For my upcoming Yellowstone trip, I am going to be shooting two camera bodies, one with my 500 f4, and one with my 70-200 f4. I want to have both rigs on me at the same time, and be able to switch back and forth as needed for various wildlife subjects (close / far / large / small). I'm trying to map out how to pull this off.
My initial thought is to get a shoulder strap (such as the black rapid sport) for the 70-200 rig, and then carry the 500 on the tripod/gimbal setup as usual.
My main concern with that idea is, how much the camera and lens on the shoulder strap will swing around when I walk/hike. I will not be able to stabilize it because my hands will be full with the tripod and big lens.
I also wonder what it will be like to be walking with the 500mm + tripod, see something I want to shoot with the 70-200, put down the tripod, make sure it's stable, and then grab the 70-200 and shoot. Perhaps too slow and difficult? Also once I put the tripod and 500 down, I can't move too far from the 70-200 since I don't want to leave my 500 up for grabs to anybody happening by.
Final complication, I like to get really low shots for wildlife (crawling or crouching), and I wonder how that would go with the 70-200 dangling off my body.
For a split second, I considered the insane idea of carrying both cameras on a shoulder strap (like some kind of harness setup or something), but decided that would be too much weight pulling down on me, swinging around, and then I would not have a tripod at all.
Have any of you shot with a multiple body setup such as this, and how did you pull it off?
Also, how do you like the black rapid sport, if you've used it?
Thanks
p.s. my main body will be the 7D mk II which I LOVE, and the secondary with my my old 7D...unless I can find some way to afford a second 7D mk II by the time the trip rolls around
p.s p.s. When is Canon coming out with a 28-600mm lens with built in 1.4x ? JK