The Travelling Lemon
8 May 2012 19:38![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The Travelling Lemon
Some brilliant fellow Cabin Pressure fans had the idea of creating a coordinated fanmail project involving a lemon, since The Travelling Lemon is one of the many games our favourite pilots like to play. So I took the lemon on a trip through north-west Germany.
First of all, the lemon visits my place of origin, Bremen, and its famous Town Musicians:

This is the coal surface mine in Hambach, close to where I used to live for a few years. It's hard to capture its hugeness on a single photograph. The coal, that's the black stuff in the middle, is 400 metres below the surface (and thus 200 metres below zero), so those machines you see would make Gerti look small.


I just moved to Cologne, so of course I had to take a picture of the Cathedral of Cologne, too!

I call this The Moving Lemon:

Back in the days when the phone business was still part of Deutsche Post, phone booths used to be yellow:

Rapeseed fields and windmills are a very common sight here.

To John Finnemore:
There are no ways to express how much I love Cabin Pressure, you, and everyone involved in creating it. You make me very very happy!
Some brilliant fellow Cabin Pressure fans had the idea of creating a coordinated fanmail project involving a lemon, since The Travelling Lemon is one of the many games our favourite pilots like to play. So I took the lemon on a trip through north-west Germany.
First of all, the lemon visits my place of origin, Bremen, and its famous Town Musicians:

This is the coal surface mine in Hambach, close to where I used to live for a few years. It's hard to capture its hugeness on a single photograph. The coal, that's the black stuff in the middle, is 400 metres below the surface (and thus 200 metres below zero), so those machines you see would make Gerti look small.


I just moved to Cologne, so of course I had to take a picture of the Cathedral of Cologne, too!

I call this The Moving Lemon:

Back in the days when the phone business was still part of Deutsche Post, phone booths used to be yellow:

Rapeseed fields and windmills are a very common sight here.

To John Finnemore:
There are no ways to express how much I love Cabin Pressure, you, and everyone involved in creating it. You make me very very happy!