An allotment shed. Owner dead or alive?
An allotment shed. Owner dead or alive?
Alive
The owner posted it on the internet
It's your shed, on your allotment.![]()
NopeOriginally Posted by jandajoy
Not for saleOriginally Posted by Texpat
So why else would you post the picture ?
DD's shed building thread?
^
Good, but not DD's
Conceptual art?
Ahhhh before/after ..... looking looking looking
NopeOriginally Posted by jandajoy
I only want the owners christian name and town/city
Yes that sort of thingOriginally Posted by Texpat
Now what two words will you google to find this exciting website ?
Readers Sheds?
^
Yes excellent
Can you find the picture ?
Believe it or not that picture has been viewed 2140 times since it was entered
^ I made it up! I'm going to have a look.
YESOriginally Posted by jandajoy
Your turn
I have added a comment and sent Richard our greetings.
Wait and see if it gets posted
Last edited by Thetyim; 13-12-2008 at 02:06 PM.

Is that you Tetty?This shed is tops with me. Every plank is a different colour. If it is renovated as per above, it needs to be done as sensitively as possible. Ideally it should be 'stabilised'. Its integrity should not be put into question. Future conservators might have things to say about your methods.
by horselover
Originally Posted by Thetyim
^
Nope
Looks like they have banned my comment
I only wished Richard a happy Xmas from Teakdoor and told him that his shed was famous in Thailand now

Philip Pullman author of his darkaet from a feminised plant material?
GB Shaw had a shed on a rotating platform to track the sun and enlighten his work
To shed more light on the matter Wn Australia and New Zealand the term shed can be used to refer to any building that is not a residence and which may be open at the ends or sides, or both. Australia's passion for sheds is documented in Mark Thomson's Blokes and Sheds. In New Zealand, the bi-monthly magazine The Shed appeals to the culture of "blokes" who do woodwork or metalwork DIY projects in their sheds. There is also another magazine called The Shed, a bimonthly pdf free magazine produced in the UK but with a global audience, for people who work (usually in creative industries) in garden offices, sheds and other shedlike atmospheres. In the UK, men have long enjoyed working in their potting sheds; the slang term "sheddie", to refer to a person enamoured of shed-building, testifies to the place of sheds in UK popular culture. Author Gordon Thorburn examined this proclivity in his book Men and Sheds, which argues that a "place of retreat" is a "male necessity" which provides men with solace, especially during their retirement. The first National Shed Week was held in the UK in July 2007 and received widespread coverage in the media. A second National Shed Week is planned for July 2008. The UK Internet usenet group uk.rec.sheds is a forum for discussing shed construction"
I m going for a shack now see you for elevenses gintojoy?
iki informs us about the male retreat
'
Come on JJ step up![]()
Oh right. Sorry.
Give me 5 minutes.
This might be a bit difficult....... but let's see how it goes. Where?
![]()
Ireland?
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