Talulah
Well-Known Member
Marine parachute flares are still burning when they come down. They rely on landing in the sea to put them out.
Pete
Just to be pedantic - the sea would not put them out.
Marine parachute flares are still burning when they come down. They rely on landing in the sea to put them out.
Pete
Just to be pedantic - the sea would not put them out.
1) I'm not condoning dumping expired flares at sea as has been mentioned, but if all boat owners dumped their expired flares in the sea every year, it would be a "drop in the ocean" (pun intended) compared to what the RN and other organisations legally dump at sea! Sadly our oceans are still used as a dumping ground.
duncan99210;3981663 Since the dumping stopped said:Perhaps HMCG could be persuaded to liase with the MoD regarding these disposal companies. Firms which organise firework displays might also start a lucrative sideline in TEP disposal.
I've never heard any discussion whatsoever .of this subject here in Ireland but I have seen expired flares fired off during New Year celebrations in a small southern seaport with the local lifeboat being previously notified
Hampshire police will accept up to 10 flares handed in at the police station from individual members of the public.
2) From what I understand there are ways that you can legally dispose of expired flares your self - by discharging them a certain distance from the coast on bombfire night for example - which is what we all do here! I've heard you can also discharge them at other times with prior permission - not entirely sure about that. Either way I don't really understand what the big deal is as you're only going to cause a problem if you discharge them upwards into the sky - there are other ways of doing it safely.
Cheshire too. They have never refused and never given any grief.
No, it is illegal to let off distress flares ANYWHERE . In the case of parachute rockets, it is very unsafe anyway; as others have remarked, they are still burning when they reach the ground. I'd be very unhappy if someone's time-expired parachute flare landed on my roof!
Distress flares are (potentially) used inland; for example in mountain rescue.
Can't wait until the H&S "jobs worths" see your post. Out of interest is that rocket flares as well please?I burn mine, one at a time in garden waste, cutting through the tubes before putting them on the bonfire.
Put them in the boot of your car and take a cross channel ferry.
You will be asked if you are carrying anything flamable..........
Flares will be confiscated.
Job done.![]()
Pains Wessex and Comet distress flares are no longer British and are made in Hungary or Poland and owned by Drew Marine Inc, an American company. They no longer have the Highpost countermeasures military site on Salisbury Plain and so can no longer process expired distress flares or make safe defectives ones themselves in the UK.
To me this is not right as advice from them is to take expired flares to HMCG.
I did so last week taking some to Weymouth and Portland Coastguard who would not take them and sent me to the RNLI at Poole HQ who did.
Solent and Brixham HMCG will very reluctantly take in only up to twelve flares. The Coastguard stations that will take time expired pyrotechnics are few and far between. You have to travel long distances carry potentially dangerous explosives in your car.
Some chandlery shops will take in flares but only if you buy the same amount of new ones. Not all shops take them.
Some people buy flares online.
The flares that I disposed of had been dumped in the cockpit of an elderly gentleman’s yacht that he is selling. He is not going to buy new flares and the flares were not his.
In my opinion it should not be up to a charity like the RNLI or cash-strapped public bodies like the HMCG to do the work that the manufacturer should be doing!
I feel that Pains Wessex should build a site that can take back their expired flares and build the cost into the purchase price of a new pack of flares.
End of life corporate responsibility is this called?
What do others think?
Should manufacturers of flares be expected to process out of date pyros?
Nick
I believe that finding a plastic bag full of TEPs dumped by the road would prompt a good citizen to take them to his local police station. One could say it was a civic duty to do so.