Threeteas
New member
I once went with my Dad to see the Wolves v Man Utd, with Best, Charlton et al. We marched down barrackaded streets with windows boarded up. Stood in the Molineaux end and I couldn't see a damn thing...I was very young and small at the time. But there was a definite sense of an uncontrolable power, especially as the crowd moved like a wave ebbing forwards and backwards...I suspect it's like being a sock in a heavy wash on spin cycle.
Guernsey: lots of German stuff hanging around there too, as it was occupied during the war. There's some very strange photographs of policemen and Nazi troopers standing on street corners guiding traffic. I looks like the Germans took the island, then seemed embarrassed about it, or awkward and unsure what to do with it.
Gerrald Durrell's zoo is worth a visit, as it's far less"ooh look" and more, "let's save and study", his book, "My friends and other animals" is worth a read before you go.
The roads are twisty and I can't recall any straights where you'd open up, at all.
But, great place to while away a week or two...enjoy your trip.
So, Paperboy, are you somewhere near, is it the Black Hawk boarder crossing?
I was that way with the HU meeting in BC not long ago, then last week I was in Winthrop, Twisp, Okanagan, then down to the Coulee City area for the Dry Falls...spectacular geological area, where the Lake Missoula was created behind an ice tongue, then broke through (a few times), rippling the land (30 foot high ripples that is), depositing some of Canada down in Washington (boulders the size of small houses), cut swathes through volcanoes and mountains to leave deep gorges and then these falls. Bigger than Niagara, about 6 miles round, the water came over the top at 300 feet deep and travelling approx 65mph, before hitting the Columbia River and sweeping down there to the sea. Fascinating stuff.
You don't get that sort of thing in Guernsey, or Hull...more's the pity.
Guernsey: lots of German stuff hanging around there too, as it was occupied during the war. There's some very strange photographs of policemen and Nazi troopers standing on street corners guiding traffic. I looks like the Germans took the island, then seemed embarrassed about it, or awkward and unsure what to do with it.
Gerrald Durrell's zoo is worth a visit, as it's far less"ooh look" and more, "let's save and study", his book, "My friends and other animals" is worth a read before you go.
The roads are twisty and I can't recall any straights where you'd open up, at all.
But, great place to while away a week or two...enjoy your trip.
So, Paperboy, are you somewhere near, is it the Black Hawk boarder crossing?
I was that way with the HU meeting in BC not long ago, then last week I was in Winthrop, Twisp, Okanagan, then down to the Coulee City area for the Dry Falls...spectacular geological area, where the Lake Missoula was created behind an ice tongue, then broke through (a few times), rippling the land (30 foot high ripples that is), depositing some of Canada down in Washington (boulders the size of small houses), cut swathes through volcanoes and mountains to leave deep gorges and then these falls. Bigger than Niagara, about 6 miles round, the water came over the top at 300 feet deep and travelling approx 65mph, before hitting the Columbia River and sweeping down there to the sea. Fascinating stuff.
You don't get that sort of thing in Guernsey, or Hull...more's the pity.