please empty your brain below

You actually make RM19 sound lovely - to me - but then I guess I am a marshy nomansland kind of person. Steve
Yet again, congratulations on completion - hoping this is really it!
Perhaps they were writing that capitalism is pognophobic but got interrupted
As heard via my daughter's YouTube watching, POG is gamer-speak, for what I don't know.

Quite the achievement in 6 months and that was a fun read to to finish the quest with (again!)
Well done! Just hope Royal Mail doesn't create a new postcode for the new houses on the sleepy paddock.
The Trout Lane SL0 one (local to me) and maybe others are probably just a legacy of mapwork only as precise as it needed to be when postcodes were allocated; as there was no property to deliver mail to, the Royal Mail wouldn't have worried about any minor lack of accuracy or geographic logic. We're now using postcodes for purposes unseen when they were allocated, which is where things like WhatThreeWords come in, though postcodes are far more familiar to many.

Thinking of the coal tax obelisk next to the Trout Lane canal bridge, I don't think you've yet done all the coal tax posts, though you've probably done most as part of other projects.
POG in gamer-speak is an acronym for "play of the game", i.e. something incredible / exciting.

Completing that postcode challenge was POG!
congratulations, call the Guinness guys
RM19 1SZ is a good spot for seeing Marsh Harriers and other wetland birds on the RSPB reserve. Among birdwatchers it's known as the Serin Mound after a couple of rare birds that spent some time there a few years ago. The walk in from Purfleet is somewhat nicer than the one from Rainham, or there's a small carpark where the seawall meets the road.
With the peripheral postcodes completed, how many of the partially-in-London boundary grid squares have you also now visited?

dg writes: 212
Once again dg goes the extra mile - literally!

Congratulations on the satisfaction of a project well done.
Life on the edge, indeed! I love the logic of it being "easiest" to go and visit the potentially-ambiguous cases. Perhaps a similar loophole could be found to re-ignite the embers of the "British B-roads" series, of happy memory.
massive congratulations dg, it's been entertaining to follow
Congratulations for the third time!
Congratulations yet again, for the umpteenth and hopefully last (in this context) time!
You can tell those were properly peripheral locations because only two people had anything to add from their own experience.

Cheers!
Really can’t understand why anyone would want to write to an electricity pylon or a footpath gate !!
Wonder if they get junk mail?
You are the pogchamp










TridentScan | Privacy Policy