August 8, 2008

How To Choose The Best Bird Watching Binoculars

Binoculars are one of the essentials when it comes birding. With binoculars you can identify birds easily that would be nothing but a speck on the horizon to the unaided eye. There are a number of different brands and styles that are available on the market ranging from a few dollars to thousands of dollars a pair depending on what you are looking for. Popular brands include Nikon and Swarovski. Nikon make many fine optic products and their birding binoculars are particularly good. Nikon binoculars are excellent for the early morning or dusk - times that most species of birds are quite active.

Magnification and Front Lens Diameter

The kind of standard binoculars you will find in any sporting goods or hardware store are just fine for basic bird watching. They are not expensive and will prove to be good value for money. Binoculars are always rated with two numbers. The first indicates the magnification power that the binoculars has. The second number indicates the front lens diameter. The best binoculars for birding also provide a wide view so that birds can be viewed in flight, as well as in a static situation.

Usually these are written in the following manner 7×23. This set of numbers indicates that the binoculars have a magnification of seven with a diameter of 23 millimeters on the front lens. The distance you intend to be away from the birds will determine what magnification power you will need. If you are planning to watch just around your neighborhood at birds that may be in trees or on the ground, then a lighter magnification will probably work. However, if you want to spend a lot of time watching birds interacting in their natural habitat where distance viewing is likely, you will need a stronger magnification to get the best from your bird watching.

Changing the Level of Magnification

There are birding binoculars that have just one level of magnification, these are usually the basic style that allow simply a slight amount of focusing. There are then the styles that allow you to be able to alter not only the focus of the lens but also the level of magnification, allowing you to adjust between objects that are closer and farther away without having to have additional sets of binoculars.

Make Sure Your Binoculars Are Not Too Heavy

When purchasing binoculars, check them out and make sure they are not too heavy. Some pairs are difficult to handle and holding them up for a long time can become tiresome, so this is something you should take into consideration. Many lightweight models exist today which offer all of the features of heavier models without the weight. After all, if you intend to carry them around with you whilst out on your adventures bird watching you do not want to be struggling with a heavy pair of binoculars.

There's nothing to spoil that dream bird watching trip like being unable to spend all the time you need admiring the birds you came to see like inconvenient, heavy equipment. You should also seek out birding binoculars which have a scratch resistant lens coating and some way of carrying them around other than around your neck or in your hand. After all, you want your binoculars to give you a clear view, yet be out of your way except when you are marveling at avian wildlife.

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