What a grub.... oh I mean worm...
Nath
What a grub.... oh I mean worm...
Nath
When you find the culprit Shane, cut him off at the legs, and if he presses charges he wont have a leg to stand on. Louie.
I'll be forked. Hope he puts it through his foot the first time he uses it.
Finally got one
For someone to steal a worming fork you would assume he intended to use it.A week or so back I was on my morning walk and spotted a glasses case on the side of the road.I said to Di that it was mine.Some bastard had broken into my car,taken my sunglasses from the glovebox,walked 200m down the road,took the glasses from their case and bag and then stomped on them and left them there. obviously a $260 pair of Maui Jims weren't good enough for him.
Cheers, Mick
aspire to inspire before you expire
Have you an enemy Mick?
Hi John pinched from the back of the house I live 1 house off the corner and I would say someone walking down the side street has seen it accross the neighbours fence and helped themselves.
Bracey I feel for the kids mate notning worse than losing something you worked hard for
shane
I went thru the same sorta ordeal last yr losing my worming fork from the back of the ute.
I bought several (4) replacements since and finally found one that was up to the task at a price.
http://www.cyclone.com.au/products/c...sed-dee-handle
you bananabenders do things differently up your way.The fork we use to dig bloodworms is a hoe fork - shaped like a hoe but with prongs instead of a blade.A trench is started and then work along the face,pulling the mud back towards you into the hole made by the previous stroke.We obtain our bloodworms from the mud around mangroves and it is extremely difficult to dig this mud with a conventional garden fork.The suction created by the mud is too great.When you have a vertical face in the trench it is much easier - strike the hoe into the mud about 30cm from the edge and then pull towards yourself - no lifting involved.
Cheers, Mick
aspire to inspire before you expire