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henry d

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Posts posted by henry d

  1. Had an invite from friends to go out fishing from their boat, it took several milliseconds to clear my diary. 

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    Passed HMS Enterprise and thought it would be a laugh if you were called Kirk, Scotty etc onboard. Got out to the ground we had chosen, a mixed bottom between rocky outcrops and anchored up. As the tide was just turning we didn't get anything for the first half hour when I hooked a decent whiting on half a launce. As the tide increased we had dogfish, not something you expect from the tyneside area, and a small spotted ray too!

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    As the tide really got going we had small shoals of codling come past giving us periods of intense activity among the quiet times. 

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    Lots of codling, with 3 of the deeper hooked fish coming home along with 3 whiting, lots of dogs, some of which were just clamping on the bait and dropping off at the side or onboard and a lone spotted ray. Home in time for the rugby, a great time had by all but I still think that the sea temperatures are all to pot as we never used to, or should I say rarely, get dogs and ray, along with the increasing numbers of pout. I even got a small grey Gurnard in the summer! If the bass numbers and sizes were better I might be happy, but I have to say it is bizarre having so many different species where we used to just have cod, coalie and pollock. 

  2. 14 minutes ago, Mice! said:

    The problem is there will have been loads and loads of 'evidence ' around the bench.  The river at the bottom of our garden is well walked, with a bench opposite ours, my wife was down there working yesterday and it's amazing just how many people go by during a few hours, and a lot will stop for a few minutes at the bench.

    That's part of what I am saying, if there are plenty of people in the area, how do you kidnap or attack someone in such a busy area at a busy time without being seen? 

    I too have a busy dog walking area near the river and I know what you mean, when the school run is finished it's constant (dog and other) walkers and you see similar faces/dogs so it's difficult to imagine how she disappeared other than the river. 

  3. 3 minutes ago, Vince Green said:

    None of these questions have any bearing on asylum law. What you are saying is completely irrelevant.  They must claim asylum in the first safe country they come to.

    It's not a pick and choose option

    No they don't. 

  4. On 11/02/2023 at 18:08, billytheghillie said:

    ...family situations....it doesnt wash with me.

    Doesn't have to, it is a big factor in learned behaviour. Have a Google or just stick with your "...doesn't wash with me." it's up to you. 

  5. 9 hours ago, armsid said:

    Agree with 12gauge12 if as oowee has said the east European countries these economic migrants have come through are prosperring why have they not stayed there and got jobs?

    Do they speak the language, do they have friends and/or family there...

  6. On 11/02/2023 at 08:21, Mungler said:

    I increasingly find this forum stocked full of some very thick people who are only too happy to entirely switch off their brains, turn off any enquiring thought or go against the Daily Mail or what they are told.

    I didn't see the programme so I have to use secondary sources like the one you used. 

    He said that he listened to the experts and formed the opinion that she isn't in the water. My thoughts are why he didn't take into account the police?

    He then surmises that it is a local person is responsible for her disappearance. That is problematic as there seem to be lots of local people in the dog walking area near the river and a busy road nearby that has had lots of people with placards about it since it happened along with national news coverage. The road seems to be a main drag between Garstang/M6 and Poulton/Blackpool and it was just after the school run. He even shoots his theory in the foot by saying: "You see the same faces every single day, and on the very odd occasion when you see somebody that you know, you don't know. They stand out like a sore thumb." Also he said "He believes the discovery of her phone on a bench could be just a 'decoy'." 

    So either he has done her in or he's totally overthinking it (naturally) and she drowned. 

    What's your suggestion Andy?

     

  7. 2 hours ago, billytheghillie said:

    ...i chose to say no, it really is that simple.

    No it isn't, no one wakes up one day and says; "You know what, I'm going to become a substance abuser..." plenty are in families where alcohol etc is as acceptable as food is elsewhere.

  8. 2 hours ago, johnphilip said:

    Did they come across in a rubber inflatable  ?? 

    No, can't say how but it wasn't a regular entry into the UK as her mother, my aunt, was the only one who had a UK passport but didn't have permission to leave Iraq as she didn't appear on official Iraqi records as she was a "visitor" who had unofficially over stayed. They got into Syria by lying and appealing to border guards sympathy. After getting into Syria a member of the family went to work somewhere else until she, my cousin, got into the uk and settled. Eventually my cousin and some of the family got to the UK and the funny part of her story was that at one stage a civil servant said it would have been easier if she was a an illegal immigrant as she had no papers to prove who she is and that her British passport owning mother couldn't vouch for her as she shouldn't have left Iraq even though she had overstayed her visa for Iraq. She also had difficulty in proving the large amount of money (@$20K when they left Mosul) was from selling land they owned near a Yazidi village outside of Mosul.

    Nothing is cut and dried. (Full disclosure, there is some information in the above that isn't strictly correct so that they can't be positively identified, nor the person who helped them leave Iraq)

  9. 17 minutes ago, johnphilip said:

    They have not  crossed  the channel to work in tesco . 

    My cousin and her family did, admittedly not Tesco but they contributed very handsomely once he got back into heading up further education and she in health care. 

  10. 1 hour ago, discobob said:

    fit an extraction port on all the rigid body lorries - and then before boarding connect an extractor up and suck the air out. This will stop those lorries being used. I am not condoning killing anyone - make sure it is well publicised at the camps and on all the fences around the ports - so an effective deterrent.

    Or we could breed big ferrets and chase them out... 😵💫

    2 hours ago, johnphilip said:

    Did upto a 1000 people a day cross   via  lorries  ?  All that is needed  in that case  is  better  controlling  of the said  lorries  . 

    We had controls before but plenty get through, but they disappear off into the black economy. 

  11. 17 hours ago, Vince Green said:

    The truth is it wouldn't be solved over night but gradually, as the message got back to the camps across the channel they would realise it was hopeless, then it would work.

    And it would solve France's problem too because they would stop coming to the channel ports in the first place.  No point trying if you just going to get sent back

    No I don't think it would, it would be back to lorries etc.

  12. 7 hours ago, aldivalloch said:

    I take great issue with the word "alkys". It's deeply disrespectful to fellow human beings who have become addicted to alcohol for a whole range of reasons - for example, abuse, relationship break-down, PTSD, mental ill-health.

    Well said 👏 

  13. OK, thinking along @Mungler lines, obedient spaniel, likely to follow owner obediently and someone tries to abduct or attack the owner, and dog is found close to bench/phone. I'd be checking the spaniels teeth and claws, because mine would have had a piece. 

    Possibly something else plod hasn't thought of? 🤔 

  14. 58 minutes ago, Mungler said:

    Errrr because the dog was out for a walk and was under control, and the owner didn’t end up in the river?

    I’m amazed that everyone will blindly accept what the police say and without challenge, but suggest something else and it’s up there with Martians snatching her.

     

    I'm sorry but I must be missing something, I haven't (and admit I haven't read all accounts) heard anything about her dog being under close control?

    I don't accept all that is said, the water rescue experts for one, as you can't take things for granted concerning water and a rapid downstream search should have taken place at strategic points like bridges etc 

    2 hours ago, Gordon R said:

    Next minute the search moves to the open sea, where the world's fastest tide is located. 

    Looking at maps, there are also a lot of creeks and marshy areas closer to Fleetwood where a body may wash up. 

  15. 37 minutes ago, Mungler said:

    As above, what perplexes me is there being a dry spaniel in the equation when the woman is supposed to have gone in the river.

    One of my spaniels would not go into water unless there was a bird downed and as hers is dry it suggests that it doesn't go in regularly either, also if the dog is off running about and Nicola goes in the river then the dog returns it is unlikely to look for her there?

  16. 36 minutes ago, Penelope said:

    I work with a member of the search and rescue team (the water search specialists members are up there) and they are saying she isn't in the water.

    Don't know how they can say that, I was swiftwater rescue trained in the FS. Also the sidescan they are using is limited too as you need to be able to interpret what is shown on screen, fine if you are over a wreck or reef in 60+ft but they are in much shallower water so bottom coverage is limited and you need to be able to cover all the river which is hard as one person is navigating and another watching the sonar. GPS is good but not totally accurate and could miss areas.

  17. Going beyond the spaniel thing, we had several drownings where I lived in Scotland. One was a very experienced angler was fishing 5 miles or so above Perth and was found in the reedbeds in the estuary between Perth and Dundee. Another was a young lad who tried swimming across the river and was trying to remove his hoodie as it was hampering him swimming and he disappeared under the water never to be seen again until 10 or so days later when my friend spotted something around 150m downstream, his body had snagged on a  branch. 

    I sincerely hope she is well somewhere but water is a strange thing and doesn't react like we might think 

  18. 36 minutes ago, ditchman said:

    thank you for you polite reply to my post...:good:

    you are not getting off lightly tho'..:lol:....i still would like to know what souces/periodicles you would trust to believe

    That's what I was saying, you need to look at several to get an idea of what is actually going on. In the case above I don't go with farage as there is a bias or direction so I looked myself and there are buses that are free in that area and rather than take the line of the op and blaming the EU/France, I think that it is just people using what is freely available. If there is evidence of the French authorities rounding up people from the camp and putting them into the buses then that is a different matter and I will change my opinion but that seems unlikely.

    There is bias all around to a greater or lesser extent so going for single sources is just allowing yourself to confirm that bias.

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