William Lewis
Wishing birdwatching paid the bills.

Just after some general, from experience advice.
I think I'm pretty typical in carrying some bins and a scope whenever I go birding. I'm thinking of changing my swaro ctc 30/75 scope for something different - it's just not coming out of the birding bag with it's monopod very much so I'm just toying with the idea of flogging it and getting something else instead.
Whatever high mag option goes in the bag it has to fit in a bag roughly 40cm long with whatever stability device it needs and some sarnies and a cup of t.
Quick reasons I'm not getting the CTC out much. I need to attach it to the mono pod when it comes out of the bag for the first time before it can hang on the strap supplied, most i.d's I get with the bins instead on my local patch as well as a good view of them with adequate field craft.
The vast vast majority of my birding is done straight from my front door on foot. Getting a really good idea of whats appearing, nesting, leaving or moving through my local area as well as seeing what it's up to, there is much more to everyone's local eco system than we'll probably ever understand but I enjoy scratching the surface immensely. With a relatively busy work and family life this is usually shuffled to either end of the day, dawn and dusk. My local views rarely exceed 1 kilometer but i do visit larger vistas during the summer months, probably for a month a year total, I have a sturdy tripod for these occasions but 99% of the time I spend just using a monopod as it fits in the birding bag.
So scope options, it's got to have a big enough aperture and low enough mag to work well in low light, I've got a dob for the stars so I'm tempted to return to a the zoom for flexibility.
It's either European or Japanese build, USA built means Japan and so does a large proportion of European optics and China means China, no problem with China though if there's a gem I'm not aware of.
Contenders,
Why no opticron? I'm vain, to be honest I don't like the look of them, shoot me.
Suggestions welcome.
-The Nikon can be equipped with a 20-48 zoom, good for my local area as well as when I go away and will have reasonable twilight performance at 20x as well as a decent optical configuration and quite low rates of sample variation from my research but less than ideal warranty support from my experience.
-Meopta has more aperture and a decent optical configuration.
Budget means no swaro, Leica, zeiss top end models, diminished returns per £ etc and I don't want to dip below 60mm aperture.
Areas I'm hoping to improve on the CTC in with these 2 would be more versatility with zoom as well as better low light performance with less zoom. And c.a, the CTC is not great on c.a, and with it's stay on case you can't easily have a tripod foot attached so attaching to support is trickier. I probably wouldn't get them out of the bag any more locally though but would have a more versatile scope for occasional use.
Or i.s bins. I'm sure if use them more than I'd use a scope locally, just for the occasional soaring raptor, birds at the tops of trees a distance away, no set up time. But they would need to be great optically (I'm quite picky), waterproof, 15+ mag and durable, buy cheap buy twice etc. Either the cannon 18x50 or kite 16x42 spring to mind, I like the kite's, hated the cannons ergonomics but see potentially more longevity with them. Also if it's the bin that's not often glued to my eyes could I cope with the terrible ergonomics?
My current thought is to just reach for the lazers and get the cannons as I know I'd use them more and they'd help me enjoy my local area more....
Will
I think I'm pretty typical in carrying some bins and a scope whenever I go birding. I'm thinking of changing my swaro ctc 30/75 scope for something different - it's just not coming out of the birding bag with it's monopod very much so I'm just toying with the idea of flogging it and getting something else instead.
Whatever high mag option goes in the bag it has to fit in a bag roughly 40cm long with whatever stability device it needs and some sarnies and a cup of t.
Quick reasons I'm not getting the CTC out much. I need to attach it to the mono pod when it comes out of the bag for the first time before it can hang on the strap supplied, most i.d's I get with the bins instead on my local patch as well as a good view of them with adequate field craft.
The vast vast majority of my birding is done straight from my front door on foot. Getting a really good idea of whats appearing, nesting, leaving or moving through my local area as well as seeing what it's up to, there is much more to everyone's local eco system than we'll probably ever understand but I enjoy scratching the surface immensely. With a relatively busy work and family life this is usually shuffled to either end of the day, dawn and dusk. My local views rarely exceed 1 kilometer but i do visit larger vistas during the summer months, probably for a month a year total, I have a sturdy tripod for these occasions but 99% of the time I spend just using a monopod as it fits in the birding bag.
So scope options, it's got to have a big enough aperture and low enough mag to work well in low light, I've got a dob for the stars so I'm tempted to return to a the zoom for flexibility.
It's either European or Japanese build, USA built means Japan and so does a large proportion of European optics and China means China, no problem with China though if there's a gem I'm not aware of.
Contenders,
Nikon Monarch FS 60ED-A
MEOPRO 80 HD Angled
Why no opticron? I'm vain, to be honest I don't like the look of them, shoot me.
Suggestions welcome.
-The Nikon can be equipped with a 20-48 zoom, good for my local area as well as when I go away and will have reasonable twilight performance at 20x as well as a decent optical configuration and quite low rates of sample variation from my research but less than ideal warranty support from my experience.
-Meopta has more aperture and a decent optical configuration.
Budget means no swaro, Leica, zeiss top end models, diminished returns per £ etc and I don't want to dip below 60mm aperture.
Areas I'm hoping to improve on the CTC in with these 2 would be more versatility with zoom as well as better low light performance with less zoom. And c.a, the CTC is not great on c.a, and with it's stay on case you can't easily have a tripod foot attached so attaching to support is trickier. I probably wouldn't get them out of the bag any more locally though but would have a more versatile scope for occasional use.
Or i.s bins. I'm sure if use them more than I'd use a scope locally, just for the occasional soaring raptor, birds at the tops of trees a distance away, no set up time. But they would need to be great optically (I'm quite picky), waterproof, 15+ mag and durable, buy cheap buy twice etc. Either the cannon 18x50 or kite 16x42 spring to mind, I like the kite's, hated the cannons ergonomics but see potentially more longevity with them. Also if it's the bin that's not often glued to my eyes could I cope with the terrible ergonomics?
My current thought is to just reach for the lazers and get the cannons as I know I'd use them more and they'd help me enjoy my local area more....
Will
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