I would never go on an important nature trip without a back-up body and lens (and back-up everything else). For local use my, 200-800 is treated like any other lens to give it every chance of breaking where I can deal with it best, and test it. On my very first serious bird watching trip, to the Pantanal some 13 years ago, I took just a 7D and an EF 100-400mm (first version). The AF broke on my last day when the camera and lens fell between my legs on to the car mat, lens down, through only about 15-20 cm. Lucky it wasn't the first day. A useful lesson.Some birder I met told me about the same story recently. I immediately started to caress my 200-800 after the first cases reported in the net, what basically means that I take nearly always my heavier and bigger 600mm lens out when I think I should better rely on a really rugged gear. So the zoom lost a substantial part of its usability for my purposes, and I am really disappointed by Canon for the first time since many years. Ruggedness and reliability was always something that kept me within Canon's ecosystem, in particular because we had much more trouble with my wife's big Nikon gear over the years. Plus, I should add that, even non L gear from Canon never let me down so far. But, obviously, now Canon seems to feel forced to reside to critically cheap engineering solutions at least with some gear. They really shouldn't do that - a good reputation is quickly destroyed, and it is much harder to regain it again.
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