**** Booking Information for Lifers Trip to Ypres & Battlefields ****
Comments
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have just sent you a reply to your messageBournesnr said:Large I have tried to contact you but I'm new to this, my wife and I are interested in joining your trip if there are still spaces available.
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*** Just ONE place left on the trip ***
message me if you want booking details0 -
Gutted to be missing this, looking forward to the next trip already2
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I'd really fancy this, is there anyone below 40 going? I understand I sound like an arse right now.1
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Personally I would have thought you would be better off with older people on this trip to grasp a better understanding of things. I appreciate you are probably thinking about a bit of banter on the coach and a few drinks in the evening but putting that aside go with experience.PopIcon said:I'd really fancy this, is there anyone below 40 going? I understand I sound like an arse right now.
I am a WW2 buff so keeping my eyes open for any trips that comes along for this era.0 -
sorry, the coach is now full. I think most are over 40, if not a lot older, although there is a 13 year old on board.PopIcon said:I'd really fancy this, is there anyone below 40 going? I understand I sound like an arse right now.
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I can understand Poplcon.
Who really wants to sit in a coach full of whistling hearing aids, creaking joints, dicky bladders and snoring.
That's just me.3 -
If you are not in that "grouping" yet @ShootersHillGuru, you should get there one day. Please show a bit more respect for the older generation :-)ShootersHillGuru said:I can understand Poplcon.
Who really wants to sit in a coach full of whistling hearing aids, creaking joints, dicky bladders and snoring.
That's just me.0 -
Is there not going to be a fun zone on the coach then?0
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I qualify on each category and a couple of others I won't mention. :0)PeterGage said:
If you are not in that "grouping" yet @ShootersHillGuru, you should get there one day. Please show a bit more respect for the older generation :-)ShootersHillGuru said:I can understand Poplcon.
Who really wants to sit in a coach full of whistling hearing aids, creaking joints, dicky bladders and snoring.
That's just me.
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If you are going on this trip, as I am, we can verbally "exchange" conditional details of have a race over 10 yards !! :-)ShootersHillGuru said:
I qualify on each category and a couple of others I won't mention. :0)PeterGage said:
If you are not in that "grouping" yet @ShootersHillGuru, you should get there one day. Please show a bit more respect for the older generation :-)ShootersHillGuru said:I can understand Poplcon.
Who really wants to sit in a coach full of whistling hearing aids, creaking joints, dicky bladders and snoring.
That's just me.0 -
I know where you are coming from, Popcorn, but remember there are people in their 30s who are old fogies, & those in their 60s who are still teenagers at heart!
I wondered initially if I might be the only woman on the trip, but it didn't stop me going ahead.1 -
Never do long distance stuff these days.PeterGage said:
If you are going on this trip, as I am, we can verbally "exchange" conditional details of have a race over 10 yards !! :-)ShootersHillGuru said:
I qualify on each category and a couple of others I won't mention. :0)PeterGage said:
If you are not in that "grouping" yet @ShootersHillGuru, you should get there one day. Please show a bit more respect for the older generation :-)ShootersHillGuru said:I can understand Poplcon.
Who really wants to sit in a coach full of whistling hearing aids, creaking joints, dicky bladders and snoring.
That's just me.
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I am in Messines currently and have walked the entire front over the last 3 days (around 15km a day, we have been lucky and studied every unit that fought in what was a hugely successful set piece battle from the 23rd and London Divisions in the north down to the NZ and Australian Divisions in the south.
I had people whose Great Grandfathers fought in the battle and one whose father fought. An amazing few days where we managed to skip every ceremony and covered all the ground often with the battlefields to our self.
This week was the story of Plumers II Army, from his dynamic leadership alongside his Chief of Staff Tim Harrington, through the incredibly thorough detailed planning of the BEF staff, to the determined spirit of the rifleman at the sharp end who bought into the commanders intent and understood entirely the plan.
Messines was a victory the likes of which the British Army had not experienced up to that point in the war and one they were not to experience again until the following summer and the Last Hunsred Days, the fact that it came less than a year after the First Day on the Somme makes it all the more incredible.
Our local lads were directly involved with the 20th (Blackheath & Woolwich) Btn, London Regiment who fought along the canal sector and passed the bluff, (many Addicks were among their ranks) and through the Gunners, again many from Woolwich/Plumstead who literally blew the German Army off the Ridge (and whose achievements are often overshadowed by the quite incredible tunnelling operations).
What a day and what a victory the 7 June 1917 was.
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