Pilot Romantis Melamar dengan Kata `Marry Me` di Ladang Pertanian

Romantic Pilot Proposes by Getting `Marry Me` Ploughed into Field

Editor : Ismail Gani
Translator : Parulian Manalu


Pilot Romantis Melamar dengan Kata `Marry Me` di Ladang Pertanian
Cara melamar yang unik (Foto2: Mail Online)

INSTRUKTUR terbang Stuart Black memberi kejutan buat pacarnya, Annette MacKenzie dengan memintanya melihat ke ladang pertanian di bawah.

"Nikahi Saya Annette" kalimat itu terukir di ladang jerami dan ketika berbalik mendapati Black, kekasihnya memegang cincin berlian untuk pertunangan. Annette pun langsung menjawab: Ya.

Stuart Black meminta bantuan temannya seorang petani untuk membuat lamaran di atas ladang yang tiap huruf tingginya delapan meter.

Calon pengantin pria awalnya ingin melamar pada hari Natal, tapi tugas ke Teluk selama empat bulan bersama Angkatan Udara Kerajaan Inggris (RAF) memaksanya harus dilakukan lebih awal.

Nona MacKenzie dari Dunvegan, Isle of Skye mengaku tidak tahu soal lamaran unik tersebut. Pria berusia 37 tahun itu menjawab: "Itu adalah kejutan."

"Saya sangat gugup ketika pertama kali belajar terbang dan saya sangat terkejut ketika Stuart meminta melihat ke bawah dan saya melihat sesuatu."

"Saya berbalik dan Stuart sudah memegang cincin dan semuanya klik."

"Biasanya dia tidak bisa menyembunyikan apa pun sehingga saya kagum karena tidak pernah tahu dengan rencananya."

Pasangan ini hidup terpisah sejauh 200 mil dan pertama kali bertemu di Facebook dua tahun lalu, tapi keduanya melakukan tatap muka pada Desember.

Mereka belum menetapkan tanggal pernikahan, dan mempertimbangkan menikah pada Desember tahun depan - dua tahun setelah mereka 'klik'

Black dari Crieff, Perthshire, mengaku lamaran unik itu direncanakan satu bulan lamanya dengan meminta bantuan teman kecilnya, John Wyatt, seorang petani.

"Pada awalnya saya ingin melamarnya ketika terbang kebetulan Annette juga belajar terbang, sebagai pengalaman unik.

"Kemudian saya pikir, kenapa tidak membuat sesuatu yang berbeda di daratan? Jadi saya menghubungi teman saya John yang memiliki peternakan dan kami membuat rencana untuk menulis lamaran di atas ladang pertanian."

INSTRUCTOR Stuart Black was giving girlfriend Annette MacKenzie her first flying lesson when he asked her to look down into a field.

'Marry me Annettte' had been carved in 25-foot long letters into the stubble field below and when she looked back Mr Black was holding a diamond engagement ring. She said yes straight away.

Stuart Black enlisted the help of a farmer friend to plough proposal in 25-foot long letters.

The groom-to-be had originally planned on popping the question at Christmas but brought it forward as he is due to leave for the Gulf for four months on duty with the RAF.

Ms MacKenzie, from Dunvegan, Isle of Skye, said she had no idea he was planning to propose. The 37-year-old said: 'It was such a surprise."

'I was so nervous doing a flying lesson for the first time and then all of a sudden Stuart said I should look down at the field outside as I might see something.'

"We had just flown over Gleneagles so I thought it was going to be another big building or something, but there were all these words and I couldn’t quite take them all in.

'I turned around and there was Stuart holding a ring and it all clicked.

'Normally he can’t keep anything quiet so I’m amazed I never found out beforehand.'

The pair live more than 200 miles apart and first met on Facebook two years ago but only saw each other face-to-face in December.

They have yet to set a date but are considering marrying in December next year - two years after they first 'clicked'.

Mr Black, 39, of Crieff, Perthshire, said the dramatic proposal had taken months of planning and he enlisted the help of his childhood friend John Watt, who a farm.

Mr Black said: 'At first I had this idea of proposing in the air while Annette was having a flying lesson, as it would be something different.

'Then I thought, why not have something marked out on the ground? 'So I contacted my friend John who owns a farm and we came up with a plan to carve a proposal into a field.