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Post by steveandthedogs on Sept 3, 2023 16:45:50 GMT
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Post by JohnY on Sept 3, 2023 20:41:14 GMT
I would like to know if powered transportation machines are allowed in that wood. Also is there any connection between a motorbike and the cross. I feel that I am being set up for an onslaught by motorbike fetishists. I don't care. Motor bikes don't belong in woods.
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Post by andy on Sept 3, 2023 20:56:39 GMT
I would like to know if powered transportation machines are allowed in that wood. Also is there any connection between a motorbike and the cross. I feel that I am being set up for an onslaught by motorbike fetishists. I don't care. Motor bikes don't belong in woods. Dunno about that wood but the ones round here with gravel roads are effectively part of public road network so you can do 60mph on them.
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Post by steveandthedogs on Sept 3, 2023 21:48:05 GMT
I would like to know if powered transportation machines are allowed in that wood. Also is there any connection between a motorbike and the cross. I feel that I am being set up for an onslaught by motorbike fetishists. I don't care. Motor bikes don't belong in woods. They do when it's my twenty hectares.
And the grave is the old chap's who lived in a caravan at Bonnie's.
It's also where we intend to be buried.
S
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Post by Chester PB on Sept 5, 2023 18:12:09 GMT
A few years ago the local paper reported that a teenager using his off-road motorcycle in the local woods had crashed it and lay injured for some hours whilst people walking nearby ignored him. Eventually somebody called an ambulance, so he is probably still doing it on another bike.
I have personally enjoyed an encounter with a motorcyclist on a footpath in the Lake District, and had to quickly move to the side of the path. Hopefully he has now too had a collision with a tree or a rock, but hopefully not a person or a sheep.
However, the motorcycle in this picture looks more like the type that might be purchased by a wealthy older adult trying to regain a wild youth he never had (there are a few like this near where I live). Is my guess correct?
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Post by steveandthedogs on Sept 6, 2023 17:25:06 GMT
No, it's to replace the Bonneville I sold to a neighbour about four years ago.
As for people walking nearby, no chance. It's not open to the general public, only family and corpses.
S
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Post by andy on Sept 6, 2023 19:08:26 GMT
No, it's to replace the Bonneville I sold to a neighbour about four years ago. As for people walking nearby, no chance. It's not open to the general public, only family and corpses. S Getting buried on your own personal rally stage? What a way to go .
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Post by dreampolice on Sept 6, 2023 19:26:43 GMT
No, it's to replace the Bonneville I sold to a neighbour about four years ago. As for people walking nearby, no chance. It's not open to the general public, only family and corpses. S Do you have to get people in to dig the hole (and presumably ensure it is the right depth etc)and bury the body, or can you do it yourself?
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Post by steveandthedogs on Sept 6, 2023 21:56:28 GMT
No, it's to replace the Bonneville I sold to a neighbour about four years ago. As for people walking nearby, no chance. It's not open to the general public, only family and corpses. S Do you have to get people in to dig the hole (and presumably ensure it is the right depth etc)and bury the body, or can you do it yourself? It's hard to dig a hole when you're dead.
You can diy if you want, but it has to be 6' deep, not near a water course.
We had the undertaker organise a mini-digger. And bring a pump on the day - it had filled up with the rain. Evidently a common problem. I did ask if we should have buried him in a submarine.
S
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Post by dreampolice on Sept 6, 2023 22:37:17 GMT
Do you have to get people in to dig the hole (and presumably ensure it is the right depth etc)and bury the body, or can you do it yourself? It's hard to dig a hole when you're dead.
S
Haha.
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