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Thread: Shooting Portland/Columbia River Gorge--am I travelling too light?

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  1. #1

    Shooting Portland/Columbia River Gorge--am I travelling too light?



    I'm headed out to Portland wednesday evening for a long weekend of day hikes in the Columbia River Gorge and, well, beer drinking.


    This is my first trip out there since the photography bug has bitten. I own a 40D, a 70-200 f/4 (non-IS), 17-55 f/2.8 IS (my main lens), and a nifty-fifty (my first lens).


    As a former Peace Corps volunteer, I'm very much a traveling light kind of guy, and have been thinking of just taking the 40D, the nifty fifty, and my gorillapod tripod. Am I going to regret that not having one of the other lenses?


    (And for those who know the gorge, both Larch Mountain and Mt. Defiance are on the agenda.)






  2. #2
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    Re: Shooting Portland/Columbia River Gorge--am I travelling too light?



    The first rule of hiking is that no matter what you bring with you, the thing you miss the most will be the one thing you left behind. I think the 70-200 is expendable, but I would urge you to bring the 17-55 no matter what the cost. Even if it means packing one less bottle of our hand-crafted Portland microbrew. It's so powerful and versatile that it's like packing four prime lenses.


    EDIT: Consider renting or borrowing an 18-55 IS. It's super light weight, and the quality is actually very good. A wide angle shot with the kit lens is better than no wide angle at all.

  3. #3

    Re: Shooting Portland/Columbia River Gorge--am I travelling too light?



    Oh, I'm not hauling bottles up the hill. The draught pints are a reward for after. Thanks for your thoughts on the 17-55, though.

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    Re: Shooting Portland/Columbia River Gorge--am I travelling too light?



    I agree. When I go hiking in the Gorge, I either bring the 17-55 or the 10-22. I think you would really miss not having something on the wide end while hiking up here. So suck it up and enjoy the excercise of bringing a couple of extra pounds. But don't go crazy -- leave the 70-200 behind.

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    Re: Shooting Portland/Columbia River Gorge--am I travelling too light?



    I'd vote for just the 17-55.


    I went hiking carrying a 180mm f3.5macro, two bodies, and a 16-35 f2.8, and a tripod.


    I got tired.


    Daniel's 18-55 IS sounds appealing too. You can miss a lot screwing around with your camera.

  6. #6
    Senior Member Mark Elberson's Avatar
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    Re: Shooting Portland/Columbia River Gorge--am I travelling too light?



    You NEED the wide-angle! I went hiking in Portland (up by Hood) years ago and all I had with me was35mm Rebel and a crappy 80-200mm zoom attached (just out of college, this hand-me-down kit was all that I had[]). It totally killed the perspective of the height of the cliffs and theview down 45 degreeterrain that we were hiking. Rember that your nifty-fifty will provide the same angle of view that my 80mm did on my 35mm Rebel. If you can get your hands on the 18-55 kit like Daniel suggested that would be great since it's so light but I personally don't feel like the 17-55 f/2.8 is very heavy.

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    Senior Member Jarhead5811's Avatar
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    Re: Shooting Portland/Columbia River Gorge--am I travelling too light?



    If you were thinking of renting this is whenthe EF-S 18-200mm f-3.5-5.6 IS seems like it would be nice. Just a thought.
    T3i, Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8, 70-200mm f/2.8 L, Sigma 30mm f/1.4, 430ex (x2), 580ex
    13.3" MacBook Pro (late '11 model) w/8GB Ram & 1TB HD, Aperture 3 & Photoshop Elements 9

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    Re: Shooting Portland/Columbia River Gorge--am I travelling too light?



    If your traveling light I'd go with the 17-55 & 70-200, forget the 50 & the gorillapod.

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