2024: My New Year's Resolutions

A triumph of hope over experience…

Me and my Sony ⍺1 with a 600mm lens

I don’t normally make New Year’s resolutions, but I thought I should share some of the things I’d like to be able to do in 2024. Unfortunately, most of them are outside my control and rely on various businesses getting their act together, but here’s hoping…!

Equipment

Sony Telephoto Lens with TC

My main wish this year is that Sony finally gets round to releasing a long lens with a built-in teleconverter. Canon did it a few years ago with the Canon EF 200-400mm f/4L IS USM Extender 1.4x, and Nikon now gives you a choice between the mirrorless NIKKOR Z 400mm f/2.8 TC VR S and NIKKOR Z 600mm f/4 TC VR S (both with built-in 1.4x teleconverters).

I’m fed up with having to choose between carrying my 400mm and 600mm G Master lenses or leaving one at home, so I’d like to be able to trade in both of them for a 400mm lens with a 1.4x teleconverter—giving me the equivalent of 560mm and releasing thousands of pounds in cash!

So come on, Sony. If you build it, I will come…

Sony ⍺1 II

I hear on the grapevine that Sony won’t be bringing out the ⍺1 II this year, but we can always dream!

The release of the ⍺9 III with a global shutter was a real turning point in offering frame rates up to 120 fps without any rolling shutter effect. However, the base ISO of 250 wasn’t great for low light, and there appears to have been a drop in dynamic range and an increase in noise. This is because the sensor has two photodiodes for each pixel, effectively halving its light-gathering capacity.

The rumour is that the ⍺1 II will have a 50MP global shutter capable of 60 fps, and I hope it’ll be able to tell the difference between a bird and an animal! However, I imagine Sony won’t want to compromise on image quality in its flagship camera. That means a few more late nights for their engineers before I can replace my existing ⍺1 camera bodies…

Travel

Watch the Birdies, taken near Muchenje in May 2023

I have trips planned this year to Kicheche in Kenya, Tallinn in Estonia and Muchenje in Botswana. However, I’m also hoping to be able to go to Mfuwe Lodge in Zambia and lead a trip to the Serengeti with Great Migration Camps. Progress is slow, though, so fingers crossed I hear some good news soon…

Technique

"Behind you!"—my first kill on safari and the highlight of my 2018 trip to Kicheche

My final resolution concerns the quality and variety of my images. I’m always looking to develop my technique, and I’ll continue that effort in 2024.

The first opportunity is at Kicheche. When I first went there in 2018 on an Exodus trip with Paul Goldstein, I saw five cheetah kills in a week! I went again in 2021, but I only saw one that time. The big difference this year is that I’ll have my new Sony mirrorless cameras and lenses with me, so I look forward to seeing how they cope with the action.

The last time I went to Kicheche, Paul was gobsmacked that I hadn’t brought a wide-angle lens with me. I was trying to save weight due to the 15kg luggage allowance on local flights in Kenya, but I was suitably shamed.

This time, I’ll take my 12-24mm and/or 24-70mm with me and try to get a few close-ups of large animals like elephants. I just need to figure out a way of safely shooting from ground level. That might mean opening a door, leaning over the side of the vehicle or using my monopod upside-down with a remote release. We shall see…

I’d also like to get a few different types of shots, including ‘look-throughs’. That means finding a tree or bush to shoot through or simply breaking off a branch and holding it up in front of the lens.

Paul always challenges me to do things differently (and better), and he introduced me to the slow pan on a trip to Svalbard a few years ago, so I hope I continue up the learning curve.

In Botswana, I’d like to focus a bit more on sunrise and sunset and backlit shots. The boat trips were all scheduled during the middle of the day when I went last year, but I’d like to take advantage of the golden hour if I can. I also tended to drive along the Chobe waterfront with the sun behind me, but I’d like to switch direction a few times this year in order to get more backlit shots, such as this one of a chacma baboon.

The Rock

Finally, I’m visiting hides in Estonia for the first time, so it’ll give me a good chance to take pictures of bears, wolves and other animals that I don’t usually get to see. I hope my friend Jason will come along, too, but we’ll have to wait and see on that one…

Verdict

I’m looking forward to 2024, and I hope I enjoy all my trips and come back with some decent images. If Sony brings out a new telephoto lens with a built-in teleconverter, I’ll be trading in my existing 400mm and 600mm lenses as soon as I can.

Unfortunately, the cash windfall will probably just get spent on the ⍺1 II whenever it comes out. Photography is a money pit, after all…!




If you’d like to order a framed print of one of my wildlife photographs, please visit the Prints page.

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Nick Dale
I read English at Oxford before beginning a career as a strategy consultant in London. After a spell as Project Manager, I left to set up various businesses, including raising $5m in funding as Development Director for www.military.com in San Francisco, building a £1m property portfolio in Notting Hill and the Alps and financing the first two albums by Eden James, an Australian singer-songwriter who has now won record deals with Sony and EMI and reached number one in Greece with his first single Cherub Feathers. In 1998, I had lunch with a friend of mine who had an apartment in the Alps and ended up renting the place for the whole season. That was probably the only real decision I’ve ever made in my life! After ‘retiring’ at the age of 29, I spent seven years skiing and playing golf in France, Belgium, America and Australia before returning to London to settle down and start a family. That hasn’t happened yet, but I’ve now decided to focus on ‘quality of life’. That means trying to maximise my enjoyment rather than my salary. As I love teaching, I spend a few hours a week as a private tutor in south-west London and on assignment in places as far afield as Hong Kong and Bodrum. In my spare time, I enjoy playing tennis, writing, acting, photography, dancing, skiing and coaching golf. I still have all the same problems as everyone else, but at least I never get up in the morning wishing I didn’t have to go to work!
http://www.nickdalephotography.com
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