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Ugh... Dead Grass...

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  • C code frog 0

    Yeah I've got 6 spots and it's not buried it's just sitting right on top of the ground. Right where it was dropped.

    C Offline
    C Offline
    Colin Angus Mackay
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    When I bought a house a few years ago I found all sorts of crap in the garden. I'm glad I don't have any kids or they could have seriously hurt themselves on some of it. It took a good couple of years before most of it was out.


    Upcoming events: * Glasgow: Mock Objects, SQL Server CLR Integration, Reporting Services, db4o, Dependency Injection with Spring ... * Reading: Developer Day 5 Ready to Give up - Your help will be much appreciated. My website

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    • C Colin Angus Mackay

      When I bought a house a few years ago I found all sorts of crap in the garden. I'm glad I don't have any kids or they could have seriously hurt themselves on some of it. It took a good couple of years before most of it was out.


      Upcoming events: * Glasgow: Mock Objects, SQL Server CLR Integration, Reporting Services, db4o, Dependency Injection with Spring ... * Reading: Developer Day 5 Ready to Give up - Your help will be much appreciated. My website

      C Offline
      C Offline
      code frog 0
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      Yeah, depending on the builders response I might be borrowing my dads metal detector. There's a lot of junk in there and it's frustrating. The shingles just blew me away.

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      • L Lost User

        Good luck with the builder. I remember when I was a kid my father demolished the kitchen and bathroom, dug a big hole in the garden and buried the lot

        D Offline
        D Offline
        David Wulff
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        You must have had my dad. :rolleyes:


        Ðavid Wulff What kind of music should programmers listen to?
        Join the Code Project Last.fm group | dwulff
        I'm so gangsta I eat cereal without the milk

        L 1 Reply Last reply
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        • C code frog 0

          So folks. This weekend I thought I'd try and ease back into life (after major back injury) and see why I have about 6 rather large and very dead spots in my lawn that is now in it's 2nd summer. So I spoke with a few experts who said to get a hand aerator and aerate my lawn first. They said the process will reveal one of two problems. Really hard soil that isn't absorbing water in which case the aeration will help or construction debris which is preventing the grass from growing down in the soil. So I started hand aerating and guess what I start finding. Huge chunks of wood siding, sections of shingle and other debris at most 2 inches below the surface.:wtf: So now I get to call the builder and see if he has enough class to come and fix the problem. I'm not hopeful as we bought from a "spec home" builder who hasn't been super helpful with other problems unless they were just blatant screw-ups on the construction side of things. But seriously... to find huge slabs of shingle less than 2" under your ground. What were they thinking to just roll sod right on top of that!?!?!?! GRRRR!!! It's a good thing I'm mostly sedated right now or I'd totally lose it on some poor defenseless farm animal right now.:eek: I wonder if the builder will have any class or not... Totally dreading the conversation...:sigh: Among the other issues this isn't helping.:((

          D Offline
          D Offline
          David Wulff
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          Hey at least you have 2 inches of soil... I found out the reason my front lawn was always in such a poor state was due to the fact the turf was laid right on top of an old 4-6 inch think reinforced concrete driveway. Now that was fun to break up. Still, at least we solved the problem with it becoming waterlogged in the winter...


          Ðavid Wulff What kind of music should programmers listen to?
          Join the Code Project Last.fm group | dwulff
          I'm so gangsta I eat cereal without the milk

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • D David Wulff

            You must have had my dad. :rolleyes:


            Ðavid Wulff What kind of music should programmers listen to?
            Join the Code Project Last.fm group | dwulff
            I'm so gangsta I eat cereal without the milk

            L Offline
            L Offline
            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            My mother still refers to that part of the garden as "the hump" His other favorite trick was raking all the leaves into a pile and throwing a match on it.

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            • C code frog 0

              So folks. This weekend I thought I'd try and ease back into life (after major back injury) and see why I have about 6 rather large and very dead spots in my lawn that is now in it's 2nd summer. So I spoke with a few experts who said to get a hand aerator and aerate my lawn first. They said the process will reveal one of two problems. Really hard soil that isn't absorbing water in which case the aeration will help or construction debris which is preventing the grass from growing down in the soil. So I started hand aerating and guess what I start finding. Huge chunks of wood siding, sections of shingle and other debris at most 2 inches below the surface.:wtf: So now I get to call the builder and see if he has enough class to come and fix the problem. I'm not hopeful as we bought from a "spec home" builder who hasn't been super helpful with other problems unless they were just blatant screw-ups on the construction side of things. But seriously... to find huge slabs of shingle less than 2" under your ground. What were they thinking to just roll sod right on top of that!?!?!?! GRRRR!!! It's a good thing I'm mostly sedated right now or I'd totally lose it on some poor defenseless farm animal right now.:eek: I wonder if the builder will have any class or not... Totally dreading the conversation...:sigh: Among the other issues this isn't helping.:((

              R Offline
              R Offline
              Robert Surtees
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              on the bright side, you'll have a nice crop of mushrooms once it all starts decaying

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • C code frog 0

                So folks. This weekend I thought I'd try and ease back into life (after major back injury) and see why I have about 6 rather large and very dead spots in my lawn that is now in it's 2nd summer. So I spoke with a few experts who said to get a hand aerator and aerate my lawn first. They said the process will reveal one of two problems. Really hard soil that isn't absorbing water in which case the aeration will help or construction debris which is preventing the grass from growing down in the soil. So I started hand aerating and guess what I start finding. Huge chunks of wood siding, sections of shingle and other debris at most 2 inches below the surface.:wtf: So now I get to call the builder and see if he has enough class to come and fix the problem. I'm not hopeful as we bought from a "spec home" builder who hasn't been super helpful with other problems unless they were just blatant screw-ups on the construction side of things. But seriously... to find huge slabs of shingle less than 2" under your ground. What were they thinking to just roll sod right on top of that!?!?!?! GRRRR!!! It's a good thing I'm mostly sedated right now or I'd totally lose it on some poor defenseless farm animal right now.:eek: I wonder if the builder will have any class or not... Totally dreading the conversation...:sigh: Among the other issues this isn't helping.:((

                Steve EcholsS Offline
                Steve EcholsS Offline
                Steve Echols
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                I think most construction companies assume you're going to haul in 2-4-6-8 inches of topsoil over their mess. I've dug up old 2x4s while trying to plant trees, and didn't think much of it until I dug up a circa 72 coke can, at which point I thought I hit a time capsule! Further digging yielded nothing but rocks :-) Rip out the shingles, replace with topsoil, sprinkle some grass seed, and water, water, water. You'll have your lawn back in no time.


                - S 50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!

                • S
                  50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!
                  Code, follow, or get out of the way.
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                • C code frog 0

                  So folks. This weekend I thought I'd try and ease back into life (after major back injury) and see why I have about 6 rather large and very dead spots in my lawn that is now in it's 2nd summer. So I spoke with a few experts who said to get a hand aerator and aerate my lawn first. They said the process will reveal one of two problems. Really hard soil that isn't absorbing water in which case the aeration will help or construction debris which is preventing the grass from growing down in the soil. So I started hand aerating and guess what I start finding. Huge chunks of wood siding, sections of shingle and other debris at most 2 inches below the surface.:wtf: So now I get to call the builder and see if he has enough class to come and fix the problem. I'm not hopeful as we bought from a "spec home" builder who hasn't been super helpful with other problems unless they were just blatant screw-ups on the construction side of things. But seriously... to find huge slabs of shingle less than 2" under your ground. What were they thinking to just roll sod right on top of that!?!?!?! GRRRR!!! It's a good thing I'm mostly sedated right now or I'd totally lose it on some poor defenseless farm animal right now.:eek: I wonder if the builder will have any class or not... Totally dreading the conversation...:sigh: Among the other issues this isn't helping.:((

                  E Offline
                  E Offline
                  El Corazon
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #14

                  code-frog wrote:

                  But seriously... to find huge slabs of shingle less than 2" under your ground.

                  About a decade ago I had a similar episode with my house then. It had been several years trying to grow something, anything, in the section of land between the curb and the sidewalk, which you are required to maintain as part of owning a home.... Now, mind you, this house was made in the 60's, we bought it in the 90's, so it had been there a while.... We finally got desperate trying to figure out why nothing would grow there, and were tired of complaints from the city for not doing so (and threats of fines, etc). So I dug it up... Try concrete! Now wood or shingles is one thing, but try pulling out 12 inch chunks, 4" thick of concrete from a tiny section of land less than two feet wide and the length of the house. Not sure who, but someone was using the area to dump either an old sidewalk or some other concrete slab and then just covered it up with dirt.

                  _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                  • C code frog 0

                    So folks. This weekend I thought I'd try and ease back into life (after major back injury) and see why I have about 6 rather large and very dead spots in my lawn that is now in it's 2nd summer. So I spoke with a few experts who said to get a hand aerator and aerate my lawn first. They said the process will reveal one of two problems. Really hard soil that isn't absorbing water in which case the aeration will help or construction debris which is preventing the grass from growing down in the soil. So I started hand aerating and guess what I start finding. Huge chunks of wood siding, sections of shingle and other debris at most 2 inches below the surface.:wtf: So now I get to call the builder and see if he has enough class to come and fix the problem. I'm not hopeful as we bought from a "spec home" builder who hasn't been super helpful with other problems unless they were just blatant screw-ups on the construction side of things. But seriously... to find huge slabs of shingle less than 2" under your ground. What were they thinking to just roll sod right on top of that!?!?!?! GRRRR!!! It's a good thing I'm mostly sedated right now or I'd totally lose it on some poor defenseless farm animal right now.:eek: I wonder if the builder will have any class or not... Totally dreading the conversation...:sigh: Among the other issues this isn't helping.:((

                    J Offline
                    J Offline
                    Joan M
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #15

                    Er... as it is wood... have you seen the film poltergeist? (http://spanish.imdb.com/title/tt0084516/[^]) Now, being serious... try to talk with him, who knows it can be that his/her workers are not clean, but normally if the workers are not clean is because the company owner is not clean... Let's hope that when you talk to the builder he will want to repair that... Regards Rex, and good luck with everything... :rose:

                    https://www.robotecnik.com freelance robots, PLC and CNC programmer.

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                    • C code frog 0

                      So folks. This weekend I thought I'd try and ease back into life (after major back injury) and see why I have about 6 rather large and very dead spots in my lawn that is now in it's 2nd summer. So I spoke with a few experts who said to get a hand aerator and aerate my lawn first. They said the process will reveal one of two problems. Really hard soil that isn't absorbing water in which case the aeration will help or construction debris which is preventing the grass from growing down in the soil. So I started hand aerating and guess what I start finding. Huge chunks of wood siding, sections of shingle and other debris at most 2 inches below the surface.:wtf: So now I get to call the builder and see if he has enough class to come and fix the problem. I'm not hopeful as we bought from a "spec home" builder who hasn't been super helpful with other problems unless they were just blatant screw-ups on the construction side of things. But seriously... to find huge slabs of shingle less than 2" under your ground. What were they thinking to just roll sod right on top of that!?!?!?! GRRRR!!! It's a good thing I'm mostly sedated right now or I'd totally lose it on some poor defenseless farm animal right now.:eek: I wonder if the builder will have any class or not... Totally dreading the conversation...:sigh: Among the other issues this isn't helping.:((

                      T Offline
                      T Offline
                      Ted Ferenc
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      Reminds me of a friend who bought a house on a new development, the builder was still on site completing other houses, he found a full pallet of house bricks buried in his garden! As in the UK it was nearly bonfire night there was talk of the residents using the builder as the Guy!


                      "Normal is getting dressed in clothes that you buy for work and driving through traffic in a car that you are still paying for - in order to get to the job you need to pay for the clothes and the car, and the house you leave vacant all day so you can afford to live in it." - Ellen Goodman

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                      • Steve EcholsS Steve Echols

                        I think most construction companies assume you're going to haul in 2-4-6-8 inches of topsoil over their mess. I've dug up old 2x4s while trying to plant trees, and didn't think much of it until I dug up a circa 72 coke can, at which point I thought I hit a time capsule! Further digging yielded nothing but rocks :-) Rip out the shingles, replace with topsoil, sprinkle some grass seed, and water, water, water. You'll have your lawn back in no time.


                        - S 50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!

                        D Offline
                        D Offline
                        Dario Solera
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #17

                        Steve Echols wrote:

                        You'll have your lawn back in no time.

                        Yeah, sure. ;P

                        If you truly believe you need to pick a mobile phone that "says something" about your personality, don't bother. You don't have a personality. A mental illness, maybe - but not a personality. - Charlie Brooker My Blog - My Photos - ScrewTurn Wiki

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                        • C code frog 0

                          So folks. This weekend I thought I'd try and ease back into life (after major back injury) and see why I have about 6 rather large and very dead spots in my lawn that is now in it's 2nd summer. So I spoke with a few experts who said to get a hand aerator and aerate my lawn first. They said the process will reveal one of two problems. Really hard soil that isn't absorbing water in which case the aeration will help or construction debris which is preventing the grass from growing down in the soil. So I started hand aerating and guess what I start finding. Huge chunks of wood siding, sections of shingle and other debris at most 2 inches below the surface.:wtf: So now I get to call the builder and see if he has enough class to come and fix the problem. I'm not hopeful as we bought from a "spec home" builder who hasn't been super helpful with other problems unless they were just blatant screw-ups on the construction side of things. But seriously... to find huge slabs of shingle less than 2" under your ground. What were they thinking to just roll sod right on top of that!?!?!?! GRRRR!!! It's a good thing I'm mostly sedated right now or I'd totally lose it on some poor defenseless farm animal right now.:eek: I wonder if the builder will have any class or not... Totally dreading the conversation...:sigh: Among the other issues this isn't helping.:((

                          M Offline
                          M Offline
                          Matthew Faithfull
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #18

                          My parents old house had a nice 120" urban garden with a bit of rubbish in it, at least that's what we thought when we moved in. 18 steel window frames, >100 house bricks, several square feet of intact reinforced glass, 1 bicycle frame 3 feet down, kids toys, >20 coins going back as far as 90 years, >1000 carpenters nails, half a dozen complete items of crockery, a dozen broken paving slabs a complete 1960s glass coke bottle, about 10 kilo of broken glass, several square metres of chicken wire, assorted items of cutlery and 15 years later we pretty much had it in shape shortly before they moved out. Life throws us these curve balls sometimes but it could be worse. We didn't find any bodies or toxic waste and we didn't even puncture a gas main getting that bicycle frame out ;) I hope in all seriousness your gardening woes are the worst thing that happens to you this year or in the future.

                          Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

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                          • C code frog 0

                            So folks. This weekend I thought I'd try and ease back into life (after major back injury) and see why I have about 6 rather large and very dead spots in my lawn that is now in it's 2nd summer. So I spoke with a few experts who said to get a hand aerator and aerate my lawn first. They said the process will reveal one of two problems. Really hard soil that isn't absorbing water in which case the aeration will help or construction debris which is preventing the grass from growing down in the soil. So I started hand aerating and guess what I start finding. Huge chunks of wood siding, sections of shingle and other debris at most 2 inches below the surface.:wtf: So now I get to call the builder and see if he has enough class to come and fix the problem. I'm not hopeful as we bought from a "spec home" builder who hasn't been super helpful with other problems unless they were just blatant screw-ups on the construction side of things. But seriously... to find huge slabs of shingle less than 2" under your ground. What were they thinking to just roll sod right on top of that!?!?!?! GRRRR!!! It's a good thing I'm mostly sedated right now or I'd totally lose it on some poor defenseless farm animal right now.:eek: I wonder if the builder will have any class or not... Totally dreading the conversation...:sigh: Among the other issues this isn't helping.:((

                            N Offline
                            N Offline
                            normanS
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #19

                            It could be worse. There was a small hotel / pub on the piece of land next to our house, but it burned down about 3 years ago (well, it burned, but since it was brick with concrete, it stayed up mostly.) About 2 years ago, I watched a bulldozer dig a hole, maybe 2 or 3 meters deep, and push it in. Imagine buying that property and trying to dig holes for foundations or to put a swimming pool in. I reckon there were reinforced concrete beams 5 meters long under there.

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                            • N normanS

                              It could be worse. There was a small hotel / pub on the piece of land next to our house, but it burned down about 3 years ago (well, it burned, but since it was brick with concrete, it stayed up mostly.) About 2 years ago, I watched a bulldozer dig a hole, maybe 2 or 3 meters deep, and push it in. Imagine buying that property and trying to dig holes for foundations or to put a swimming pool in. I reckon there were reinforced concrete beams 5 meters long under there.

                              B Offline
                              B Offline
                              Brady Kelly
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #20

                              normanS wrote:

                              There was a small hotel / pub on the piece of land next to our house, but it burned down about 3 years ago (well, it burned, but since it was brick with concrete, it stayed up mostly.) About 2 years ago, I watched a bulldozer dig a hole, maybe 2 or 3 meters deep, and push it in.

                              Where I grew up, in Kempton Park, South Africa, there was once a fire that gutted a perfume factory. This close to 1981 or so, and the site still stands unusable. The heat was so intense the foundations were irreparably damaged, and the cost of removing them outweighs the value of the land. Now that I think about it, it was quite a fire. They bought in earthmoving equipment to damn up a small river, to provide enough water. We were at a school athletics meeting about 4km away when we saw the ball of fire mushroom up into the air. We went down on bicycles to go and watch the spectacle, and I bought a 1 litre coke on the way, from a shop 1km away from the fire, and on opening it it fizzed out gloriously from being shaken by the blast.

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                              • C code frog 0

                                So folks. This weekend I thought I'd try and ease back into life (after major back injury) and see why I have about 6 rather large and very dead spots in my lawn that is now in it's 2nd summer. So I spoke with a few experts who said to get a hand aerator and aerate my lawn first. They said the process will reveal one of two problems. Really hard soil that isn't absorbing water in which case the aeration will help or construction debris which is preventing the grass from growing down in the soil. So I started hand aerating and guess what I start finding. Huge chunks of wood siding, sections of shingle and other debris at most 2 inches below the surface.:wtf: So now I get to call the builder and see if he has enough class to come and fix the problem. I'm not hopeful as we bought from a "spec home" builder who hasn't been super helpful with other problems unless they were just blatant screw-ups on the construction side of things. But seriously... to find huge slabs of shingle less than 2" under your ground. What were they thinking to just roll sod right on top of that!?!?!?! GRRRR!!! It's a good thing I'm mostly sedated right now or I'd totally lose it on some poor defenseless farm animal right now.:eek: I wonder if the builder will have any class or not... Totally dreading the conversation...:sigh: Among the other issues this isn't helping.:((

                                R Offline
                                R Offline
                                Rocky Moore
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #21

                                code-frog wrote:

                                Huge chunks of wood siding, sections of shingle and other debris at most 2 inches below the surface

                                Kind of makes you wonder if the builder was getting late into the project and starting to think "I know we had more supplies here some where.. Anyone seen them?"... :)

                                Rocky <>< Latest Code Blog Post: Linq - One-to-One issues? Latest Tech Blog Post: Microsoft Surface!

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                                • C code frog 0

                                  So folks. This weekend I thought I'd try and ease back into life (after major back injury) and see why I have about 6 rather large and very dead spots in my lawn that is now in it's 2nd summer. So I spoke with a few experts who said to get a hand aerator and aerate my lawn first. They said the process will reveal one of two problems. Really hard soil that isn't absorbing water in which case the aeration will help or construction debris which is preventing the grass from growing down in the soil. So I started hand aerating and guess what I start finding. Huge chunks of wood siding, sections of shingle and other debris at most 2 inches below the surface.:wtf: So now I get to call the builder and see if he has enough class to come and fix the problem. I'm not hopeful as we bought from a "spec home" builder who hasn't been super helpful with other problems unless they were just blatant screw-ups on the construction side of things. But seriously... to find huge slabs of shingle less than 2" under your ground. What were they thinking to just roll sod right on top of that!?!?!?! GRRRR!!! It's a good thing I'm mostly sedated right now or I'd totally lose it on some poor defenseless farm animal right now.:eek: I wonder if the builder will have any class or not... Totally dreading the conversation...:sigh: Among the other issues this isn't helping.:((

                                  L Offline
                                  L Offline
                                  Lost User
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #22

                                  code-frog wrote:

                                  ease back into life (after major back injury)

                                  :confused: Didn't you post a few weeks ago about how much exercise you do and how healthy you're feeling? :confused:

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                                  • B Brady Kelly

                                    normanS wrote:

                                    There was a small hotel / pub on the piece of land next to our house, but it burned down about 3 years ago (well, it burned, but since it was brick with concrete, it stayed up mostly.) About 2 years ago, I watched a bulldozer dig a hole, maybe 2 or 3 meters deep, and push it in.

                                    Where I grew up, in Kempton Park, South Africa, there was once a fire that gutted a perfume factory. This close to 1981 or so, and the site still stands unusable. The heat was so intense the foundations were irreparably damaged, and the cost of removing them outweighs the value of the land. Now that I think about it, it was quite a fire. They bought in earthmoving equipment to damn up a small river, to provide enough water. We were at a school athletics meeting about 4km away when we saw the ball of fire mushroom up into the air. We went down on bicycles to go and watch the spectacle, and I bought a 1 litre coke on the way, from a shop 1km away from the fire, and on opening it it fizzed out gloriously from being shaken by the blast.

                                    N Offline
                                    N Offline
                                    normanS
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #23

                                    Brady Kelly wrote:

                                    Where I grew up, in Kempton Park, South Africa

                                    Uuum. Are you thinking of a fire at the NCP factory at Chloorkop? They produce what passes for perfume in Kempton Park, don't they? OK, I confess, I lived in Kempton Park from 1983for about 5 years, and worked at Atlas Aircraft / Denel Aviation from 1983 off-and-on for almost 20 years.

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                                    • N normanS

                                      Brady Kelly wrote:

                                      Where I grew up, in Kempton Park, South Africa

                                      Uuum. Are you thinking of a fire at the NCP factory at Chloorkop? They produce what passes for perfume in Kempton Park, don't they? OK, I confess, I lived in Kempton Park from 1983for about 5 years, and worked at Atlas Aircraft / Denel Aviation from 1983 off-and-on for almost 20 years.

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                                      B Offline
                                      Brady Kelly
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #24

                                      No, it was in Spartan, in Kelvin Road to be precise. You probably had quite a lot to do with the air force. I was there between 1988 and 1996, and we had a lot to do with Atlas / Denel. We even had quite a few of your guys actually posted at the bases.

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                                      • M Matthew Faithfull

                                        My parents old house had a nice 120" urban garden with a bit of rubbish in it, at least that's what we thought when we moved in. 18 steel window frames, >100 house bricks, several square feet of intact reinforced glass, 1 bicycle frame 3 feet down, kids toys, >20 coins going back as far as 90 years, >1000 carpenters nails, half a dozen complete items of crockery, a dozen broken paving slabs a complete 1960s glass coke bottle, about 10 kilo of broken glass, several square metres of chicken wire, assorted items of cutlery and 15 years later we pretty much had it in shape shortly before they moved out. Life throws us these curve balls sometimes but it could be worse. We didn't find any bodies or toxic waste and we didn't even puncture a gas main getting that bicycle frame out ;) I hope in all seriousness your gardening woes are the worst thing that happens to you this year or in the future.

                                        Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

                                        D Offline
                                        D Offline
                                        Dan Neely
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #25

                                        Tops the mess at my parents. There was a dump out in the woods that dated back to before their was municipal trash collection in the area that included a rusted out truck frame and at least on major appliance. We hauled out everything we could find bigger than a beer can (and I collected a bunch of those too), and buried the rest under several feet of fill: powdered limestone from redigging the well and ash from the burnpile mostly.

                                        -- You have to explain to them [VB coders] what you mean by "typed". their first response is likely to be something like, "Of course my code is typed. Do you think i magically project it onto the screen with the power of my mind?" --- John Simmons / outlaw programmer

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                                        • N normanS

                                          It could be worse. There was a small hotel / pub on the piece of land next to our house, but it burned down about 3 years ago (well, it burned, but since it was brick with concrete, it stayed up mostly.) About 2 years ago, I watched a bulldozer dig a hole, maybe 2 or 3 meters deep, and push it in. Imagine buying that property and trying to dig holes for foundations or to put a swimming pool in. I reckon there were reinforced concrete beams 5 meters long under there.

                                          M Offline
                                          M Offline
                                          Matthew Faithfull
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #26

                                          Burying problems for others to deal with later is a problem everywhere I'm afraid. They took down a petrol (gas) station about a mile from us when I lived near London. They carefully removed the tanks before bringing in the heavy diggers but didn't notice the old ones from the 1950s buried underneath. When the JCB driver put his shovel through one of the old tanks we heard the blast a mile away. He was very lucky most of the force went length ways into pushing up a ten foot mound of earth and it only blew out the glass on the front of his cab. The shovel looked like a piece tin foil that had been scruched up and thrown in a fire. As I don't remeber it making the news I guess the driver was OK. If it was me I reckon I would have died of shock.

                                          Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

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