LastStarfighter
Member
I'm not sure this qualifies as Optical issues or not for the purposes of the original question, but I do most of my birding when out hiking and I usually like to hike hills and mountains. Consequently I'm usually working hard, heart rate up, breathing well, when I see something that catches my eye.
Each week, unless I have something more adventurous planned I usually take around a 10 mile hike in local hills. There's a decent variety of birds there to glass, some birds of prey and at least one Buzzard that I tend to find at some point on the hills every week.
It takes a few moments to be able to steady myself enough to get a stable view through the binos in those moments after hiking hard one minute and going to stationary, I also have gone with a relatively high power bino though due to the distances often involved that I like to be able to glass at, so that doesn't help either.
Each week, unless I have something more adventurous planned I usually take around a 10 mile hike in local hills. There's a decent variety of birds there to glass, some birds of prey and at least one Buzzard that I tend to find at some point on the hills every week.
It takes a few moments to be able to steady myself enough to get a stable view through the binos in those moments after hiking hard one minute and going to stationary, I also have gone with a relatively high power bino though due to the distances often involved that I like to be able to glass at, so that doesn't help either.