Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/02/08

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Subject: [Leica] Coffee break pictures - N.Germany
From: grduprey at mchsi.com (grduprey@mchsi.com)
Date: Fri Feb 8 23:27:32 2008

Doug,

Very nice set, thanks for showing these.  Something to look forward to later 
this year when I am over there.

gene

-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: Douglas Sharp <douglas.sharp@gmx.de>
>
> Tekn on a recent nightmare drive from Hannover to Kiel in Northern 
> Germany - pitch dark, force 10 side winds and driving snow accompanied 
> by maniac fellow drivers who thought they could get home quicker by 
> driving at ridiculous speeds - a couple of them didn't, we saw what was 
> left of them when the police waved us past the accident (no photos of 
> that). The light was rather difficult, to say the least, patches of sun, 
> thick cloud, showers of snow, hail and rain so most shots have been 
> converted to BW because I didn't like the colours.
> 
> The weather was lousy the morning after we arrived - this is down near 
> the harbour on the northern side of the Kieler Förde (like a fjord but 
> flat)
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/d/117459-1/_MG_7428-Edit.jpg
> 
> Stopped at Potter's Cafe in Lübeck on the way back home for a coffee 
> (very good too)
> This is down by the River Trave, and shows typical Hanseatic architecture
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/d/117462-1/_MG_7442-Edit.jpg
> 
> Lübeck was one of the richest towns of the Hanseatic League - this is a 
> group of typical warehouses at the other side of the river. Today the 
> city is better known for its marzipan.
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/d/117465-1/_MG_7443-Edit.jpg
> 
> Next coffee break in Lüneburg about half way between Kiel and Hannover - 
> another formerly very rich city founded on the wealth of 'white gold' as 
> salt was called at the time. Linked to, but not a member of the 
> Hanseatic League, the value of salt for preserving food, particularly 
> herring, was so immense (no refrigerators!) that Lüneburg held the 
> Hanseatic League to ransom by refusing to provide salt for Baltic trading.
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/d/117468-1/_MG_7459-Edit.jpg
> 
> Red Brick Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque and Wilhelminian, Jugendstil - 
> Lüneburg is packed with just about every architectural style there is.
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/d/117471-1/_MG_7460-Edit.jpg
> 
> The old harbour crane (powered by a treadmill) was actually still in use 
> during the industrial revolution - it unloaded Germany's first ever 
> steam locomotive from a barge on the , then navigable, River Ilmenau
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/d/117480-1/_MG_7470-Edit.jpg
> 
> The harbour basin ends at a weir which dammed the water for a group of 
> flour mills on an island in the river, 25 years ago the area was almostr 
> derelict, but has now been refurbished as a conglemerate of excellent 
> restaurants, bistros and hotels.
> ttp://gallery.leica-users.org/d/117486-1/_MG_7472-Edit.jpg
> 
> A dazzling break in the weather lasted for about five minutes, enough 
> for another view of the old harbour.
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/d/117483-1/_MG_7471-Edit.jpg
> 
> and the town hall, which is very untypical for N. German architecture an 
> the tower IS strangely twisted.
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/d/117474-1/_MG_7467-Edit.jpg
> 
> Hope you like them - strange that the BW shots look darker in the 
> gallery than in CS2 and Lightroom.
> 
> C+C more than welcome
> Cheers
> Douglas
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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