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14th July 11, 01:25 PM
#1
The scarf has made it to it's next destination! I will go back and look for names to be added to the list and make sure the scarf gets a night on the town here...but not tonight. I do not think scarf is interested in going to midnight showing of Harry Potter and would much prefer to see the proper sights and hoist a pint.
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14th July 11, 01:32 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by TurboKittie
I do not think scarf is interested in going to midnight showing of Harry Potter and would much prefer to see the proper sights and hoist a pint.
why cant it do both even give you a interesting pic to commemorate the midnight showing
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14th July 11, 02:01 PM
#3
Like Santa Wally I am going off topic here, but I felt I ought to point out that while the copper mine in the picture might be the largest man-made hole in the world, it has entirely been excavated by machinery.
The largest hand-excavated hole in the world is in South Africa. Known as the Big Hole in Kimberley (capital of the Northern Cape), it is even deeper than it appears, since it is more than half full of water (poisonous, sad to say).
When the diamond diggers first arrived there in 1869, there was a hill standing where the hole is now. Because the first people to dig the diamondiferous kimberlite pipe that made up the peak of the hill came from the town of Colesberg, south of the Orange River, it was called Colesberg Koppie.
The koppie was divided up into individual claims, and each claim was worked separately by its owners. At the height of the individual working, there were hundreds of steel ropes running down from the side of the hole, each to a particular claim.
Because of the difficulty of identifying the separate claims, as well as the great expense of working them deeper into the ground, Cecil John Rhodes bought up the claims and merged them into the De Beers Mining Company.
Many of the first men who developed gold mines on the Witwatersrand (including Rhodes) did so using capital built up at Kimberley.
That became an even more expensive operation, because the gold-bearing reef was far narrower than the kimberlite, and before long ever deeper mines were needed.
Those still operating have levels three kilometres below the surface.
Regards,
Mike

A diagram of the Big Hole.

The Big Hole seen from above.
The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life.
[Proverbs 14:27]
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15th July 11, 12:08 AM
#4
Great news that the scarf has made its way to yet another destination. Look forward to your pics TurboKittie. I'm sure you will have fun.
Once you have added the new addtions to the list could you count up how many more stops it still has to go, and post the number on this thread. Thanks.
In the meantime I am treating myself to a small tot of welsh Penderyn Whisky and looking back over the scarfs adventures so far.
Iechyd Da 
Derek
A Proud Welsh Cilt Wearer
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