Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/04/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Through a friend in Wetzlar we had booked a hotel there for 3 days. If you ever go there I can heartily recommend it. "Wöllbacher Tor" is just a Nikon lens throw from the Dome in Wetzlar (with those cobblestones you would not want to throw your Nocti!) Modestly priced at about $80/night including breakfast. It also has the advantage of being less than 5 minutes walk from Lars Netopil's "Classic Camera" store. Great little store, filled with Leica stuff. Some is excruciatingly rare. Lars is a connoisseur in the field of Leica, as well as vice-president of the German Leica Historical Society. He is also a very nice guy, with a rather wicked sense of humour. The store is small, furnished with comfortable leather chairs, an espresso machine and cabinets of Leica stuff. Hey, if you are going to buy a black MOOLY motor or a Stemar kit, you need a comfortable chair. He also has some good user stuff (one M2 less after I had been there). I had a meeting with Leica/Solms for a day, but sadly I cannot reveal what we talked about. Sworn to secrecy and all that. Suffice to say, I am still making Rapidwinders and they are not! The non-secrets that can be revealed is that the 90 APO/Asph will be coming later this spring (I think they are hoping for a late spring in Solms) and Yes, there will be a motor drive for the R8 before the new millennium (now does it start on Jan. 1st 2000 or Jan 1st 2001?). With one camera fixed at the source and after some really good German food and beer we headed for Sweden. Fellow LUGgers Hans Pahlen and Martin Howard and Tuulikki and I had decided before we left Canada to have a Mini-LUG meet while we where in Sweden. Figuring out that we should meet somewhere equidistant from out respective bases, we settled on the town of Gränna, (about ½ way between Malmö and Stockholm, for those of you with a Swedish map handy). Gränna's claim to fame is twofold. The balloonist Andree came from there and there is a small museum dedicated to the ill-fated "Örnen" (Eagle)expedition of 1899. It was an attempt to reach the North Pole by balloon. All the participants died and their last landing-place was not discovered until the 30's. For us photographers it is a significant museum as they also discovered several rolls of film, exposed and undeveloped and the work that Kodak put in to developing these rolls is remarkable. The images of the camp, the downed balloon and combined with the diaries of the three expedition members are haunting. They give a gripping description of the last days of the doomed expedition. The second claim to fame is the famous Gränna Polkagris (=the "Polka Pig"). This is a dentist dream come true and the bane for many a dental filling. This peppermint flavoured candy stick has the capacity of removing just about every filling in your teeth and if you were lucky not to have any before, you will after having consumed one. These are not wimpy little cute red and white sticks, these are the "mother of all Candy sticks", a good inch in diameter and 5-6 inches long. You suck on those for a while and not even Kenneth Starr could get a statement out of you! We tried to get in to the Andree museum but it was closed (on a nice Saturday afternoon?) and mindful of the high cost of dental work, we abstained from Polka Pigs and retired to restaurant Amalia for a long lunch. I had met Hans Pahlen before but not Martin and Tuulikki had met neither. It was a good Mini-LUG. Hans used an off brand camera to take some close ups of Softreleases, Rewindcranks and upgraded his web page (http://www.komvux.skola.mark.se). He did insist on a picture of me in it - under the pretext of showing how to hold the Rapidwinder/camera correctly. If anyone has a comment on my physical appearance, keep it to yourself. Remember that this is after 3 weeks of hedonistic living in the Gastronomical centers of the World. to be continued in Part 4