-4 times for similar 'spec' Leica binos or scope plus tripod.
Good luck.
If you can afford it go for Zeiss Terra. I saved up all the profits from a months jam selling and splashed out. Especially good if you are in climate that is humid or with salty spray when checking out sea birds nesting. Make sure you wear decent camouflaged gear to as otherwise can scare off parents and leave young birds vuneralbe to predators. Not light at 720 grames (it will be in ounzes when Saint Teresa triggers artical 50 though) but extra size allows more light in.
Ive had some great cormorant and petrol shots with them, just disappointed Ive never had a shag/
Regards
DR
Slightly off topic but have you been to the West Coast at that time of year before?
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Speculate if you like if you haven't been there at that time of year. I'll say nothing more as any actual information seems to be unwelcome.Uh oh.
I think I can guess this is unlikely to be good news.
Cold, is it? Wet, too? Snow? Unlikely to see much of anything through the horrible fog, so no point buying bins (see how easily I slip into the patois?) ?
Speculate if you like if you haven't been there at that time of year. I'll say nothing more as any actual information seems to be unwelcome.
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Haven't read all the thread but as an experienced twitcher you should be looking at a pair of 8x42's. This is the optimum size for bird watching combining maximum light gathering qualities with ease of getting the targets in vision
Whatever you do, do not get zoom binoculars. Nikon/Opticron good bets in your price range. Go for either; 8 x 32 - if weight is consideration. If you want a bit more power then 10 x 42 - there is not as much difference in the magnification that you would imagine and you will get more image shake from the 10 x 42s. Whatever you go for make sure it is waterproof (Scotland can be wet!).
For more advice try Birdforum. net - http://www.birdforum.net/forumdisplay.php?f=112
Whatever you do, do not get zoom binoculars. Nikon/Opticron good bets in your price range. Go for either; 8 x 32 - if weight is consideration. If you want a bit more power then 10 x 42 - there is not as much difference in the magnification that you would imagine and you will get more image shake from the 10 x 42s. Whatever you go for make sure it is waterproof (Scotland can be wet!).
For more advice try Birdforum. net - http://www.birdforum.net/forumdisplay.php?f=112
Haven't read all the thread but as an experienced twitcher you should be looking at a pair of 8x42's. This is the optimum size for bird watching combining maximum light gathering qualities with ease of getting the targets in vision
As others have said, do not go for zoom binoculars, they're cheap and not suited for what you want them for [not really suitable for any form of quality viewing]. Having specialised in selling optics to bird/wildlife watchers all my working life [40+years] a reasonable pair of 8x42 is the top pick for bird watching. Power has nothing to do with the performance of binoculars, the performance comes down to optical quality alone. If you want the best value then buy Opticron http://www.opticron.co.uk/Pages/binoculars_menu.htm They for many years [since the 70's] have specialised in importing directly from Japan and China and selling directly and via retailers to birders. Do bear in mind if you exclude Swarovski, the quality end of Zeiss, Leica [I worked for them for 20 years] and the very top Nikon HG's virtually all the others you see listed emanate from a couple of factories in either China or Japan. How they are finished and branded and how many wholesalers they pass through determines the finished retail price. Compare it to car manufacturing/marketing and you know where I am coming from.
The best advice is; always try before you buy, and I don't mean in a department store. Find a specialised dealer, look for where they are holding an open day near you and go along. This way you will get something that is suited to you in your price range. But whatever you do - don't waste your money buying zoom binoculars!
Great response - thanks. Looks like I'll be making a trip to a dealer. Hawke nature trek - any view?