Welcome to the unofficial Christ's Hospital Forum - for discussing everything CH/Old Blue related. All pupils, parents, families, staff, Old Blues and anyone else related to CH are welcome to browse the boards, register and contribute.
englishangel wrote:All of us love storms and can frequently be found outside to watch them.
I rather suspected I might be misunderstood! I used to live on the seafront in Dover and loved to watch storms approaching across/along the Channel. I'd love to see someone going outside to watch a tropical monsoon storm at its height - it would be like Mary Poppins without the umbrella, or wossername with the red shoes on the Yellow Brick Road; "This isn't Hua Hin..." You'd either be blown away, drummed flat into the ground, have your eardrums burst or be struck by lightning! Katharine, please describe what I'm talking about!
I don't mind Storms -- and as for our pets, ---- the Pond is 1Metre deep and they all disappear, until it is over -- and then come up again to lie in their collective teeth (What teeth ?) to say that they havn't been fed for a week ! :deadhorse:
NEILL THE NOTORIOUS wrote: ---- the Pond is 1Metre deep and they all disappear, until it is over -- and then come up again to lie in their collective teeth (What teeth ?) to say that they havn't been fed for a week !
If you want to see fish with teeth, have a look at these photos of the orphanage day out...
Don't be daft, you'd need a crane to get the so-and-so out of the water. Apparently they put a calf onto a set of scales, lowered them into the water, waited until he came for his lunch, subtracted the weight of the calf and did whatever calculations you'd need to do to allow for the scales being under water...
The Bind Moggles, Phil....
What sort of calf? Bovine? Was it deceased? OOh dear. So are these fish carnivorous? And people get close to them? Blimey...
Ajarn Philip wrote:Don't be daft, you'd need a crane to get the so-and-so out of the water. Apparently they put a calf onto a set of scales, lowered them into the water, waited until he came for his lunch, subtracted the weight of the calf and did whatever calculations you'd need to do to allow for the scales being under water...
Did they weigh him before he ate, or after? It could make all the difference in the final calcuation.