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Author Topic: Vagueness and the Aftermath - A sporadic diary  (Read 4459665 times)
RED-DOG
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« Reply #6015 on: June 17, 2009, 12:08:39 PM »

I sort my bogies into categories.


Gritty

Elastic

Superglue

Small green pea

Cornflake



sorry, but I'm definitely not with you anymore Tom!

Er, me neither, I was only kidding.
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« Reply #6016 on: June 17, 2009, 12:22:03 PM »

A certain % of carbon is a radioactive type which degrades.
The % of this in the atmosphere is pretty constant.
When something dies it has the radioactive carbon in it at this %.
As the carbon degrades the % drops.
You can calculate how long it would take for the carbon to decline to that % and figure out how old the thing is.

Thanks Bongo. I think I actually understand it now.
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« Reply #6017 on: June 17, 2009, 12:23:51 PM »

No way on earth am I going to believe that Kev doesn't have a bogey collection.
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« Reply #6018 on: June 17, 2009, 01:19:31 PM »



Look carefully at the picture. Right near the top of the railings, you can just about see her silhouette behind the curtains. Can't you just feel her eyes on you, willing you to break down the door, take her in your arms, and carry her off into the moonlight?  



Hmmm, perhaps it's just me then.....

 Joo say's I can't even think about it.  Grin
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« Reply #6019 on: June 17, 2009, 01:28:15 PM »



Look carefully at the picture. Right near the top of the railings, you can just about see her silhouette behind the curtains. Can't you just feel her eyes on you, willing you to break down the door, take her in your arms, and carry her off into the moonlight?  



Hmmm, perhaps it's just me then.....

 Joo say's I can't even think about it.  Grin

That's OK. One beautiful girl is enough for you.
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« Reply #6020 on: June 17, 2009, 04:06:55 PM »

No way on earth am I going to believe that Kev doesn't have a bogey collection.

Alas Tom, i had to dispose of my bogey, ear wax and toe nail collection when I moved to Portsmouth .... try explaining to women what you give up for them !!  they never appreciate it.
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« Reply #6021 on: June 17, 2009, 04:14:07 PM »

No way on earth am I going to believe that Kev doesn't have a bogey collection.

Alas Tom, i had to dispose of my bogey, ear wax and toe nail collection when I moved to Portsmouth .... try explaining to women what you give up for them !!  they never appreciate it.

Yeah, I know where you're coming from. toenail collections grow so quickly. I'm on my second shoe-box.
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« Reply #6022 on: June 17, 2009, 04:37:10 PM »

Continued from

http://blondepoker.com/forum/index.php?topic=30601.msg979535#msg979535


There were two big names in air rifles back then. One was BSA with their “Airsporter” “Meteor” and “Mercury” models; the other was Webly with the “Hurricane” “Hawke” and “Ospray”. Attercliffe Sale and Exchange had some fine examples of all these, but they each carried an orange tag, with prices ranging from £2.9s.11d. to a whopping £5.19s.6d.

I took out my purse, (Yes I used to have a purse) In those days money, (If you had any) wasn’t something you carried around with you all the time, it was something you kept at home until you were actually going to buy something. I kept mine in an old purse and if I needed to take it anywhere, I took it in the purse. Anyway, I took out my purse and looked inside. I don’t know why I did this, it was a pointless exercise, I knew exactly how much was in there, one carefully folded ten bob note, and one threepenny bit. Not nearly enough for me to buy any of the guns on offer. I knew however that the owner would let potential customers test them by firing them at a stack of old books at the back of the shop, so I decided that I might as well go inside and have some fun.

After letting me test fire most of the guns, waiting patiently while I examined the pile of books to see how far the pellets had penetrated, and discussing at length the pro’s and cons of things like crimp-fit v tapped foresights or under lever v break-barrel cocking, it suddenly seemed to dawn on the shopkeeper that I wasn’t going to actually buy anything. He regarded me balefully over his wire-framed half-moon reading glasses, seeming to notice for the first time my youth and my scarecrowesque appearance.
“Has tha got any brass at all lad?” he enquired, as he took the air rifle I was holding and replaced it in the window.
“I’ve got ten bob and me bus fare,” I told him.
“Well” he said, as he put his hand on my shoulder and steered me towards the door, “Ah dunt think we’ll be doin’ any arms deals today”.

Just as I was leaving the shop, he pulled me back inside. “’Ang on a minute, ave a look at this”.

He stepped into a back room and re emerged a few moments later holding the most decrepit looking air rifle you could imagine. The lock and barrel were coated with a layer of thick, “stain your hands red” type rust. The stock, totally devoid of varnish, had that sort of dry, powdery feel that you find on a wooden clothes peg after it has been left out on the line all summer, or on a walking stick that has been at the back of the shed for years.
On the top of the barrel, at the breech end, I could see the faint outline of something cut into the metal. I spat on the inside of my jersey and scrubbed away some of the grime to expose a little etching of a lady in long flowing robes holding a rifle above her head. Below this was some faint lettering, “Diana, cal .177”

I looked at the gun suspiciously.  The shopkeeper, now in full salesman mode advised me, “Dun’t judge a book by it’s cover lad, it just needs a bit o ticklin’ oop an tha’ll be ower t’ moon wi it. Tha’ll see”.

Unconvinced, I asked him if I could test fire it, as I had with the ones from the window. “O’ course tha can.” He said enthusiastically, and he passed me a tin of .177 calibre pellets. Not without some difficulty, I cocked the gun and inserted a pellet into the breech Then I took careful aim at the stack of books and pulled the trigger.

The gun made a loud “kerchunga” sound, then the lock and barrel swivelled see-saw like a couple of times before chattering to the floor, leaving me looking slightly ridiculous with one eye still closed and the stock firmly clamped to my shoulder. I rescued the lock and barrel from the floor and opened the breech to find the pellet still in position
“Like ah said” cooed the shopkeeper, “It just needs a bit o ticklin’ oop.”

It bares testament to my negotiating skills, (and those of the shopkeeper) that 10 minutes later, I found myself walking home. Sans bus fare, but with half a rifle tucked under each arm. Yes folks, I had somehow managed to beat him down to precisely 10s.3d, or, to put it another way, exactly the amount that I had in my pocket.

Wasn’t that lucky?
« Last Edit: June 17, 2009, 04:48:40 PM by RED-DOG » Logged

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« Reply #6023 on: June 17, 2009, 04:45:07 PM »

Cheesy Love the story Tom, I could see the Diana in my mind's eye. The first Air Rifle I shot was an old Diana .22 that I shot with my Dad, but I reckon my Mum made him get rid of it as I got older and more likely to want to go shooting on my own.

I'd to buy my own gun when I got old enough & pay for it with money saved from my paper round, it was a massive Wiehrauch .177, I got teased for using the smaller calibre but could pull off longer range shots than the guys with the .22's Grin
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« Reply #6024 on: June 17, 2009, 04:45:49 PM »


Grand stuff Tom!
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« Reply #6025 on: June 17, 2009, 04:52:31 PM »

Cheesy Love the story Tom, I could see the Diana in my mind's eye. The first Air Rifle I shot was an old Diana .22 that I shot with my Dad, but I reckon my Mum made him get rid of it as I got older and more likely to want to go shooting on my own.

I'd to buy my own gun when I got old enough & pay for it with money saved from my paper round, it was a massive Wiehrauch .177, I got teased for using the smaller calibre but could pull off longer range shots than the guys with the .22's Grin

Was your Wiehrauch the underlever type with the little swivel loading toggle? I had one of those once, a .22 it was. I couldn't hardly lift the bloody thing.
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« Reply #6026 on: June 17, 2009, 04:55:13 PM »

 Click to see full-size image.


No the HW35 - it was about a foot longer than all the other guy's air rifles, and about 5lbs heavier.
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« Reply #6027 on: June 17, 2009, 04:56:45 PM »

I bought a Diana with three week's worth iof school dinner money in about 1969.
It wasn't covered in rust, nor did it fall apart when I fired it, but it had the range of a pea-shooter powered by an asthmatic toddler. The sparrow population of Northamptonshire was safe from me.

I traded it back to the lad that sold it to me for two days worth of chips and a battered sausage. (sausage covered in batter, not...)

I've never been much good with my hands so couldn't have fixed it, but I'd guess you got yours bright and shiny and effective Red.
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« Reply #6028 on: June 17, 2009, 04:59:08 PM »

Cheesy Love the story Tom, I could see the Diana in my mind's eye. The first Air Rifle I shot was an old Diana .22 that I shot with my Dad, but I reckon my Mum made him get rid of it as I got older and more likely to want to go shooting on my own.

I'd to buy my own gun when I got old enough & pay for it with money saved from my paper round, it was a massive Wiehrauch .177, I got teased for using the smaller calibre but could pull off longer range shots than the guys with the .22's Grin

Was your Wiehrauch the underlever type with the little swivel loading toggle? I had one of those once, a .22 it was. I could hardly lift the bloody thing.

FMP
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« Reply #6029 on: June 17, 2009, 05:00:22 PM »

A great yarn Tom. In the 70's I lived right by the canal and we used to go down there ratting or just target shooting. Some times we used to go on to a farmers land with a friends brother who had a shotgun. He used to shoot rabbits or pigeons that the farmer saw as pests. I had a brand new Webley and Scott Hawk, this beauty had interchangeable .177 and .22 barrels which was handy sometimes if you ran out of one calibre you could change it and scrounge the other of a mate. My mate Dave had an old meteor with a slightly bowed barrel when you looked down it and he was a crack shot with it. The days of jumpers for goalposts were truly magical.

And yes one beautiful woman is enough Tom.
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