I was just sat half-watching reruns of the classic British TV series The Hitch Hiker’s Guide To The Galaxy (or H2G2 for short). Right at the end the main characters Arthur Dent and Ford Prefect have crash landed 2 million years ago on Earth and are trying to teach some cave men scrabble so that the spaceship full of some other planet’s castoffs that crash landed with them won’t out-evolve them (it’s mad stuff and if you don’t know the story then either read the books, listen to the radio show, watch the TV series or buy the film on DVD – and what rock have you been hiding under?). They eventually give up realising it’s futile and walk off into the distance.
And at exactly that point I looked up at the TV and exclaimed: “I know where that is!”. Here’s the final scene:
And here’s a photo I took in March of 2007 just above Dove Stone Reservoir near where I live:
You’ll note that it’s exactly the same place – although at a different time of year! The notch on the horizon at centre-left, the straight line of trees in the distance from lower left to upper right, the boulder which is right at the front of my shot but further in the distance on the TV and the position of the river.
It’s a small world indeed but it just goes to show when you look through the viewfinder to take in a scene, compose a shot and click the shutter to capture a photo – it gets not only imprinted on a digital card but in the back of your mind too! A lot of thought goes into every photograph I take and every one feels like a personal achievement. Which is why I never forget a photo I’ve taken – although I may well forget where it was taken as my memory’s not always the best!
That’s amazing, well spotted! Did you see any telephone sanitizers about when you took your photograph?
Heh heh, I didn’t see any. But it was 2 million years ago! 😉
bloody hell – that is spooky!
I went there a while ago with Esther and it was even more cold and miserable this time than when we were there.
your photo is far nicer than the screen shot 🙂
I know, we’ll have to do a pilgrimage at some point and wear Arthur Dent style dressing gowns!
And thanks – I think I preferred my composition to their parting shot!