624 replies, Replies 171 to 180

Another English summer walk.

Hahaha I remember one for getting from England to somewhere like Japan and it said to jump in a canoe

That's the way people talk here.
'On the' isn't used anymore, it's on't

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A summers walk in the north of England.

Mya wrote:

BuckingFastard(JN) wrote:
Fleetwith https://imgur.com/gallery/mU8Ms0N

ah, lake district! Thanks, I thought it was. Was there first time in February this year.

Yes it is.
It was bloody cold in Feb!!
We're you here walking?

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A summers walk in the north of England.

Fleetwith https://imgur.com/gallery/mU8Ms0N

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A summers walk in the north of England.

Fleetwith https://imgur.com/gallery/mU8Ms0N

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A summers walk in the north of England.

The top of them aren't steady.
Rocks often fall off.
If they didn't they'd become too high.

On larger mountains the bases are very wide making them sturdier.

The rocks that fall off will be placed back on one by one by the next people to climb up there.

You could say that they're permanently under construction by visitors

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A summers walk in the north of England.

There is a rock pile (called a cairn) on the highest point of every mountain and fell so you know where the exact summit point is.

Traditionally every person that gets there adds another.

On some of the higher and more popular ones these piles are meters high.

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A summers walk in the north of England.

https://i.imgur.com/vQli8lv.jpg

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A summers walk in the north of England.

https://i.imgur.com/phOpHZJ.jpg

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A summers walk in the north of England.

https://i.imgur.com/m9Wg9Yf.jpg

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A summers walk in the north of England.

https://i.imgur.com/aJ14qd7.jpg

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