For me, where we differ is mainly age. I have been at it since the 1940s, natural history and photographing since I was 14 years old.
I'm catching up to you quick in the age department
We do share similarities, yes.
My first 'pets' 5-6 were jumping spiders, black widows, and praying mantids.
In junior high, as a pre-teen, when other kids were ditching school to smoke pot ... I was ditching school catching rattlesnakes
I believe, in time, we will converge more on APO lenses, of which the CV-125 is a good example. Don't underestimate the Zeiss 100mm Macro Elmarit-R. It is more refined than the CV-125 and there is a 60mm Elmarit that is VERY useful. For me, I got past my interest in 1:1 photos and got more into wider angles. This is done, if I remember, with the D810 and the Otus 55 mm.
Beautiful image ... and you're right ... I do appreciate "stepping back" and capturing the scene, which you did wonderfully, here.
Seeing other people's work, such as your own, helps me broaden my perspective.
As a hiker, though, I just can't justify having the Zeiss 135
and the Voigtländer 125 in my pouch, occupying the same niche. One of them had to go.
The Voigtländer takes beautiful images like that also ...
and it gets in close when I need it. The Zeiss was too limited.
I
have been very curious about the Leica 100mm Macro Elmarit-R ... but the CV 125 is just perfect for its niche ... and I thank you for turning me on to it.
I will probably secure a copy of the Leica, though, if only to see it for myself ...
As you are, I too am very particular with
my needs. I can appreciate the opinions and needs of other discriminating lens aficionados, while realizing they don't exactly match my own.
That said, I will bet ... if we were contemporaries ... living in the same proximity ... we'd both be hiking, talking lenses ... and that you'd bring your CV 125 for those hikes as well
Cheers,