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Digging up some strange stuff

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  • Digging up some strange stuff

    I just read an article about a woman who dug up a WWII bomb and threw it on the rubbish pile thinking it was part of an exhaust.

    What strange things have you dug up? My garden is on a new building plot so all I found was a rock that was heavier than it looked. About the size of a watermelon but the two of us couldn't lift it. Not that interesting really in the grand scheme of things
    When weeding, the best way to make sure you are removing a weed and not a valuable plant is to pull on it.
    If it comes out of the ground easily, it is a valuable plant.

  • #2
    We live on a farm so really mostly rusty bits of things, old horse nails and shoes. Bits of glass. And ants nests.
    Ali

    My blog: feral007.com/countrylife/

    Some days it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints!

    One bit of old folklore wisdom says to plant tomatoes when the soil is warm enough to sit on with bare buttocks. In surburban areas, use the back of your wrist. Jackie French

    Member of the Eastern Branch of the Darn Under Nutter's Club

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    • #3
      Once I dug up something I've never seen before - or since. A straight carrot

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      • #4
        most recent was a lead model of a ww2 spifire aeroplane. I could have kept it but gave it to the owner of the garden I was working in. Some wee boy must have really missed it when he lost it.

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        • #5
          Bits of coal (we live near the end of a coal outcrop which was surface mined in the 17th century) lumps of cast iron railings which were buried under approx 0.5 meters of clay, glass, an old sink, parts of foundations of old outbuildings, the skeleton of a pet cat (previous owners?), a clay pipe (broken) and some really old corroded iron nails...

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          • #6
            A pair of scissors, a teaspoon, a table knife, glass stopper for a bottle, a doorknob, a door catch - and in a former garden, lots and lots of bits of clay pipes!
            Whooops - now what are the dogs getting up to?

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            • #7
              Nine pence three farthings in old money.(about 4p)
              The river Trent is lovely, I know because I have walked on it for 18 years.
              Brian Clough

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              • #8
                Originally posted by bubblewrap View Post
                Nine pence three farthings in old money.(about 4p)
                But this is since September 2005 when I acquired my allotment.
                The river Trent is lovely, I know because I have walked on it for 18 years.
                Brian Clough

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                • #9
                  I wasn't able to get it all out, as it went under where my shed is, but I'm pretty sure I got 2 sides out a shopping trolley out. I'd put my shed on this bit that was a bit scrappy and I realised I could squeeze a veg bed next to it. I only had half a plot, so was taking advantage of this newly aquired shed bit.

                  One of the stories I head was someone had an underground celler there before, but it got infested with rats and was knocked down. Anyway I was digging out all sorts including the shopping trolley, old tools, lots of broken tiles and glass, massive lumps of concrete, a sack of concrete that had gone solid, old taps, a saw, jars of medicine and more!
                  http://togrowahome.wordpress.com/ making a house a home and a garden home grown.

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                  • #10
                    Here's the list we've dug up out of our garden over the years

                    armchair
                    roll of carpet
                    bits of smoking clay pipe
                    stone lintels
                    stone slabs
                    quarry tiles from 2 rooms
                    found a coal seam when digging the pond
                    plus assorted bits of broken tools and toys
                    Location....East Midlands.

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                    • #11



                      Tons of interesting little bits of stuff.

                      A child's gold ring, broken though.
                      About 6 £coins, another quid easily in spendable coinage.
                      Old coins - from 1/2p to big round pennys.
                      Spoons - plated once with something
                      Two pen knives - the one in the photo and then a lump of really rusted metal.
                      Tons of pretty bits of pottery -
                      A huge chunk of really thick glass someone reckons might be from an airplane windscreen.
                      Some tags off meter things. (They're the things that look like tickets)
                      Number 2 off a door.
                      4 door keys.
                      The clay pipes were from someone else's plot.

                      And about a million beer bottles, cans and bits of rubbish.
                      Attached Files

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                      • #12
                        I used to work in civil engineering and we were always digging up strange things; on one occasion there was a skeleton right in the way of a new road so the job had to be put on hold for 18 months as we discovered an ancient burial site.

                        One of my particular faves was a site in Yalding, Kent; we were digging trial pits and 3-4 metres underground we were finding a system of pipes all over the place. Completely flummoxed us. So we went to the pub for lunch and asked the barman what was on site; and it turns out it was a pub years back and he used to brew moonshine in the cellar. It had been bombed and of course the cellar just filled with bricks and mud over the years. It's now a housing estate.

                        We were always finding those bottles with the balls in them; we had shelves and shelves of them back at the laboratory.
                        Last edited by zazen999; 10-02-2013, 10:15 AM.

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                        • #13
                          When I find old bottles and pottery I find out more about them - where they were made, the date, what were they used for. In other words, I treat my garden as an archaeological dig - which is my "Unearthly" hobby that VVG has mentioned cryptically elsewhere
                          Clay pipes are invaluable for dating as the design changed constantly. If you've found some see if you can date them. - Clay Pipe Gallery

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                          • #14
                            My Dad found a 'Beumb' in the garden, years ago. We found loads of plastic toys, mainly chewed and broken, in our old garden. The previous tenants had two small children, who were obviously very destructive! I don't think they ever binned anything, they just buried it!
                            All the best - Glutton 4 Punishment
                            Freelance shrub butcher and weed removal operative.

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by KittyColdNose View Post
                              What strange things have you dug up?
                              On this lotty, an ironing board and a curtain track. Thrown over the fence by a lazy neighbour, who denied doing it, even when presented with a sack full of rubbish that had her name & address in it, on old mail.
                              All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.

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