Warning: The following assertion will sound heretical to many photography enthusiasts. Stop reading now if you can’t handle the truth :-).
I’m going to say it. You don’t need to carry a tripod for most travel photography situations. There, I’ve said it.
This is blasphemy to many photographers. After all, for the past 15 years or so, the badge of a “serious” photographer has been this three-legged object we stick between our camera and the ground. Most scenic overlooks and other landscape photography-friendly locations have been positively flooded by a veritable sea of tripods in recent years. I’ve seen viewpoints so clogged by tripods that photographers and even (heaven forbid) non-photographers are forced to elbow their way through just to get a place to stand to watch the sunrise, sunset, or other pretty happening. For years, I have carried at least a lightweight tripod, and occasionally a heavy-duty professional tripod, with me to nearly every shoot, which for me is usually about two per day. It’s become an ingrained behavior, a knee-jerk reaction, for most photographers. But why, exactly?
During my recent travels in India, I made many wonderful images in all genres of photography. I used a lot of gear to do so. One item I didn’t use: a tripod. Buy this photo
There are times when a tripod is necessary. In very low-light situations, such as true nighttime scenes, most astrophotography, and some indoor shoots, it is essential to mount the camera on a sturdy tripod. When a very long shutter speed is required for a specific effect, such as blurring water in a waterfall or shooting a dancer using rear-curtain sync flash, then you really do need a tripod. We can even include shoots where several images will be combined using software to make a high dynamic range (HDR) or panoramic image in the category where a tripod is helpful (though, I would argue, not really essential anymore, given how good software has become at stitching overlapping images together).
But so many other times, a tripod is not only not an asset but actually becomes a liability. Travel photographers must be very mindful of the size and weight of the gear we carry on our adventures. Every item we bring has to be considered in terms of its value: will the space it takes up in our limited carry-on baggage allotment and its weight on our back every step of our trip be worthwhile in terms of its usefulness in making the best possible images? A tripod, even a lightweight travel tripod, is a relatively large and heavy piece of gear. There are other items we need to leave at home in order to make room for a tripod.
I recently returned from a 2.5-week journey through the north of India. I brought as much gear as I could reasonably fit in carry-on for the international and internal Indian flights. It weighed a lot, and I had to lug much of the gear I brought on the trip each day on my back through 115-degree heat, sometimes up steep hills to the top of ancient forts. At the end of the trip, I contemplated my usage of each item I carried. Both DSLR camera bodies, every lens (even the massive 500mm super-telephoto which I required to make great images of far-off tigers), the speedlights, both battery chargers, and all remote releases, cables, filters, cleaning supplies, etc. were used at some point during the trip. The one item I never once needed: you guessed it, the tripod!
True, India is a very densely populated country where most sites do not allow tripods or, if they are allowed, the crowds are too thick to deploy them. And there was ample bright sunlight at most of our locations to handhold the camera.
But I would argue that a tripod is simply not needed for many travel photography situations in general. These days, a camera’s sensor is so fast and noise-free, and the camera’s resolution so high, that camera shake for most landscape photography settings is a much smaller risk than motion of the subject itself. My Nikon D810 has a resolution of nearly 37 MB, so if a single tree branch or sometimes even a single leaf moves, I can see it in the image. A tripod is no more going to stop a leaf from moving than could the ancient viking king Canute stop the tide from coming in (a story frequently misused in modern times, by the way).
From now on, when I pack for a day’s shoot or a month-long journey, I’m going to seriously consider whether I’ll need a tripod and will pack one (or two) only when I can reasonably expect to need it.
What about you? Do you always carry a tripod, or do you consider its appropriateness before you travel? If you always carry it, do you always need it? Would you bring some other piece of gear along if you didn’t have to make space for the tripod? Please share your thoughts on this controversial topic here!
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I totally agree with you, Kyle. Sometimes I think those who always use a tripod think that makes them “professional” or a better photographer. The main reason I don’t use one 99% of the time is that a tripod limits what I can capture with my camera. Moving from one scene to another is greatly reduced, especially if one if photographing animals. By the time I’ve set up the camera with the tripod, the ducks, egrets or heron I want to photograph is gone. Worse, if one of them suddenly takes flight, there is no chance of capturing the image with a tripod. When I want to steady the camera with the long lens, I sometimes use the car window or body if its available.
Hi Yvonne,
You make a good point that I should have mentioned in the post: Using a tripod restricts your ability to quickly recompose the shot. Counterintuitively, quite a few photographers use a tripod for that reason, i.e., to limit their ability to recompose the scene on the fly. They believe the discipline of being forced to keep the composition fixed will allow them to make a better choice regarding how to compose in the first place. For certain types of landscape photography I might agree, but in general I like to handhold unless there’s a very good reason to use a tripod. By the way, I find a beanbag camera support can be a simple and inexpensive way to steady the long telephoto in situations, like in a safari vehicle, where a tripod or monopod is infeasible. Thanks as always for your valuable input!
Kyle