We have just returned from three weeks Japan (which was brilliant by the way). It was somewhat shocking to realise that between my wife and I we had shot nearly 4,500 raw images and about 40 short videos. We are keen travellers and photographers, but this was a surprise. It is a feature of the digital age, as film was so expensive to process, there was far less tendency to shoot indiscriminately.
A good chunk of the volume was caused by capturing birds in flight and mounted samurai archery with high burst rate. Plus quite a few bracketed shots of sunrises, sunsets and other things with awkward light, but even so, this is a lot of photos and somewhat daunting for selecting what to rate for processing. The vast majority will end up being discarded.
Despite my vow to take fewer shots and spend more time thinking and composing before pressing the button, many times quick shots are taken to capture a face or event in the moment. This especially applies to street shooting, market scenes and such like.
Clearly, on holiday, some shots are bound to be souvenir snaps, and some will be opportunistic rather than carefully composed. Still, my ideal is to end up with around 200 good shots that will make a credible album.
I would be interested to discover how others manage to overcome the quality over quantity issue.
Adrian