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welsh dragon

Thanks but no thanks. I think I'll pass.
Watch out they dont stuck to the roads :laugh:
Went out Monday afternoon and the bloody roads were melting



When i was out the other day, i could hear the tamac making popping noises where it was melting and causing bubbles that were popoing as i went over them. Very weird.
 

Bobby Mhor

Legendary Member
Location
Behind You
Watch out they dont stuck to the roads :laugh:
Went out Monday afternoon and the bloody roads were melting
For my youngest, she's inherited her sis bike so I'm fitting road tyres instead of the 52 knobblies currently on wheels.
Section of road nearby has melted on more than one occasion over the years, I took my old motorbike through it once. A surreal feeling.
 

classic33

Leg End Member
We have potholes too, our back country roads are actually in great nick, mostly all top-dressed so occasional spots with some loose gravel but I'd give them a pass, town roads can be hit and miss though:laugh:
Very little difference in them round here. Aside from those that have traffic "sent down them" by the satnav.
 

welsh dragon

Thanks but no thanks. I think I'll pass.
I say what we're there for you WD:okay::hugs:!


Thank you Maverick. :hello: ^_^
 

MikeG

Guru
Location
Suffolk

That's rather a long way away from me.

I was sitting in a tectonics lecture at uni in about 1980 when we had an earthquake. Lovely coincidence. The Richter scale is logarithmic, so 3 on the scale is ten times as powerful as 2 (it isn't quite as simple as that, because it is comparing amplitudes on a seismograph, but that's the principle). 2.6 in Dorking isn't much more than Mrs Miggins at number three tripping over the cat.
 
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