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Sharpeset

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Everything posted by Sharpeset

  1. I've got some but can't remember! I know S = Shimano (who invented them) and P = pedals, but the 'D' is eluding me... (and I've never had a 'timber' moment.....yet....)
  2. We were in Helsinki on a 'cruise-call' this summer. We walked about two miles to find the cache at the Sibelius Monument. Unfortunately the cache was gone, but it was obvious where it should have been (fixing still in place). We logged it as a find - but noted in the log what had actually happened. Others had done the same, some attaching photos of the fixing as proof. We then received an e:mail from CO, quoting guidelines that 'no sign log = no find' and requesting we amend the log to a 'note' or delete it. We felt a little miffed, but complied with the request. Over the course of the next couple of days all similar logs close to ours were either amended or deleted so at least CO was consistent and not just picking on us. Shame though...
  3. Not as fast as 'very slow', more like stationary...
  4. ...White no idea on first name though Ding! T H White. Over to you. Thanks - Didn't expect the Ding for half an answer! Staying with a literary them: who famously lived at 32 Windsor Gardens, London? Pete Paddington? DING! yes indeed, one of my faves....
  5. ...White no idea on first name though Ding! T H White. Over to you. Thanks - Didn't expect the Ding for half an answer! Staying with a literary them: who famously lived at 32 Windsor Gardens, London? Pete
  6. Yesterday is yesterday in any format surely? yesterday - or more specifically 28th June was 6.28 in american format, as opposed to 28/6...
  7. Somewhere along the lies of the mathamatical bods want a new number. Tau is equal to 2x Pi The number is 628 the date written in the non-UK format. DING! Over to you Pete
  8. Ok. Bat for Lashes is a solo artist, her cousin was considered the best in the world ever in his sport... Who is he? As it's gone on a while, pub quizzers should know him by his record... Most consecutive victories in any sport. (obviously this rules out anyone from Great Britain) no idea who bat for lashes is, but I recall Jehengar (spelling?) Khan went undefeated playing squash for years Pete Ding dong! Jahengir Kahn, cousin of Natasha "bat for lashes" khan... Went 555 matches with all victories from the age of 17 unbeaten... Over 5 years. During this time he won a major tournament without losing a single point. His record is under threat... Number 2 on the list is a female wheelchair tennis player who is now past 350 wins in a row. The only people who compete for the title are the Harlem globetrotters.... Who've been unbeaten for decades. They have however drawn matches in regulation time, going on to win in overtime. For records purposes these are counted as draws, so the unbeaten streak goes on, but the winning one stops. OK: changing the subject completely to something topical that caught my eye.... In some quarters 28th June just gone was referred as 'Tau Day': To what does 'Tau' refer?
  9. Ok. Bat for Lashes is a solo artist, her cousin was considered the best in the world ever in his sport... Who is he? As it's gone on a while, pub quizzers should know him by his record... Most consecutive victories in any sport. (obviously this rules out anyone from Great Britain) no idea who bat for lashes is, but I recall Jehengar (spelling?) Khan went undefeated playing squash for years Pete
  10. Any one watch Only Connect on BBC 4? Preview of next week's edition (Monday 8.30) says a team of geocachers will be taking part. Who might they be?
  11. French equivalent of TFTC maybe? - "Merci pour la cache" Pete
  12. A vey quick DING for that (very impressive they are too) Pete
  13. Thanks: Changing topic: In which country would you find the Gullfoss and Godafoss waterfalls?
  14. Sorry missed the north pole bit no problem. Back to your question - how about Mary Queen of Scots? Think she was only a babe when she became Queen so presumably pretty small...
  15. Thanks Pete. However, Eric the Red is more likely to be the first than Amundsen - so I'll pass the ding back over to norsch, who gave that answer. Geoff okey dokey: not sure Eric fixed magnetic north pole though...
  16. I suspect you're thinking of Roald Amundsen - who navigated the Northwest passage at the beginning of the twentieth century. At least, he was the guy AFAICT who fixed the position of the North Pole. However, there is evidence that the Vikings navigated the Northwest passage centuries before, so Amundsen almost certainly wasn't the first. Geoff Well Roald Amundsen is the DING according to my Bamber Gascoigne Uni Challenge quiz book, so unless the vikings aregoing to object, over to you... Pete
  17. British, English, whatever: happy to accept the Ding.... Which explorer was the frst to sail through the northwest passage, going on to fix the position of the North magnetic Pole?
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