- October 4th, 2009, 1:57 am
#35194
http://www.accessmylibrary.com/article- ... l-s-c.html
"Not the stairs people creep up while waiting in line. The stairs that stretch about 11 stories high. The ones made of see-through metal grates where the wind blows high above Interstate 77, and the planes fly low.
But as the dawn sky fades from black to gray then blue, there's Bobby Nivens, racing up those stairs, crossing a catwalk and bounding back down.
"I don't pay any attention to the height," said Nivens, 48, standing beneath the 113-foot peak. "It's pretty up there to look around." "
http://web.archive.org/web/200104182251 ... jsp?id=609
Carowinds.com as of late 2000, the TG:TJC page:
"Highest Peak 113 feet"
Word of advise for newbies, When The NUT knows he is right, he will go to ANY lengths to prove it. I dug through 13 pages of Google News Searchs, and atleast 10 pages from Wayback Machine.
"Not the stairs people creep up while waiting in line. The stairs that stretch about 11 stories high. The ones made of see-through metal grates where the wind blows high above Interstate 77, and the planes fly low.
But as the dawn sky fades from black to gray then blue, there's Bobby Nivens, racing up those stairs, crossing a catwalk and bounding back down.
"I don't pay any attention to the height," said Nivens, 48, standing beneath the 113-foot peak. "It's pretty up there to look around." "
http://web.archive.org/web/200104182251 ... jsp?id=609
Carowinds.com as of late 2000, the TG:TJC page:
"Highest Peak 113 feet"
Word of advise for newbies, When The NUT knows he is right, he will go to ANY lengths to prove it. I dug through 13 pages of Google News Searchs, and atleast 10 pages from Wayback Machine.
I am back from Carowinds Connection Time-Out!