What is yours?
The weirdest thing I have done on a beach
Try and eat seaweed.
Quote: Ben @ 6th April 2015, 8:18 PM BSTTry and eat seaweed.
Did you take a knife and fork?
Just my hands!
Quote: Ben @ 6th April 2015, 8:19 PM BSTJust my hands!
I've done that with curry - but only on buses.
Thanks - I'm never hopeful with threads I introduce.
But it's a good start.
Collecting shells - explosive shells.
Quote: Chappers @ 6th April 2015, 8:25 PM BSTCollecting shells - explosive shells.
Why on earth did you do that?
And where were you?
In all senses of that phrase.
Lochs have beaches. In the 1970s, I walked along the beach of Loch Long one morning before breakfast. Only on getting to the end of it did I realise there was a flag forbidding it at all costs.
Turns out it was a torpedo testing range. I could have been back in London within seconds.
http://www.derelictplaces.co.uk/main/showthread.php?t=21964#.VSLoP9zF_Q0
Any more takers?
Tried to count the pebbles on Shingle Street beach once.
Quote: Hercules Grytpype Thynne @ 6th April 2015, 10:14 PM BSTTried to count the pebbles on Shingle Street beach once.
That is where it is rumoured the Germans invaded in 1940.
Any evidence found by metal detector etc would produce a great pension.
You could go and investigate it if thinking of doing a recount.
Much controversy over whether many Germans were burnt alive by a secret stash of fuel that the British ignited just offshore when they allegedly invaded.
Beaches are places where normal codes of conduct are suspended. If you're naked on the pavement, people will be outraged and you'll be arrested, but you can flash your bits while changing on the beach without a problem. Families stand on the shoreline, in immediate danger of being swept out to a watery death, and think it's fun. People jump off piers, risking death in shallow seas, even though they know the practise is ominously called tombstoning. Weird.
I can often be seen with my willy out on Shingle Street.
Quote: Hercules Grytpype Thynne @ 7th April 2015, 9:15 AM BSTI can often be seen with my willy out on Shingle Street.
Now I know why you suggested meeting there
Measured the speed of the backflow of waves on Chesil beach with a funnel on the end of a string with two black marks on the string which triggered an electro-magnet to thump the button of a stopwatch.
Quote: billwill @ 7th April 2015, 11:19 AM BSTMeasured the speed of the backflow of waves on Chesil beach with a funnel on the end of a string with two black marks on the string which triggered an electro-magnet to thump the button of a stopwatch.
Why?
That reminds me, I should read Chesil Beach again.