I was so frustrated with the Nikon1 system during our last travel experience that when we got home I sacked it and got a Sony a6000/17-55/55-210 kit. I hadn't even shot it yet and we have travel coming up soon. So I took it along yesterday when we took Grace out for a walk in the park. I thought I'd grab a few shots of Grace, a few landscapes, and tweak the camera setup along the way.
We barely got started on our walk when we stumbled upon a bull moose thrashing the brush just out of sight a few yards off the trail. We felt safe slipping on by and ran into this guy 50m further on. He was coming down the trail to investigate what all the ruckuss was about. He then stopped right in the trail and made his own display of thrashing the brush and grunting challenges to the unseen bull.
The unseen moose apparently didn't like what he heard because he ceased his antics and apparently slipped away. So we did not end up in the middle of a moose fight. But needless to say we had to re-route our dog walk but not before I grabbed a few shots. The a6000 is definitely not a wildlife camera. At least not compared to a DSLR. But it is a joy to carry around and the interface is far superior to the Nikon1 V1. Though the EVF is just as frustrating shooting rapid fire.
One unexpected difficulty was how different the image RAW file processing is than with Nikon images from my current bodies. In LR the WB responds much differently and a much higher saturation setting was required to bring out reasonable colors. Looking at these now they clearly still need some work. It seems there will be more of a learning curve with this camera than I anticipated. But we'll reserve judgment until having a chance to shoot it in decent light.
Sony a6000/55-210mm kit lens
manual mode, auto ISO, single point focus/AF-C, 10fps
1) 210mm, 1/400s, f6.3, ISO1000
2) 210mm, 1/400s, f6.3, ISO800
3) 210mm, 1/400s, f6.3, ISO800