You're welcome.
One further and more general piece of advice about equipment: unless you are some mega-rich dude with a strong back, go easy on buying kit, at least at the early stages. Never buy rubbish (like most of the kit lenses that are sold by Canon and Nikon), but don't overdo it by splashing out on all the top of the range fast L lenses early on in your photographic career.
Canon make a very decent range of excellent of mid-price lenses. For example I have a 50mm f/1.4, and a 24-105 f/4L IS. Now I could make myself several thousand $$ poorer by replacing these with the 50mm f1.2L and the 24-70 f/2.8L. They are for sure slightly better lenses, but mine are good enough for me and I have better things to spend $3000 on.
The golden rule is to only buy a piece of equipment such as a lens when you really need it (like you wanting to take long range photos of your dogs and birds, or finding the image quality of an existing lens intolerably bad). Establish your needs by going out and taking photos with your existing kit, and discover through experience what it can and can't do. Don't buy something because you feel you ought to have it, but can't define in one clear sentence why you need it.
If you follow this advice, you will save wasting money, you will get the most out of the equipment you do buy, and you will probably enjoy yourself more.
Ed