Yes you do. Ask me how I know.
How do you know?
Yes you do. Ask me how I know.
All depends on how much time you have for photography which is code for it all depends on how patient your travelling partner is.
On day two with the Leica, the camera quit working. Nothing I could do would make
it work.
It realized that when it came to Everest, Sir Edmund Hillary, Tenzing Norgay and the Sherpas who supported them, the only appropriate rangefinder to use was a Retina.
https://wallphotography.wordpress.com/2012/04/22/cameras-explorer-i-kodak-retina-type-118-1935/
Did you ever discover why the camera quit working?
In 2003 I went to Nepal for Outside magazine with Martin Schoeller, who was photographing the surviving sherpa climbers who had helped Hillary (Sir Edmund) climb everest on the first summit.
I had planned to only take the M4-P and 35F2 I had at the time...and on the advice of a journalist friend was told
to bring a back-up camera. On day two with the Leica, the camera quit working. Nothing I could do would make
it work. My back up camera was a trusted EOS 1N with 20-35 2.8. If I hadn't brought it, I would have had nothing.
Those images are some of my best memories.
Leica's are great, but just like any camera, even a German camera...they can take a dump. When one goes to
great effort and expense to get themselves to a place where great images await, it is sheer stupidity to rely on only one camera. It's a gamble...and gambles rarely pay off. Even if the Leica was new out of the box, I would take a back-up.
Would you drive across country without a spare tire? You have four good ones, why bother?
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