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adzyvilla

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Posts posted by adzyvilla

  1. 35 minutes ago, marsh man said:

    Talking to a ex P W member ( answer 2 )  down the marsh this afternoon there was a constant stream of Pigeons going into the wood a good 100 yds behind us , he had a little go yesterday afternoon in that strong wind and the bulk of the Pigeons were going over my field and he was on land the G Y W A rent , even so he had a nice lot of shooting and just got in double figures .

    Around here the o s r fields are the last resort for Pigeons and the main diet are the fresh lifted Sugar Beet fields , trouble is a lot of the fields are connected with game shooting and they are happy to leave them alone on beet tops rather than put them on to the o s r fields , but as for numbers , not sure with the rest of Norfolk but in my little neck of the woods we are seeing very good numbers and I might have a little go myself if the weather stay dry and above mild as Pigeon shooting in the cold is no longer my favorite past time .    MM 

    Thanks MM. Not a massive amount of harvested beet round here yet, and it all seems to be in the wrong place (if you are a gamekeeper anyway). I do know of one field harvested a while back that is really wet and rutted that has been hosting huge numbers of geese.

  2. Yes the wet conditions won't have helped, anything that wasn't drilled early seems to be mud and standing water. Saying that, I'm currently sitting in my parents front room looking out of the window to the west looking over a big rape field in the distance and seeing a fair bit of blue-grey toing and froing in the dying daylight. I can hear a gas gun going in that direction so the wind and noise are probably keeping them moving about.

  3. Currently I'm only dreaming of some roost shooting and decoying the remnants of maize strips, but I'll have to wait as my two farms are strictly off limits until the end of the pheasant season.

    Not to say that I haven't been doing a bit of impromptu recon in the local area. Mid and central south Norfolk so far seems to be enjoying slightly increased numbers of pigeon making the most of the abundant ivy berries and other natural food sources in the woods and hedgerows, but mostly steering clear of the very average rape fields that dot the landscape here abouts. This last week I have seen separate flocks of 60-70 in two different areas (one North and one south of dereham), and my favourite roost wood hosting well over 50. 

    Hopefully this is of some interest to local PW members. Would be keen to find out if the woodies are bothering with rape yet in other localities.

  4. 55 minutes ago, Stonepark said:

    Things that shouldn't exist? Don't follow the high school level of physics dumbed down so it can be "understood"?

    The problem is that like other things.... people are locked into a narrative or paradigm and fail to look, much less understand, and those who do are often excommucated because they don't agree with the "concensus".

     

    Well Galileo was right, the earth is a ball and orbits the sun

    Einstein was correct E=mc2

    Robitaillie is correct... the sun is a liquid/semi-sold

    Vogt was right... the sun micro-novas on a 12,000 yearly basis

    Davidson is right... the universe is Electro-magnetic and dark matter doesn't exist

     

    Bought and paid for follow the narritive/consensus scientists are wrong about other things as well such as :-

    Climate change & global warming & CO2

    COVID virus

    Fusion on earth

    mRNA vaccines

    to name a few

     

    Yes, the ion drive already exists but as noted is simple well understood physics.

    A fellow Ben Davidson fan? I thought I was th only one....

  5. As pushandpull says, its been 'around the corner' for decades. Like many things, where there is a will there is a way. What use would the powers be have for abundant cheap limitless energy and its easy availability for the masses? If it was necessary, we'd all be using it already.

  6. 22 hours ago, marsh man said:

    I am exactly the same age as dad and when I look back my life have had many up's and downs but we battled on and enjoyed the up's and got through the downs .

    Looking at the above posts there seem to be a number of ex naval chaps , my dad was also in the R N and done 20 odd years , I believe his last ship was the old H M S Boxer and many years ago we had a big certificate above our fireplace of the Spithead naval review but I believe it got washed off the wall when we were badly flooded in the 1953 floods , I followed his foot prints by signing up for nine years in the R N , had a good time and ended up coming out after three years with a hearing problem , I then went back to sea again on the gas supply boats until we were in a storm force nine and I vowed if I got back in one piece my seafaring days would come to a end , and so they did . 

    None of my direct family have a history of military service (world wars excepted) but my great uncle joined the navy at 16 and was a survivor of the sinking of HMS Prince of Wales by the Japanese. Cant imagine my dad on a battle ship, he gets sea sick on the Isle of White ferry....

  7. Interesting thread to read, I myself haven't done much of significance or happen to me so I suppose in many ways I'm fortunate. I sometimes wish my father would write a book or at least record his exploits as he has had an eventful 76 years on earth (so far). I'm sure there are many on this forum with a few tales to tell and hopefully they will share here.  A life lived to the full with few regrets is a life lived well.

  8. Had a mate who has his own landscaping/gardening business around to help me cut my overgrown 200ft long mixed hedge right back this year and all his gear (trimmer, long reach and chainsaw) was milwaukee. Very impressed with how long the battery lasted before they needed charging, and being lighter than all my two stroke gear were pleasant to use over extended periods. He has recently switched from dewalt to milwaukee as his preferred make but I understand they are quite pricey.

  9. 7 hours ago, marsh man said:

    I am no doubt well out of touch with how gun shops treat there customers nowadays and for a good part of my life I have only used one and that was Richardsons of Halesworth , I have bought cartridges from others like Churchills at Dereham and Websters , Richardsons must be one of the best , if not the best in the country for treating there customers with respect , I have been in there and been offered a cup of tea or coffee , had a yarn with the two brothers for ages before they asked me what I wanted and they once put a new top lever spring in one of my guns for nothing as they waited a long while for the part , both of them and one of the sons who work in the shop are true gentlemen and by the sound of it they are a declining race .  MM

    I think phillip Webster is a top bloke, I used to go to lings in Massingham but Phil gets all my business now. We do have a gun shop like the one in the OP just down the road from me, where he either likes you or he doesn't and nothing in between. I've not heard many have a good word to say about him.

  10. I've had a few, averaged one ever 6 months for the first 15 years of driving.

    First car was a mk1 golf gti which my dad and I rebuilt over 2 years and I learned all about car repairs and maintenance from it. It will always have a special place in my heart.

    Most fun was a Toyota celica GT4 st185 in the castrol rally livery. Wish I'd kept that one as they are silly money now.

    Fastest (but only just) was a subaru impreza wrx, the first of many subarus for me.

    Rarest was car 003 of 150 Ford racing pumas. Shame I didn't have it for long as it was certainly not a daily driver and I couldn't afford to run more than one car at a time.

    I've spent an obscene amount of money on cars but I don't regret a single penny. I have calmed down a lot now and been driving the same subaru xv for 5 trouble free years.

  11. On 20/10/2023 at 20:37, marsh man said:

    So how did the day go ? , Let me guess , the day started with heavy rain that was relentless , you had either 2 or 3 poor(ish) drives and then went in for early lunch , come dinnertime with no signs of the rain easing off and the roads getting flooded it was decided to call it a day , to every ones relief :good:

    Well it was a bit of a cock up from the word go. I got there first of the beaters and noone else was about so I waited a bit then decided to look at my phone. One message from the keeper telling me the day was cancelled. But just as I was leaving the farmyard, the keeper steamed up in his kubota in a lather and told me it was back on. The boss had tried to cancel but half the guns had already arrived by that point although I hadn't seen anyone (we share the same yard) Then the other beaters started to arrive as the keeper phoned them all one by one, except the solitary picker up who he couldn't get hold of. All the guns finally all arrived by 10, an hour after we were supposed to start and had agreed we would shoot straight through and do 5 drives. The rain was relentless and despite some decent clothing, I was soaked through after 2 hours and 3 drives walking through 300 yard strips of 8 ft high maize and ankle mangling brambles. At this point the guns decided to head back to the yard for a change of clothing, but we didn't have the same luxury. They were gone for 45 minutes (turns out they were having drinks and bacon rolls). They finally turned up again and we completed the last 2 drives just after 1. They then asked if we could do another as the rain had eased a bit (it hadnt). The keeper blew his top at this point and we beat a hasty retreat back to the yard. I was back home and had my feet up by 2, a massive £35 richer.

    Total bag for the day? 19. Two blank drives. If my dog hadn't made a solid retrieve from a fast flowing deep ditch it would have been 18. It was a woeful spectacle for all involved and the poor birds deserved a more dignified end.

  12. 41 minutes ago, marsh man said:

    Leave your work problems at your work place tomorrow and have a good day , we have never called a whole day off through rain , half a day yes but never a full day , the half day(s) were later on in the year when it was freezing on top of the heavy rain , the decision is left to the guns and as we know them well they would have been looked after on another day , we have got some good waterproof gear now and I often think we are more prepared than the guns and looking at some of them I am not to far out 

    I think the average age of this team of guns is about 80, so we will have to see how keen they are!

  13. 22 hours ago, marsh man said:

    Ah , Thanks for reminding me , I totally forgot that some people still have to go to work and take on board the pressures that go with it 

    Needless to say, come 6am this morning, it was clear my day was not going to be made. Still, off beating tomorrow (unless it gets rained off) so I can forget all about it until Monday!

  14. Doesn't make much sense to me. He's going to be on significantly more money than the previous manager, plus whatever they had to pay him to leave. Is it really affordable for a second rate team in what is arguably the most competitive league in club football? I suppose they are banking on the big name of Rooney being able to draw in some higher profile players, a formula that fails as often as it works. I feel sorry for John eustace, but I'm sure he's shown enough to attract the attention of some more worthy employers. As a villa fan, I wish him all the success of his previous managemental ventures.

  15. The farm i grew up on was sold for housing when dad gave up the lease and retired 16 years ago. It was a wonderful 350 acre mixed farm with about 200 acres under arable and the rest water meadows which hosted cattle and sheep over the years and two blocks of low lying woodland that often flooded. Despite the meadows all being home to rare orchids and invertebrates and the woodland having several TPOs on ancient oaks the whole lot was cleared, the meadows drained and 400 houses and a school built in its place. 

    The blood, sweat and tears we as a family, but in particular my father put into that place over the 30 years we were there, only to see it all bulldozed and concreted over nearly tipped the old man over the edge when he foolishly went back to look a few years later. The houses suffer terribly from subsidence issues due to the wet ground and the whole site looks a mess.

    I have many fond memories of cutting my teeth pigeon shooting in the bigger wood, beating on the little shoot we ran for many years with the neighbouring farm (now also partly built on) and shooting my first duck on the flooded meadow one wild November night. 

    I despise the greed and avarice that motivates the builders of these housing estates on green sites while thousands of acres of brownfield lies empty and wasted.

  16. Im fully aware of this and the complete lack of attention this is getting in the legacy media, doing the governments dirty work by ignoring it. Thanks for airing it on here so it can be seen by a wider audience, and I urge all of you who care to at least try and warn others who might not know. I have lost count of the amount of times I have contacted my constituency MP about a whole range of matters, who used to just reply along the lines of 'thanks for writing, but i think you should leave it to the adults' and now no longer replies at all. As Stonepark suggests, there isn't going to be a political solution as it appears to be the problem, a mixture of blind dogma bordering on religious zealotry on the part of some, and good old fashioned vested interests on others. Parliament is all sewn up by the uniparty and their direction of travel is clear, so what other options do we have? I dont want a 4am knock at the door from special branch so I'll leave it there.

  17. Hi Marsh Man

    I had a similar problem in my subaru XV, which use as my shooting transport so a spare was vital. The spare wheel well is very shallow so initially I got a full size steel wheel (plenty second hand on eBay) which sat in the footwell behind the front passenger seat. Then I had the idea that I would get a space saver and make a new raised boot floor so it would fit. A bit of 8mm ply, some upholstery foam and a piece of cheap black carpet later, I've sacrificed about 2 inches of boot floor, but the spare now fits perfectly along with a jack and wheelbrace. The dogs don't mind the slightly reduced headroom and I can now have more space in the back for kit and occasional passengers.

     

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