'Nothing important to add, but I do think its a very cool thing - what you're doing, Bill. I suspect the scouts will not just have fun & learn, but find themselves fond of you being there.
Thanks HiHoSilver,
We had two Devil's Slide trail ambassadors with us for the hike, and they took our assignment very seriously - we got as good a beginner's workshop of photography as can be imagined, with handouts specially prepared for us. (Plus we got to learn the local history for example the efforts by local school kids to aid in the return of the Common Murre to the area). Our crowd was like an entourage because with leaders, ambassadors, moms, dads and siblings we numbered 15. Only three scouts were working on the badge but we all got lessons.
It was threatening rain but only light drizzle at the start and end of the hike, gusts of wind throughout. Here's a tip from ambassador Sharron... You know those thin plastic shower caps that you get at some hotels... they are great for protecting cameras from rain.
I shot with my brother-in-law's EOS 650 (the one that didn't work well at the play Thursday night). One scout (with a good eye for photos) picked up the Rebel and when we got to the top, I was about to switch to the 100-300 to catch the storm-driven waves when I decided he should use it instead of me. Instead of aiming in the distance, I saw him focusing close-up to things. He finished the roll and thought the batteries died. Should be interesting what he comes up with.
When I opened the back of the A-1 to load it I could see the back of the mirror. Nothing I tried seemed to bring the second curtain so I tossed it aside and pulled out the Pentax S3. Senior patrol leader was going to shoot slides, so he needed a meter. I figured an incident meter would be best so I set him up with the easiest meter to use, an old selenium Sekonic with the "50" slide. He shot at 1/60 f/4 for most of the day until we talked about bracketing. He still has 12 shots so he's hanging on to the camera until... well I don't care if he keeps it for a while.
The assistant senior patrol leader got the AF35ML loaded with black and white. I didn't watch what he was shooting.
Oh and when I got back I found out the amazing little feature of the A-1 intended (ostensibly) to enable double-exposures... They must have known the second curtain would sometimes fail... Winding for double exposure set the camera back into operation.