Lophophaps wrote:I read about a person who said that the toothpaste tasted funny, and then realised that he was using hemorrhoid cream.
Did not. it was Deep heat rub
Lophophaps wrote:I read about a person who said that the toothpaste tasted funny, and then realised that he was using hemorrhoid cream.
rcaffin wrote:
. . . Leather is obsolete.
Cheers
Yes, I’ve learnt to keep my phone in my pocket or in my sleeping bag in winter.wildwanderer wrote:Apparently I need to repeatedly learn this lesson.
Mobile phone batteries don't cope well in sub zero temperatures... resulting in fast battery drain and the phone turning off at inconvenient times.
rcaffin wrote:make the final roll towards the door
Funny thing is, I do the exact opposite.
That way I can peg out the windward end before unrolling the rest of the tent. The tent can NOT fly away like this.
When pitching a tent in a 100 kph gale, this is the only way I can rely on it working (from a lot of experience).
Warin wrote:Don't roll the tent tight .. you could have left something delicate in there.![]()
ribuck wrote:Warin wrote:Don't roll the tent tight .. you could have left something delicate in there.![]()
Which reminds me ... if something small like a head-torch goes missing, it will probably turn up on the next walk when the tent is unrolled.
wildwanderer wrote:I found my mini swiss army knife attached to the ceiling lanyard in one of my tents. Of course this was 3 months after I had bought a new swiss army knife thinking I had lost the first one
ribuck wrote:Warin wrote:Don't roll the tent tight .. you could have left something delicate in there.![]()
Which reminds me ... if something small like a head-torch goes missing, it will probably turn up on the next walk when the tent is unrolled.
stry wrote: I always search everywhere (well - everywhere that I think of) for the missing item, wait for at least two or three months, and then buy a replacement.
Then something mystical happens. Within days of buying the replacement, the lost item appears
ollster wrote:Just because the Forestry gate is open on they way in, doesn't mean it will still be open on the way out.
Been there, had that happen more than once. From my experience there is no need to go off your nut. Your in there hands so be nice. Just explain what has happened and it gets resolved quickly (assuming you have mobile connection). A lesson learnt by the lazy sod who left the gate open in the first place. That's my experience but probably not everyone's.Lophophaps wrote:Many years ago a 4WD went down a track for some distance only to find a locked gate which should have been open. From memory they thought that the gate at the other end may have been locked after they went in, so they decided to rationalise the gate to allow an easy passage. Surely land managers would drive down the track to make sure that nobody is trapped.
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