Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/11/19

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Subject: Re: [Leica] desert sands vs. the photojournalist
From: V8PWR@aol.com
Date: Mon, 19 Nov 2001 12:54:54 EST

Dans un courrier daté du 19/11/01 12:41:49 Paris, Madrid, 
KCassidy@asc.upenn.edu a écrit :

> score: desert 2, me 0
>  
>  my nikon 28-70 died a slow, miserable, grinding death yesterday. the zoom
>  ring has come detatched from whatever component made it function and now,
>  whenever you turn it, there is a grinding noise and desert sand comes out
>  from beneath the ring, tinged dark brown with some oil. leica's 
more-or-less
>  in operation, but i noticed yesterday when changing lenses that the camera
>  body is full of sand. i wonder what this will do to my film ... i'm also
>  paranoid about my film getting fogged on the way out -- what's the cairo
>  x-ray machine going to do to it ... i've tried to get hand inspections
>  everywhere so far, but sofar, no one has let me with the exception of on
>  the ground here in egypt -- you need to pass through one to get into the
>  egyptian museum and i just pushed my film over the top and nobody said
>  anything. we're leaving tomorrow so the loss of the nikon isn't that great.
>  i also noticed yesterday that the rubber covering the metal has come loose
>  on one side and there's lots of sand stuck to the glue underneath. 
certianly
>  this has been quite a workout for my cameras ... yesterday we went to see
>  zahi open a tomb in al materia which is the middle-of-nowhere egypt. still,
>  even half an hour out from city central the locals were absolutely 
fabulous,
>  everybody was eager to help us. the tomb was discovered when a local man
>  tried to build a house on a vacant lot -- about 15 feet below the surface
>  he struck large stone blocks which turned out to be roof vaulting for a
>  greco roman tomb with two sarcophagi and three chambers. i photographed
>  the media swarm around zahi and some of the hundreds of on-lookers, this
>  will nicely tie up my article and it will be sad to go home, but, as i'm
>  rapidly running out of cameras, it's about time.
>  
>  ramadan is going along nicely here. people seem a little anxious around
>  midday and it's impossible to get a taxi around 5:00 as everybody's home
>  for iftar, but everybody seems happy to be alive.
>  
>  linda and i celebrated iftar with some egyptian friends last night and then
>  stayed out on the nile chatting until about midnight. upon returning home
>  we came across a group of about eight soldiers with AK-47's in the park
>  across from our house. as we approached, they stood up and yelled at us
>  (apprehensive yet?) .... "hello! welcome in egypt!" "are you having a 
>  good time?" "let us know if we can be of any help to you!" -- i don't know
>  what was stranger, coming across a group of guys with machine guns in a
>  park at midnight, or the fact that it was a super FRIENDLY group of guys
>  with guns.
>  
>  saw one bessa-r at the pyramids in the hands of a german tourist and
>  ran into an archeologist at giza with a iiic. other than that, i haven't
>  really seen much in the way of cameras. bunch of nikons at the Big Media
>  Thing yesterday. an FM and some new thing.
>  
>  we certianly feel extraordinarily safe here. it's a great place, you
>  should all visit -- but keep your camera in an ewa marine bag.
>  --
>  To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html
>  
>  

Heelloo Kyle . I've done a lot of photo in the deserts of Africa and used 
supermarket plastic bags to cover them . Sand gets everywhere , and we
can just limit its desaster .
I haven't found your shoe size on my Air base but keep looking .

Jo Goodtimes , France 
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