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  #1  
Old 16-03-05, 17:20
servicepub (RIP)'s Avatar
servicepub (RIP) servicepub (RIP) is offline
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Default Kiwis have all the luck

Bren carrier buried in garden.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3218017a10,00.html
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  #2  
Old 16-03-05, 17:29
Vets Dottir
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Default Re: Kiwis have all the luck

Quote:
Originally posted by servicepub
Bren carrier buried in garden.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3218017a10,00.html
Wow ... makes a person want to make every yard and field an archaeology dig I'll bet these people will be getting some calls from miltary types and collectors ?

Wonder what the couple will DO with their "find" ... I assume it's also a case of "finders keepers" if it's on their property?

Karmen
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  #3  
Old 17-03-05, 11:12
hairbear hairbear is offline
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Default kiwis have all the luck

thought it was a fairy story,s about buried army gear ,where i live was ww 2 site ,you hear stories about gully findin with stuff
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  #4  
Old 17-03-05, 11:18
Hanno Spoelstra's Avatar
Hanno Spoelstra Hanno Spoelstra is offline
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Default Re: Kiwis have all the luck

I'd say the scrap dealer had all the luck!

Quote:
Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3218017a10,00.html

Army tank uncovered in couple's garden
15 March 2005

A metal object struck by a Waikato couple digging out their back garden recently later turned out to be a four-tonne army tank.


Jane and Emanuel Hurley discovered the World War 2 bren-gun carrier on their Ohaupo property, 17km south of Hamilton.

A few weeks ago, Mr Hurley was rotary hoeing the garden when he struck metal.

"He started uncovering it, thinking he could pull whatever it was out, but he had no luck," said Mrs Hurley.

A neighbour who owned contracting machinery also had no joy so they all took a break for a day or so.

"Then a friend made it his mission to uncover whatever it was," said Mrs Hurley.

"He had a go at it every day or so and slowly exposed it."

When they realised the enormity of what they had found, they called in a scrap dealer who had to use two trucks for two hours to haul out the mystery object.

Mrs Hurley said they realised it was some kind of military vehicle.

She took photographs and was editing them on the computer in their antique shop Collectamania when a customer identified it as a bren-gun carrier. More checking confirmed its identity.

Mr Hurley said the carrier was beyond repair.

Mrs Hurley had heard some former military vehicles were used on farms after the war.

"The things you find in your garden," she said.

Not only that, but they now have a huge hole to fill.

"Who knows, we might even put a swimming pool in.".
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  #5  
Old 20-03-05, 14:24
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Tony Smith Tony Smith is offline
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Default

Starnge to say, but it's quite common. There have many locations where all sorts of large metal objects have been buried in banks and soft ground to stabilise it. There were 4 carriers located together in the South Island a couple of years ago and there has been a pair of Steam Locomotives pulled out of a riverbank and one has been restored and is running again!
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