Yes i was on the look out for bird watching,but after seeing the footage of the moon,I was intrigued of there are extra lenses or was it in his original set up to see the moon so clearly.
Great, our birding camera of choice is a Nikon SX70 which comes with a 65x lens and works excellent for day to day birding. So wanting to know what the benefits would be in adding this scope to our birding tools, we would tie it to a smart phone to capture pics. Birders for 3 years now, our current challenge is needing more power to identify/pic birds out at further distances.
@@runnerbean308 Do you mean Canon SX70? - that is the primary camera I've been using for the past almost 4 years even though I have a Canon R6 with 150-600 mm zoom . With a high quality smart phone camera package you will be amazed with what you can do with a phone and this scope. Of course it lends itself to a fixed shoot, not shoot on the move like one can do with an SX70. BB
Yes, Celestron 93419 T-Ring for 35 mm Canon EOS Camera (Black) amzn.to/3QMiqF4 and if using a R-series mirrorless use the EF to RF adapter amzn.to/45X3bgN
There are so many options out there at various price ranges. This scope is one of the more reasonably priced one's for what you get. There are two smaller versions of the same ED quality scope 65mm amzn.to/3OJm6Xb and 80mm amzn.to/45gSE05 which is probably the sweet spot. For significantly less money the Celestron - Ultima 100 Angled Spotting Scope - 22-66x Zoom amzn.to/3OJmfKd is also a very nice scope for hobbyists who don't want to break the bank. Have fun! BB
You are asking an impossible question as clarity depends on so many things - like looking at a supermoon that is only 20 degrees above the horizon with cirrus clouds over it, or birds and animals after the sun goes down or in the intense brutal glare of the mid-day sun. What I can say is that this scope does amazing things with whatever conditions you have to deal with and of course is sharper at 30x than it is at 67x, but sometimes you need 67x and if you actually watched the video, which I doubt, you'd learn more. And also beware of so-called experts and snobs that hang around with their scopes and try and intimidate people into spending thousands more than needed, - the proof is always in the results given the conditions and very often conditions are quite poor. BB
@@MyBackyardBirding actually I have checked a few scopes but at higher magnification clarity goes down,for closer distance it gives clarity but for long distance it lacks,I checked Nikon monarch ED 82 that is very good scope even at higher magnification it is very sharp and the scope is belongs to one of my friends,I also checked kowa TSN Prominar its the which is very clear and crisp even at higher magnification 70 ,but I don't want to spend more money and suddenly I watched your video about celestron ED 100 mm so thought lets shoot some questions.
Trap them and take them to your local shelter usually run by the county - you should be able to find on that is no-kill. Here is a video on trapping some in my Backyard - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-sNcx7nbl8Fk.html good luck! BB