Your wife is also Andy?maverick wrote: Sounds like my wife Andy.

Andy, fantastic trip and photos as usual.
Your wife is also Andy?maverick wrote: Sounds like my wife Andy.
Could have been short for Andylisa.Your wife is also Andy?
I talked briefly to someone running that loop. He was headed up the Piute Pass trail, still a ways to go, but it was only mid-afternoon. He looked pretty good. Given that the route includes Bishop, Muir, and Piute Passes I figured it's about 10K feet of gain. But looking at this guy I thought the distance was probably only around 40 miles or so. I was wrong -- the FKT site says it's more like 55 miles.Bluewater wrote:According to the FKT site the current fastest known time for the "Evolution Loop" is 10 hours and 31 minutes.
You didn't show your work but I believe the total gain/loss on the JMT is something around 45-50K. That's uphill and downhill each, not combined. So that means he averaged 15K+ gain each day (and 15K+ loss).Bluewater wrote:If I'm doing the math right that's over 70 miles per day with 7,000' incline and another 7,000' of decline each day.
I use a 6-year old camera I bought off of ebay for $100. It's a Canon ELPH and most of the time I leave it in auto mode. The only manual override I do frequently is exposure compensation. While the picture quality is of course limited by the lens and the small sensor I never get that artificial oversaturated look. Heck, an iPhone with an even crappier lens and smaller sensor will take great pictures, just not good enough to blow up really big.Bluewater wrote:I've become less and less happy with my pictures lately. It's been time (for a while now) to upgrade to a real DSLR but I have been resisting the weight penalty. I use an old 6.7 oz Canon S95 with triple exposure bracketing, then just uploading the photos to Google Photos (via the old Picasa 3 app). Google automatically recognizes most of the triple exposure brackets and creates the final HD photos, but it also cranks up the saturation along the way. It's so easy this way that I just use their version(s) instead of actually manually combining and editing with the HD software programs I have used in the past.
What does "not full frame" mean? I know what it means for film cameras but not for digital cameras.alpinemike wrote:I would get the A6300. It's not full frame but for your purposes I'm sure it's plenty good!
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