View Single Post
  #76   Report Post  
Old 28-01-2007, 11:53 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Sacha Sacha is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,995
Default Devon Beach (Free Pampers & BMWs) (OT)

On 28/1/07 22:02, in article ,
"Chris Hogg" wrote:

On Sun, 28 Jan 2007 12:35:45 +0000, Sacha
wrote:

On 28/1/07 11:32, in article
, "Janet Tweedy"
wrote:

In article , "Keith (Dorset)"
writes


Wrecking is a time-old tradition whereby coastal dwellers have always
supplemented their often meagre earnings by salvaging items of value from
the shoreline at the time of a wreck.

Here in Dorset, often the whole community would venture out, often in
appalling weather to grab whatever was there for the taking.


Pardon me for my ignorance but I always thought that wreckers were the
murderous little swine who lured ships onto rocks thereby destroying
them and murdering the sailors on board.
It's one thing to salvage stuff from a beach another to deliberately
kill sailors!
Not that I'm condoning the looters but surely they aren't 'wreckers'?

janet


No, they're not wreckers. Your definition is the correct one. Sometimes,
if passengers and crew reached the shore in safety, the wreckers would kill
them to stop them either telling the tale of what happened, or to steal the
jewellery they were wearing.



Er...you have documentary evidence to support this?


Do you have some to support your denial? Just the other day I read of the
captain of a ship whose finger was hacked off so that the emerald it bore
could be stolen. Are you telling us there were no wreckers in Devon and
Cornwall?

snip
Perhaps things were different in the Channel Isles.


What? With the Casquets, the Minquiers and the Ecrehous? No point in
bothering, was there?


--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
http://www.discoverdartmoor.co.uk/
(remove weeds from address)