Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/01/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Howdy Norm and all; Please do come visit. Wyoming isn't all that bad. Lots of blue skies with great clouds, sunshine (as much as Phoenix), wide open spaces or confined woodlands, cold wind and snow, altitude that will take your breath away, low unemployment, low taxes, a state with a fiscal surplus, great university. Check out Laramie on the web at Lariat.org. I do not believe there is a motel in town where the rate is over $80 and we are to have a Hilton in the near future. The football stadium holds 30,000 and fills--doubling the population of the city on a Sat. afternoon. Best time of year to visit is from May to November. I-80 route is not all that bad btw. There are some great places to photograph in all that barreness between Rawlins and Green River. Only a small percent of Wyoming is actually mountains, there are lots more highplains and basins and there is more there than meets the eye at first glance. Kind regards, Mike (a Wyoming resident since 1969)(fishing is GREAT) Mike Stoesz, VP Rainbow Photography, Inc. 213 Grand Av. Laramie, Wy. 82070 Date: Wed, 25 Jan 2006 18:13:21 -0800 From: "Norm Aubin" <puff11@comcast.net> Subject: RE: [Leica] Way OT: Shooting 8x10 LF and contact printing Mike - In one sense you are way off base - I'm an ex-pat New Yorker who was convinced that the N.Y./Pennsylvania border was the start of the wild west, and in another sense you are spot on - in my heart of hearts Wyoming is the center of the universe. The Absaroka mountain range is to die for, and the Yellowstone and Teton areas are one of God's most delightful gifts to America. "High, Wide and Handsome" is the appropriate state motto. On a sad note, or perhaps as an engineering marvel, the traffic engineers who laid the course for I-80 achieved a miracle; they found the only possible route the a wonderfully beautiful state wherein they managed to miss or avoid every possible scenic location there is. This is akin to solving the four-color map theorem. The last time I was in Laramie they had not paved all the streets yet, and I bought my first pair of buffalo hide cowboy boots. I fell in love with that town then and there! 'Twas the summer of '69, and life was still in spring! You know, this is the germination of an idea - we ought to start thinking in terms of a photographic rendezvous, akin to the guys in the old hide clothes and such, but for all types and styles of photographers who just want to have a get-together in the middle of B.F.N. (that's an acronym for - "some scenic locale") and celebrate the making of photographs, and sitting around the camp fire telling lies, er ah - incidents in our past - and perhaps showing off a portfolio of stuff that we want to pass around and get coffee stains on. Food for though . . . maybe late spring or early fall of '07 is enough time to let it start to become real . . . hmmmm Best of light, Norm