Hi, I am Sig (junge1),
I was born in Dominikus- Krankenhaus in Berlin-Hermsdorf, Bezirk Reinickendorf in December 1939. Bezirk Reinickendorf was one of 20 Bezirke that made up Gross-Berlin before World War II and one of 12 Bezirke that made up former West-Berlin, the other 8 Bezirke were Russian occupied and became East-Berlin after the war. Moved from Berlin to Neurohlau (Nova Role) Sudetenland (now Czech Republic), in August 1943 (our entire block of apartment buildings was bombed out in November 1943) and returned back to Berlin in November 1945. Saw my dad the first time in my life in August/September 1946 after he returned from POW camp. Attended elementary school in Berlin-Waidmannslust, high school in Berlin-Hermsdorf, and trade school in Berlin-Kreuzberg. Was an apprentice for the trade of Klischeeaetzer (photo engraver) at Burrath & Schmidt on Friedrichstrasse between U-Bahnhof Kochstrasse (near to what later became Checkpoint Charlie) and Hallisches Tor.
While watching Allied planes supplying West-Berlin by air during the Berliner Luftbruecke in 1948-49 I developed my love for aircraft. I guess I could be considered a 'Berliner Grosschnauze", or at least I used to be.
'Wanderlust' led me to leave Berlin in summer 1960 to emigrate to Toronto, Canada and in February 1962 to move from Canada to New York City, NY, USA. In January 1963 I joined the United States Air Force, one step ahead of Uncle Sam drafting me. Became a United States citizen within 7 weeks after it became a security issue because of my military career. One day after I was sworn in as a citizen in Seattle, my entire unit left for Southeast Asia in June 1966. After nearly 5 years of active duty (extended 11 months to make it an 18 months overseas deployment) I got discharged and moved to New York City. In 1973 I moved to Phoenix, Arizona and two years later joined the Arizona Air National Guard.
Received my higher education at Arizona State University and the University of Georgia and worked for 22 years for the Arizona Department of Water Resources in various capacities. Upon military retirement in 1999 and State retirement in 2005 I looked at a number of things to keep me occupied. Traveling and joining 'renderosity' in September 2007 were a couple of them,
Sig..
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Comments (14)
giulband
Very well captured !
LivingPixels
Cool Capture my friend!!
farmerC
Shining shot.
durleybeachbum
Fascinating
alida
interesting capture
Buffalo1 Online Now!
This type of old junk would certainly attract me for a photo and maybe a cool drink!
ontar1
Cool, great capture!
Faemike55
My camera would be clicking on this one
Richardphotos
the other day I thought you had typed Wickenburg,AZ. they have many antiques placed around the city also
starship64 Online Now!
Nice capture. It reminds me of the trading posts I saw while I was driving on I40 through Arizona and New Mexico, every one of which seemed to feature both a teepee and a totem pole. Never mind that those two objects did not go together, and neither one is characteristic of the Southwest.
junge1
@starship64! I agree. I get a charge out of watching old Western where the good guys fight the bad Indians. Shot somewhere in Arizona, often in Monument Valley and they show the Indians live in tepees. Navajo live in hogans and some Southwest Indians live in pueblos, Hopis for instance. Totem poles are in the Northwest, along the Pacific Coast, in Washington, british Columbia and Alaska..
crender
So Fabulous !!!!!
Juliette.Gribnau
wonderful !
sossy
wonderful capture with amazing play of light and shadow on the carriage and the sand color tones around 😀