Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
Sunday Times General Knowledge (Gk) Sunday February 11Th 2018
29 Answers
the answers to Where Was I?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Adrienne1941. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Interesting offering, I thought this week, especially studying the detail in the OS Map of the area. I had also wondered how long it would be before the royal "diphthong" would be trotted out again. Perhaps too, Tilly may have enjoyed reading of the family connection that might be somewhat "close to home" as it were?
Always annoying when there are alternative spellings for one of the required answers!
GG, yesterday, whilst searching for the competition website (away from home and couldn't remember the URL) I came across the following article by Chris Fautley:
https:/ /www.th etimes. co.uk/a rticle/ for-the -1-000t h-time- wherewa si-xmr2 x29dd
I haven't registered to read the full article, but what is visible without doing so is interesting: he has been setting the puzzle since 1998, and my paper cutting (19 May 1996) is from the "first incarnation" of Where Was I?, before his involvement
GG, yesterday, whilst searching for the competition website (away from home and couldn't remember the URL) I came across the following article by Chris Fautley:
https:/
I haven't registered to read the full article, but what is visible without doing so is interesting: he has been setting the puzzle since 1998, and my paper cutting (19 May 1996) is from the "first incarnation" of Where Was I?, before his involvement
Ooh, I do like a challenge, F - where is he, or at least which part of the UK does the map show? I'm pretty certain it's the southern part of The Rhins (the setting for WWI? on 1 Oct 2017) with the Mull of Galloway at the top, of course, because of how the OS Landranger maps are folded: his index finger is pointing towards Clanyard Bay and his middle finger is in Port Nessock (or Port Logan) Bay
Is the scarf an attempt to remain icognito, or is it to guard against the terrible British weather that he often has to deal with? :-)
Is the scarf an attempt to remain icognito, or is it to guard against the terrible British weather that he often has to deal with? :-)
Can't fault that at all . . . Etch - 6.0 for technical merit and 6.0 for artistic impression! (at present - am watching bits of the figure skating).
It always surprises me how many people I know who don't orientate a map to the direction being travelled in order to navigate.
I think the scarf is probably a bit of both you suggest - not so the hat - well, not like Paddy Burt's Pic which used to appear in the "Room Service" features in the Telegraph.
It always surprises me how many people I know who don't orientate a map to the direction being travelled in order to navigate.
I think the scarf is probably a bit of both you suggest - not so the hat - well, not like Paddy Burt's Pic which used to appear in the "Room Service" features in the Telegraph.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.