Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Guess where this is?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Hmm the red rocks would suggest dumfries & galloway... but you've said not the west coast. So how about the south coast?
    DM says: Crunch with Matrox Users@ClimatePrediction.net

    Comment


    • South coast? um.. no. I would still think of that as west coast, and Northumberland is not a sea.

      Comment


      • Hmmm! There are red rocks between N. Berwick and Dunbar, but the architecture doesn't tell me that. Stonehaven/Aberdeen area doesn't have red sandstone, suggesting it may be farther north. I've not been farther north than Aberdeen, so am ignorant, there, but the Elgin area is mainly alluvial, which this isn't Golspie is on gneiss, I believe, so that suggests the North-East Coast or, and I'm beginning to think seriously of the islands, more probably the Shetlands???
        Brian (the devil incarnate)

        Comment


        • Not the Shetlands, nor any island (other than Great Britain)

          Comment


          • A clue for you all.. this town has everything to do with GNEP's profession, but only in fiction.

            Comment


            • Another shot.. "Scotland's most famous phone box."
              Attached Files

              Comment


              • OK, you've given it away now. Pennan. A village I've never, ever, heard of. Nor have I heard of the phone box, a common item of UK street furniture, so it ain't all that famous, having featured in an obscure film, 20 years, that I've never heard of either. I would suggest that the phone box outside the GPO, Waterloo Place, Edinburgh, that had 23 students packed inside in 1949 is more famous: at least 24 persons had it imprinted on their minds for life (the 24th being your humble servant - I was the packer-in, being too big to be half-suffocated inside it).
                Brian (the devil incarnate)

                Comment


                • Here is a photo of the old GPO, now empty and derelict. The phone boxes have also now gone.



                  It is part of Edinburgh's architectural heritage, dating from the early 1800s, when the New Town was built.
                  Last edited by Brian Ellis; 14 March 2005, 01:39.
                  Brian (the devil incarnate)

                  Comment


                  • What is the building, and where?
                    Brian (the devil incarnate)

                    Comment


                    • How about an old listening post (like Clark in the Philippines) converted to a UN facility ?

                      Comment


                      • Not in Asia, not a listening post, perhaps, with a slight stretch of the imagination, just the opposite.

                        Clue: the country is a constitutional monarchy with a democratically elected bicameral government. However, the monarch (currently female) is not the Head of State, giving that honour to the Prime Minister.
                        Brian (the devil incarnate)

                        Comment


                        • Looks like a university campus. One of the 60s ones. Coventry perhaps?
                          DM says: Crunch with Matrox Users@ClimatePrediction.net

                          Comment


                          • Not in Europe, not a campus. Whoever saw palm trees in Coventry? And the Queen is the UK Head of State.
                            Brian (the devil incarnate)

                            Comment


                            • Barbados ?
                              Currently a colony or member of the commonwealth ?

                              Comment


                              • Getting a bit warmer, but some way to go yet. Yes, a Member of the Commonwealth, hence the reference to the monarchy. That should make it easier.
                                Brian (the devil incarnate)

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X