Perry Way
Member
I'm considering some long hiking trips. I'm mostly a film photographer. It is common for me to go on day hikes with a full 4x5 setup, multiple lenses, lots of film, etc., but film photography is greedy for storage space and since I'd like to now consider long hiking trips I need to change things up. Ultimately I'm thinking of hiking the Pacific Crest Trail as a thru-hike. That means 4.5 months of hiking. And that's probably next year. This year is the year for training and so I plan to take weekend hiking trips and some week long ones to build up endurance and whatnot... Anyway.. on to the photography
My experience with quality digital cameras is nil. I have a cell phone camera and a small Kodak HD pocket Play Sport and a cheapie Kodak digital camera I think it's an Easyshare not sure of the model.
My ideal backpacking camera would be the quality, weight and size of a Leica M9-P and the pricetag of an entry-level DSLR. That's ideal and impossible I know. But somewhere along the line there has to be a happy medium.... for example in the 35mm market there are some decent point and shoot cameras like a few from Yashika and Contax that rivaled the performance of cameras costing 10-20 times their amount. I'm looking for something along those lines. I think I cannot consider a DSLR, too big and too heavy.
I'd love some input from some folks who have some good experience on this topic
My experience with quality digital cameras is nil. I have a cell phone camera and a small Kodak HD pocket Play Sport and a cheapie Kodak digital camera I think it's an Easyshare not sure of the model.
My ideal backpacking camera would be the quality, weight and size of a Leica M9-P and the pricetag of an entry-level DSLR. That's ideal and impossible I know. But somewhere along the line there has to be a happy medium.... for example in the 35mm market there are some decent point and shoot cameras like a few from Yashika and Contax that rivaled the performance of cameras costing 10-20 times their amount. I'm looking for something along those lines. I think I cannot consider a DSLR, too big and too heavy.
I'd love some input from some folks who have some good experience on this topic
