Crosswords0 min ago
Your First Wow! Factor
78 Answers
When was the first time you said WOW! I'm here in.......
Mine was in Sydney. I just couldn't believe it! I'd seen the Opera house and bridge as well as lots of things to see in Australia in photos but when I saw for myself the Opera House in front of me I cried just cos they were there in front of me.
Mine was in Sydney. I just couldn't believe it! I'd seen the Opera house and bridge as well as lots of things to see in Australia in photos but when I saw for myself the Opera House in front of me I cried just cos they were there in front of me.
Answers
Easy...so very very easy. When I had passed the FRCS (Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons) and one was welcomed by the President as a Fellow in the prescence of all the examiners dressed in their cap and gowns. Bloody fabulous feeling. Beats meeting your "loved one" Beats your wedding day. Beats seeing your first child. Beats seeing your grandchildre n....
18:44 Fri 12th Jul 2013
hey Daisy that's true; that's what I find hard now being on my own. It's that every day; hey can you see that? look at that! do you know what I saw today today? etc then the sitting at the table on a nightime and going over the day... we don't appreciate it until the day we don't have it anymore.... Hope you get to see it as I hope to one day too.
coccinelle, sorry have only just returned to this thread. Yes I saw the bombs explode, I was in the RAF and was sent to the middle of the Pacific, 1000 miles south of Hawaii [that was another wow factor] to what was then Christmas Island. The American wanted to carry out their tests and "borrowed" C I for 8 months, the first bomb was quite small by atomic bomb standards but each one got bigger and the final few were huge. The first one was quite scary as we didn't know what to expect but we gradually got used to them, they were an awesome sight.
New Grange is as Stone Age Tomb in Ireland. My father and I visited it on Yule and waited for the sun to come up which it actually did so we were lucky, and it lights up the interior of the tomb via a sort of skylight it has. It's actually a very clever and very accurate clock and it predates Stonehenge by a couple of thousand years. It really blew me away. It's quite commercial sadly, they have as visitors centre and so on but it's still a really strong place to visit.