chinita
Well-Known Member
.....forgot to mention, about 150 teaspoons jettisoned with the soapy washing up water in the bowl.
Why didn't the covers have a drawstring (in a contrasting colour) to ensure they could not come off?
.....forgot to mention, about 150 teaspoons jettisoned with the soapy washing up water in the bowl.
You must have had a pair of randy ladles breeding like rabbits to have that many!
Reading all these sob stories, it seems to me that marinas should keep a trained retrieval octopus to send down after all this stuff...
Mike.
Verboten or not, I'd be straight down there looking to recover it.
A really nice big block of vintage cheddar. I almost cried.
They are available but very expensive.It would be far cheaper to make something using underwater camera, a few dive torches and some sort of scoop. Lets get inventive.I'm not quite as nerdy as this will make me sound, but from all these entries, it sounds like there could be employment for a remote-control miniature submersible. A couple of thrusters, neutral buoyancy, a camera, light and a grab-arm, controlled from the deck, by wire. It wouldn't be popular with local dive-teams, but occasionally useful, if not profitable.
Fun for looking at life on the seabed (in some places) too, and for inspecting the hull.
...far cheaper to make something using underwater camera, a few dive torches and some sort of scoop. Lets get inventive.
Have non of you got 'seasearcher' magnets? They are good and even though things like Leathermans are stainless, they are still magnetic.
Like it! How about a telescopic shower-curtain pole...or several, allowing for whatever depth...dive torches strapped to the end, camera pointing downwards, handy hook attached.
Wires go up the tubes to give an image on deck while you reach over the guardrails, groping around without donning wetsuit or paying for 3 beefy divers to get drunk that evening...