Well I'll never know what they thought. They just came back, packed up and left. We were having a meal so I didn't jump up to go see them when they got back.edgeau wrote:Rescued some inexperienced people today. They left their campsite unattended with all their gear under a 3m X 3m gazebo. We saw it lift up and blow over. They had not pegged it down or used weights on the legs or anything. We nipped over and righted it, pegged down and donated some guy ropes from the stash of spares. I wonder what they will think when they get back and see guy ropes they didn't set up
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edgeau wrote:Well I'll never know what they thought. They just came back, packed up and left. We were having a meal so I didn't jump up to go see them when they got back.edgeau wrote:Rescued some inexperienced people today. They left their campsite unattended with all their gear under a 3m X 3m gazebo. We saw it lift up and blow over. They had not pegged it down or used weights on the legs or anything. We nipped over and righted it, pegged down and donated some guy ropes from the stash of spares. I wonder what they will think when they get back and see guy ropes they didn't set up
Sent from my Pixel 6 using Tapatalk
Sent from my Pixel 6 using Tapatalk
MickinOz wrote:Dunno what its like in your neck of the woods, but here in Oz its really difficult to get good straight timber.
Only thing good to come out of the pandemic (and that depends how you look at it) is Bunnings, the big green shed, started importing European pine species too replace the locally grown radiata.
Nicer timber, less knots, straighter. BUT, can't have done the local plantation timber industry any good.
featherliteCT1 wrote:That spotting scope appears to be pretty powerful.
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