
Essex workshop day - Colchester - Sat 26th April 2014
- lloydie
- Posts: 20928
- Joined: Mon Jan 17, 2011 11:16 pm
- Location: In the garage somewhere in Coventry
Re: Essex workshop day
Will we see some locals on the day 

Re: Essex workshop day
I'll take the one on the left.lloydie wrote:Will we see some locals on the day

"It may be yellow but it ain't no chicken"
Re: Essex workshop day
Oh dear!
Mankini and top hats it is then! I'll invite some of "the only way is Essex" cast...

Are you up for a ride up here Tony?

Mankini and top hats it is then! I'll invite some of "the only way is Essex" cast...
That'll be the cast of "the only way is Essex" if I had my waytony.mon wrote:Some of the locals are dead in it......

Are you up for a ride up here Tony?
Jamie 

Re: Essex workshop day
I'll take the lethal injection thanks!magnum wrote:I'll take the one on the left.lloydie wrote:Will we see some locals on the day
Slowly approaching the more bikes than birthdays achievement
Re: Essex workshop day
I'd rather see Marty in the tassle whips in a man kiny





Re: Essex workshop day
Oh, it's on!Ckennedy wrote:I'd rather see Marty in the tassle whips in a man kiny![]()
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Slowly approaching the more bikes than birthdays achievement
- lloydie
- Posts: 20928
- Joined: Mon Jan 17, 2011 11:16 pm
- Location: In the garage somewhere in Coventry
Re: Essex workshop day
I'll get some £5 notes
Re: Essex workshop day
Probably the pair are closely related to 'Clacton Man'
Now we know why you went for a black bike….


The Clacton channel is also uniquely important for evidence of early humans. Clacton is the ‘type site’ of the Clactonian Palaeolithic industry; a simple flint-working industry, with flakes struck off larger flints, leaving cores. No hand-axes have been found. The flint tools are from the Freshwater Beds in the channel and they represent the earliest undisputed evidence of human presence in Essex (but see entry for Wivenhoe Gravel Pit; also there is now evidence of older human occupation in Britain in other parts of East Anglia and along the South Coast). The tip of a wooden spear, made of yew, was also found in the cliffs, which, until recently, was the oldest man-made wooden object in the world. It remains the oldest in Britain. ‘Clacton man’ was not a modern human (Homo sapiens) and was not Neanderthal (Homo neanderthalensis), but an ancestor of the Neanderthals and probably related to an earlier British human species known as ‘Heidelberg man’ (Homo heidelbergensis).
Now we know why you went for a black bike….


It may be that your whole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others.
VTR Firestorm and other bikes t-shirts

Re: Essex workshop day
Black bikes are sexy. Chicks dig guys with black bikes.
Slowly approaching the more bikes than birthdays achievement
Re: Essex workshop day
I her you have long dark hair virt is that y you cover up your face.Virt wrote:I'll take the lethal injection thanks!magnum wrote:I'll take the one on the left.lloydie wrote:Will we see some locals on the day

"It may be yellow but it ain't no chicken"
Re: Essex workshop day
Not dark, stopped dyeing it almost 2 years agomagnum wrote:[
I her you have long dark hair virt is that y you cover up your face.


I cover my face up because it got tiring walking down the high street and being swarmed by fit girls. It's SUCH a hard life, I tell you

Slowly approaching the more bikes than birthdays achievement
Re: Essex workshop day
Wicky wrote:Probably the pair are closely related to 'Clacton Man'
The Clacton channel is also uniquely important for evidence of early humans. Clacton is the ‘type site’ of the Clactonian Palaeolithic industry; a simple flint-working industry, with flakes struck off larger flints, leaving cores. No hand-axes have been found. The flint tools are from the Freshwater Beds in the channel and they represent the earliest undisputed evidence of human presence in Essex (but see entry for Wivenhoe Gravel Pit; also there is now evidence of older human occupation in Britain in other parts of East Anglia and along the South Coast). The tip of a wooden spear, made of yew, was also found in the cliffs, which, until recently, was the oldest man-made wooden object in the world. It remains the oldest in Britain. ‘Clacton man’ was not a modern human (Homo sapiens) and was not Neanderthal (Homo neanderthalensis), but an ancestor of the Neanderthals and probably related to an earlier British human species known as ‘Heidelberg man’ (Homo heidelbergensis).
Now we know why you went for a black bike….


So does this mean I'm an ancestor to the Neanderthals? That would explain many things! Ugg grr arg, are a commonly used collective in my vocabulary.

I don't have photoshop...

Jamie 

Re: Essex workshop day
I am shore she has some nicer points.magnum wrote:I'll take the one on the left.lloydie wrote:Will we see some locals on the day
"It may be yellow but it ain't no chicken"