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Due to a number of factors, support for the current BigFooty mobile app has been discontinued. Your BigFooty login will no longer work on the Tapatalk or the BigFooty App - which is based on Tapatalk.
Apologies for any inconvenience. We will try to find a replacement.
How old are you???As a young teen I was a bit of a Titanic nerd.
After reading the book “a night to remember” I devoured everything I could about the great ship and its demise.
Long before Hollywood popularised it.
So yesterday I fulfilled a life long dream.
I touched the Titanic.
View attachment 1899302
That’s super cool.As a young teen I was a bit of a Titanic nerd.
After reading the book “a night to remember” I devoured everything I could about the great ship and its demise.
Long before Hollywood popularised it.
So yesterday I fulfilled a life long dream.
I touched the Titanic.
View attachment 1899302
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As a young teen I was a bit of a Titanic nerd.
After reading the book “a night to remember” I devoured everything I could about the great ship and its demise.
Long before Hollywood popularised it.
So yesterday I fulfilled a life long dream.
I touched the Titanic.
View attachment 1899302
On another forum, we used to call this kind of thread “Snippets”Not sure where to post something - do it here.
Richard Basehart. That's a blast from the past. He was in "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea" on TV. Definitely a link between that and the Titanic.How old are you???
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That’s super cool.
Where did you do that?
Did the people in the pool at the time realise it had even sank?An interesting fact re the Titanic.
When it was finally discovered after so many years, many things had rotted away but there was STILL water in the swimming pool !!
Bit too mainstream for a history snob is it? Must say, the Indianapolis is my personal favourite, Chief.The obsession with the Titanic has always baffled me.
I don't see the point of interest, at all, so if anyone can explain it then I'll finally be at ease with the world.
Bit too mainstream for a history snob is it? Must say, the Indianapolis is my personal favourite, Chief.
Biggest ship ever built gets labelled “unsinkable” and the campaigners sinks on the first trip. Absolute pisserThe obsession with the Titanic has always baffled me.
I don't see the point of interest, at all, so if anyone can explain it then I'll finally be at ease with the world.
The obsession with the Titanic has always baffled me.
I don't see the point of interest, at all, so if anyone can explain it then I'll finally be at ease with the world.
A magnificent speech in a classic film.
I share many joys and interests with the common folk, I think about the Romans at least 5 times a day, but yeah the continued curiosity for a ship which sank in 1912 strikes me as odd.
Why are the wrecks of other ships less interesting? Why are the lives of the unfortunates on other ships of less concern? I wouldn't walk across the road to bother touching a 'relic' of the Titanic, but others are willing to spend hundreds of thousands (and even their lives) just to get a look.
I also tend to view old shipwrecks as burial grounds which should be left alone, not stripped and sold for the curiously curious, unless it's one of those Spanish ships with a bajillion of gold in it.
Did they start all their stories with, "The sea was angry that day"?I used to work with maritime archaeologists employed by the State Govt. We called them ‘shipwreckers’. They spend a lot of their time trying to prevent looting of wrecks discovered in Victorian waters. Not easy.
Did they start all their stories with, "The sea was angry that day"?
The sea was angry that day, my friend...... there seemed to be something blocking its airway.....Did they start all their stories with, "The sea was angry that day"?
There's a reason those wrecks would have been where they were. Probably not hanging out at the nicest of boating spots. But they would have no doubt bagged plenty of crays whilst "protecting".They were on a good wicket. Had a dedicated boat and a depot on the Surf Coast somewhere, so they could more easily access the wrecks. Someone has to do it I guess.
Melbourne Museum.That’s super cool.
Where did you do that?
The obsession stems from the absolute belief that mankind had built something that could defy nature.The obsession with the Titanic has always baffled me.
I don't see the point of interest, at all, so if anyone can explain it then I'll finally be at ease with the world.
The “iceberg” is a wall of ice that you can put your whole hand on to feel the temperature of the berg.I assume he did that at the Titanic exhibition at Museum Victoria. Saw it a few weeks ago - and it’s very good.
They even have an iceberg (although not to scale…)
Haha!How old are you???
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I think I had an old hardcover copy of the book with an illustrated blue dust wrap.Haha!
Maybe not that old.
”A night to remember“ was a 1958 movie (doco) based on the book.
I read the book and didn’t see the movie until many, many years later. You couldn’t stream movie on demand back in the dark ages.
Funningly enough, there were scenes from that movie playing at the exhibition!