I don’t normally use my cell phone for photography except for classroom purposes (homework, tests, attendance lists and the like) but I’ve been so mixed-up lately that I managed to take not two but three empty camera batteries along on our last outing.
But have a look – is this photo really from the era of cell phones? It looks vintage, doesn’t it?

King Ludwig I. of Bavaria built a classicist villa above the village of Edenkoben in the Palatinate (part of Bavaria in the mid 19th century) and below the castle ruin of Riedburg. The villa offers a panoramic view across the Rhine Valley to the Odenwald on the other side of the river. In 1954 a chair lift was built to the top of the hill. The pamphlet proclaims that the chairlift is technically up-to-date but the newest thing we could find were the “please wear a mask” Corona warnings which were stuck to the masts. The seats looked decidedly prehistoric, and kind of unsafe, and a bit rusty. But there has never been an accident in 67 years and apparently, the modern technical side is hidden behind the scenes.
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Thanks for joining in. Your image does look like it could have been taken years ago. I used to ride a similar lift in the 1960’s in California’s mountains.
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Quite – and I as a child in Austria, in the Alps. But even then they seemed less rounded (obviously a 50s design thing) and with better safety gear across the laps.
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I forgot to mention that I used a photo from that outing for the One-to-three Photo Challenge today: https://picturesimperfectblog.wordpress.com/2023/11/04/the-deutsche-weinstrase-in-autumn/
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