I'll try to keep this shortish and to the point! I've been doing bird photography for years and I've really enjoyed seeing birds through a long camera lens (current setup is a Sigma C 150-600 attached to a Canon R6), but recently went on a field trip with a group of birders, one of whom was kind enough to lend me their binoculars for a while. I was surprised and impressed by how nice and relaxing it was looking through the binoculars, especially when spotting birds in situations where I wouldn't necessarily bother to take a photo. I guess in the past I've only looked through cheap ones with poor image quality. I don't always want to haul my camera kit when I'm birding, and as I've recently moved to a new country (Canada), all the birds here are new and exciting to me, so there is LOTS of enjoyable casual birding to be done!
I've identified the binoculars I borrowed as being an older version Nikon Monarch 5 8x42 (they have MONARCH M511 written on the focus ring). From some research I think 8x42 is probably what I want. But there's so many of them.
Possibilities:
Celestron Trailseeker ED: around CAD$490 (or seemingly CAD$360 if I buy from the US amazon... interesting), seems to review really well as per the cornell lab review (they rate it #1 under USD$600?), audubon review, and other random ones. Good FOV, very easy to focus?
Monarch M5 - current best price using a discount code - CAD$390 - I've briefly tried and liked the previous version, but it has a really narrow FOV compared to many others. Possibly the least interested in this one because I feel like I know that I'd be missing that FOV.
Vortex Diamondback HD - with a discount code, CAD$315 - good price, popular, quick sharpness falloff and some reports of a stiff focus wheel but still great quality/price ratio
Monarch M7 - can get it currently for CAD$545 (excl tax), is definitely the most that I'd want to pay for binoculars. I'm willing to pay a bit for my first pair to get something decent that I won't second-guess too much. It has a wide FOV and sounds like good quality but I still see mixed reviews.
and many others...?
It's strangely a bit tough to find nearby stores that stock all of these to compare and try. From looking online they're often missing at least one brand, and no one seems to have the Celestrons. I'm not super familiar with Canadian online stores but buying a bunch to try and then return doesn't really seem to be an option here.
If it helps I have small hands and the binoculars definitely need to be waterproof as I don't mind going out in the rain and snow.
Any and all advice appreciated thanks in advance!
I've identified the binoculars I borrowed as being an older version Nikon Monarch 5 8x42 (they have MONARCH M511 written on the focus ring). From some research I think 8x42 is probably what I want. But there's so many of them.
Possibilities:
Celestron Trailseeker ED: around CAD$490 (or seemingly CAD$360 if I buy from the US amazon... interesting), seems to review really well as per the cornell lab review (they rate it #1 under USD$600?), audubon review, and other random ones. Good FOV, very easy to focus?
Monarch M5 - current best price using a discount code - CAD$390 - I've briefly tried and liked the previous version, but it has a really narrow FOV compared to many others. Possibly the least interested in this one because I feel like I know that I'd be missing that FOV.
Vortex Diamondback HD - with a discount code, CAD$315 - good price, popular, quick sharpness falloff and some reports of a stiff focus wheel but still great quality/price ratio
Monarch M7 - can get it currently for CAD$545 (excl tax), is definitely the most that I'd want to pay for binoculars. I'm willing to pay a bit for my first pair to get something decent that I won't second-guess too much. It has a wide FOV and sounds like good quality but I still see mixed reviews.
and many others...?
It's strangely a bit tough to find nearby stores that stock all of these to compare and try. From looking online they're often missing at least one brand, and no one seems to have the Celestrons. I'm not super familiar with Canadian online stores but buying a bunch to try and then return doesn't really seem to be an option here.
If it helps I have small hands and the binoculars definitely need to be waterproof as I don't mind going out in the rain and snow.
Any and all advice appreciated thanks in advance!