Re: Soprile Wednesday



On Fri, 5 Jun 2009 01:34:42 -0700 (PDT), Ralph B
<google81@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Kate Brown wrote:
On Thu, 4 Jun 2009, Ralph B wrote
On Jun 4, 12:11?am, Harry <flapdra...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
(b) Unless it was actually broken up and buried (and why bother?), how
on earth do the SWs picture such a huge chunk of scrap decaying and
actually being swallowed up by the earth so completely as to be
forgotten about and never referred to again, in a mere six or seven
decades?? ?That kind of thing takes thousands of years. ?They should
have found something from Joe's great-grandfather's time, financially
worthless and of only minor historical interest.

To be fair to the LSWs (Bod preserve me) thems were funny times. I
remember a couple of stories from way back when of people burying an
old car in the garden rather than taking it to a scrapyard.

See http://engineweb.co.uk/odds_and_ends.htm which also backs me up
with "Whilst talking to his neighbour my friend was told that he
vaguely remembered the car being buried there. Apparently it was
common practice years ago as the scrap value was virtually nothing."

It still goes on today - although the current bunch are, of course,
too lazy to actually dig:
-
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1131585/The-Ford-discovery-Counc
il-workers-Escort-buried-garden.html

It's not inconceivable, IMHO, that Grandpa Grundy would have buried
the steam-engine. Especially as he would have had access to
agricultural digging machinery. Perhaps he was being hassled by the
landlord to clear up the eyesore, and did so in a typically pragmatic
Grundyist fashion.

Give the LSWs a break. Although, of course, TBMG.

The people who had our house before us had a habit of burying odd bits
of dead car in the garden. Nobody knew quite why, but when Ralph first
moved in he had to remove a surprisingly large amount, and we still come
across strips of bumper in the rockery. There's a persistent yellow
patch in the lawn which I suspect to be due to something of the sort,
but it would take a lot of digging to get at it.

I should just like to clarify that I am not the Ralph referred to
above - despite the similarity of surnames Kate and I are not AFAIK
related. Nor am I responsible for the yellow patches on her lawn.

And anyway, they're not in your handwriting, are they?

lff
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Soprile Wednesday
    ... on earth do the SWs picture such a huge chunk of scrap decaying and ... actually being swallowed up by the earth so completely as to be ... old car in the garden rather than taking it to a scrapyard. ... Nor am I responsible for the yellow patches on her lawn. ...
    (uk.media.radio.archers)
  • Re: Soprile Wednesday
    ... In article, Kate Brown ... how on earth do the SWs picture such a huge chunk ... of scrap decaying and actually being swallowed up by the ... that he vaguely remembered the car being buried there. ...
    (uk.media.radio.archers)
  • Re: Soprile Wednesday
    ... Kate Brown wrote: ... on earth do the SWs picture such a huge chunk of scrap decaying and ... actually being swallowed up by the earth so completely as to be ... old car in the garden rather than taking it to a scrapyard. ...
    (uk.media.radio.archers)
  • Re: Soprile Wednesday
    ... on earth do the SWs picture such a huge chunk of scrap decaying and ... actually being swallowed up by the earth so completely as to be ... old car in the garden rather than taking it to a scrapyard. ... of dead car in the garden. ...
    (uk.media.radio.archers)
  • Re: Soprile Wednesday
    ... on earth do the SWs picture such a huge chunk of scrap decaying and ... actually being swallowed up by the earth so completely as to be ... old car in the garden rather than taking it to a scrapyard. ... Nobody knew quite why, but when Ralph first moved in he had to remove a surprisingly large amount, and we still come across strips of bumper in the rockery. ...
    (uk.media.radio.archers)