Where are you from?

Where are you from?

  • North America

    Votes: 295 39.5%
  • Central/South America

    Votes: 13 1.7%
  • Europe

    Votes: 318 42.6%
  • Asia

    Votes: 50 6.7%
  • Australia

    Votes: 45 6.0%
  • Africa

    Votes: 4 0.5%
  • Elsewhere :)

    Votes: 22 2.9%

  • Total voters
    747
Born in the country of Eternal Spring, Guatemala, USA citizen since 1961.Doing Analog and printing Photography for 56 years.
God Bless America and all the members of Rangefinder Forum. I am 74, live in Philadelphia PA:bang:
 
Pennsyltucky

Pennsyltucky

Dear Board,

I live outside of Harrisburg, PA. I was born and raised early on in the Northeast PA coal region. Truthfully, that will always be my home.

I chose to remember it for what is was, just as I remember Bucks County PA where I lived from age 5 until I was 21 for what it was.

Unfortunately, now it seems everywhere in PA is some insular political stronghold of backwards people?

I liked the old days better.

Regards,

Tim Murphy

Harrisburg, PA 🙂
 
I was born in New Jersey, I have slides of it I'm going to digitize soon to prove it.
As a youngster my folks moved us all to Southern California. Grew up here, went to school here, got married and raised my own family here. Consider myself a native since I've been here longer than most true native's I know.
Have often thought about moving somewhere else, but, just couldn't find any place else with the weather we have so here I stay.🙂
 
Aw shucks, is this thread still going? I recall it from long ago, I intended to post then, but didn't. Still with us (me and the thread), better now than never., at my age (70 in December). Indeed, WDTTG?

So which button do I press, coming as I do from here, there and everywhere? Connundrum! (In the end I did Australia, read on and find out why.)

A mixed blood child - Irish-American father, French mother - born in a pleasant hamlet called Chatham, New Brunswick (Canada, not New Jersey). Childhood in a dull industrial city called Moncton, survived by weekends and school holidays in Shediac Cape, a quiet, lovely spot with the nicest beaches out of Ozzz.

As a young adult ('60s) I studied in Montreal (B.Ed.) and Toronto, (Diploma in Commercial Photography), moved to Vancouver, then in California as a studio gopher (= slave) to a renowned photographer (no name) with a carefully crafted image but a classic ogre). A new era ('70s) and back to Canada, Saigon, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, eventually Australia, Sydney (10 years), Melbourne (27 years). Now retired in a weird, strange, beautiful alternate universe called Tasmania. Old age is catching up and we will eventually move on to access better healthcare and better stocks of films and other photo stuff, for now OL ordering suffices.

In retirement from varied careers (journalism, media promotion-marketing, civil service, design architect) I now travel to Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei for extended visits. Long treks and a Nikon D700 kit and a Gitzo tripod keep me agile if n olonger young. My partner (Malaysian) iskeen that we resettle in Melbourne or Ipoh, but I don't know... I still can't decide what (or where) I want to be when I grow up.

I enjoy this forum more than any of the others and I have great admiration for many of the posters -Bill Pierce, charjohncarter, Roger Hicks, and Chris Crawford, to name only a few. Posters with the courage of their convictions and not afraid to speak for themselves.

I haven't made a fortune or even serious money in my time on this planet, but life has been fun and I want a few more years of freewheeling in Asia before I buy a rocking chair and sit and read with the cat on my lap. Not likely soon, to me a "rocker" is a musician, not furniture, and our well-fed feline weighs eight kilograms...

In my 70s I'll try to stay home more, play in darkroom and with my cameras (Nikon Fs and Ds, Nikkormats, Rolleis, Contax Gs, Voigtlanders) and try to use up the two fridges of printing paper and films in my garage.

In my next life I promise to hold true to three basic rules - brevity, brevity, brevity.
 
Born in England, was never very happy living there and so I left for the United States of America 27 years ago. I can honestly say that every year since has been delightful. My only complaint is controlling chemical temperatures, in the summer here in the south a constant 68F is not an easy job, so I just wait for the mild winter and process then.
 
I am from Sweden, where I still live.

I live since 30 years on a small farm outside our second largest city, Göteborg, and travel to work by car. But I will soon retire, I am soon 63 years old and we can retire between 61 and 67 years of age. If we work longer the state pension becomes larger, but I am not sure if I am fit for 4 years more. I would be nice to do something else except working.
 
Born in Omaha, Nebraska (That's in the USA. No, really! It is!) and lived there until I was twelve. Then, much to be horror and chagrin, we moved to a farm outside of Craig, Nebraska (an...um...enchanting?...hamlet of 310 people in NE Nebraska). Stayed there until graduating from high school.

I moved to Grinnell, Iowa for university, had a change of heart about being a physicist and then moved to the Twin Cities to attend the Minneapolis College of Art And Design. I wound up staying in Minnesota for just short of fourteen years, with a short stint in Iowa as a reporter/PJ at a paper there. I last lived in Red Wing, MN, before moving to San Francisco.

Lived in The City for six years, trying to become an internet millionaire, or at least thousandaire. The Dot Com 1.0 bubble burst, I ran out of savings, my dad had a stroke, and I moved back to Nebraska, this time to Lincoln, to be a live-in caretaker and all-around Jillaroo.

I'm still here, now working on making a career of being a fine artist and occasional PJ.
 
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