Background: The photography bug hit me the first time in college. The home had tonnes of books on photography and a Minolta X-370s Film SLR. This, and a similarly inclined friend (toting some Nikon F model) meant we spent a good time travelling on shoestring budgets and taking good photos. What the Minolta could produce with standard 35mm film and some basic photgraphic sense, was stunning.
College got over, the friend moved out of town. Professional studies became a priority and the brief romance with serious photography ended. For the last 14 years, I've been using Sony prosumers (H5 and HX200V) which are the idiot's way of convincing himself that he isn't entrusting all camera controls to the err, camera. Quality of photos were never a priority. They were just a means to compliment the text on my travelogues.
But for the last 6 months (which incidentally involved 2 trips to Bharatpur and one to the stunning Tirthan Valley), the bug has bit again. Lots of catching up on digital photography (the basics are the same, really) and shamelessly asking friends for their DSLRs whenever I'm on a trip. So I finally decide I want a semi-pro DSLR. A body that will be a keeper (to be enhanced with a lens environment over the years) and won't make me feel shortchanged for features within a year of purchase. The primary use will be landscape photography, followed by birding.
My budget is between 75-100K, within which I want the body, one normal kit lens and one superzoom. Here are my
choices in order of preference:
1.
Sony A77 - Yeah, I know its a DSLT, not R. A lot of trust on the brand, considering my familiarity with the H-series and the Minolta before that. The EVF on the camera is a thing of beauty. Comes with in-body image stabilization, so don't have to search around for lenses with IS/VR. The 55-300 lens has good reviews. Most importantly, my old Minolta 35-70 and 70-210 lenses can work on the Sony. I can basically just buy the body and the 55-300 zoom (which comes for 19K).
A brief test in urban confines showed some good results, though I found the menu options quite overwhelming. Naturally, such high end cameras need familiarization before I can get them to perform at full potential. Third-party lens support (Tamron/Sigma) for Sony also doesn't seem to be so active in India.
2.
Canon 70D - I took along a friend's Canon on one of the Bharatpur trips. Just a personal opinion, but Canon SLR menus seem the easiest to figure on the fly, as well as give (relatively) the best results when you're shooting in direct JPEG mode. A photgrapher-friendly setup without additional bells and whistles.
Came back thinking of going for the 60D, but really fell for the 70D's touchscreen setup controls (used to think its a gimmick before I tried it

) and AF system.
What's the downside? Canons will need Image Stabilization lenses. The 55-250 IS isn't enough for birding, and the 70-300 with IS is 46K! Unless I settle for the 60D, it really takes my budget beyond 1L.
The image (seriously downsized) below is of a Black Drongo I took in Bharatpur. The 55-250 is at full-zoom for this shot. While sharpness is retained, a little more zoom would be better, no?
3.
Nikon D7100 - Pick up a comparo anywhere on cyberspace, and the Nikon D7100 seems to be the universal choice of weapon in the segment. Unfortunately its the most expensive of the lot, and I've always had issues figuring out options on the Nikon menu system

.
Nothing else really. While Pentax claims to have beefed up their network in India, their country head of Sales told me higher-end cameras are not available to demo in Delhi!
So thats the story. Look forward to expert reviews/views on what to go for.