Skip to content
FREE Shipping automatically applied on all orders over £100
FREE Shipping automatically applied on all orders over £100
The Best Thermal Monocular for Wildlife Observation

The Best Thermal Monocular for Wildlife Observation

Thermal Monocular - South West Optics

During our lifetimes, there have been some major revolutions in the equipment used in the field by birdwatchers and wildlife observers. The performance of affordable binoculars and telescopes has improved exponentially in recent decades, even tripods have become lighter, sturdier and much more practical (especially with carbon fibre models being used). Then there was the dawn of digital cameras, after which every wildlife watcher could now be a photographer (whether via digiscoping, phonescoping, DSLR or bridge cameras and more recently mirrorless systems). Birdwatchers have started becoming bird listeners with high quality digital audio equipment and brilliant apps to match.

And now, the use of thermal imagers is sweeping the world of wildlife observation. Thermal imaging equipment has quietly and radically changed the way we approach birdwatching and nature watching. Now, we can see in the dark (and through fog and bad weather). Rather than using light to look for our target animals, thermal technology detects differences in temperature between live creatures and their surroundings. Even the most well camouflaged birds or mammals can't hide the heat they radiate from thermal monoculars! We can find cryptic and shy species without having to disturb them. Think of finding Jack Snipes without flushing or Woodcocks on the forest floor in winter. Huge strides have been made in non-intrusive surveying breeding ground nesting birds such as Sky Larks, thanks to thermal imaging.

Thermal images can be used for wildlife observation and for ecological purposes, but also have wider usage in things like search and rescue operations and even in security especially at night.

But, until very recently, I was out of the loop. Now, I feel I am part of the modern thermal imaging scene; my IR eyes have been opened! For the last month or so, I have had the use of the brand new HIKMICRO Falcon FQ25 monocular to use in the field, and I have to say it is a brilliant bit of kit!

It is a solid, chunky, rubber armoured thermal scope which feels very well built and is easy to carry around and remarkably easy to hold steady when in use. This stability is helped by the low magnification of the unit: look through the viewfinder and the image is 1.4x real life. This helps deliver a very wide field of view, much larger than that of the model’s predecessor, the FQ50. This very wide image to an outstanding 31m FOV at a range of 100m, making it a breeze to find birds, mammals (and people) from a distance in all light and weather conditions.
It is possible to zoom in by pressing one of the buttons, but it seems more pixelated at higher mags, like a digital zoom, and I preferred the 1.4x setting with its wide angle of viewing.

Thermal Monocular - South West Optics

With the rechargeable batteries fully charged (one in the unit, one spare), I couldn’t wait to get out and test the FQ25 in the field and in the dark! A site close to home has had some showy young Long-eared Owls recently, and to find them hiding in in vegetation, a thermal imager is just about essential.

Thermal Monocular - South West Optics

After arriving at the site at sundown, I walked along the raised bank of the River Welland, to where the owls had recently been seen. On the journey I tested the thermal monocular on a Mute Swan on the narrow, shallow river. As I watched it, impressed how the swan glowed through the viewer, a Barn Owl flew into my field of view. I quickly pressed the record button, and managed to capture a quick video of the owl as it flew past me. Thanks to the excellent depth of field and resolution, you can even tell it is a Barn Owl in the screengrabs I could take, its eyes, belly and long legs glowing ‘hot’ in the colourful ‘fusion’ mode I was using when I took the video.

Previous article Exploring the South West Optics Showroom: Where Clarity Meets Choice
Next article Night Vision and Thermal Imaging for Bird & Wildlife Watching: Pros and Cons