Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/10/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In a message dated 10/6/99 8:04:47 AM, derek.folmer@rtit.com writes: >The colours up in the Laurentians were pretty good last weekend. Hope some >of the pics I took come out. I wish I had a waterproof box and the guts >to >take the M3 whitewater paddling with me --- I was on the Rouge river last >weekend with a group of canoeists in red boats - it would have made >spectacular photos - the yellow/orange/red trees, the whitewater action, >a >partly sunny day that turned drizzly. Oh, I wouldn't dream of taking the Leica on the river. Here in Missouri we do "float trips" -- lazily drifting a canoe down a spring-fed Ozark stream. Although the pace is slow and easy there are occasional fast runs through the riffles and turns. Also there are snags and rootwads that can tip you over faster than you can say "Oh S***!" Some folks actually like to tip -- I don't, having done much of my floating with overnight camping gear in the canoe. Anyway, the rule is don't take anything you aren't prepared to lose to the river. The camping gear will dry out. The cameras won't. When I float I take a waterproof point and shoot -- a Canon WP-1 I think it is. It takes nice pictures and I have no worries about it getting wet. I even take it swimming. Years ago I tried a Nikonos but the little Canon is much more convenient and really the image quality is at least as good. I have occasionally carried old Nikon gear along in a waterproof box (primarily for the long lenses) but I'm not about to take a Leica. Bob (Float your boat 'cause your Leica won't) McEowen