tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1365582190126322848.post4467118434864056261..comments2024-03-28T13:06:29.793+00:00Comments on conradwalks: 33 Munros and computersSir Hughhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17908756392825206914noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1365582190126322848.post-62261479650107628132009-09-27T15:30:51.323+01:002009-09-27T15:30:51.323+01:00"boloc" was the word I had to enter into..."boloc" was the word I had to enter into the word verification panel to allow my comment to be accepted.Roderick Robinsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16828395545197001637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1365582190126322848.post-31191626646554203092009-09-27T15:21:22.510+01:002009-09-27T15:21:22.510+01:00BB Perhaps some of them refer to potholes and cave...BB Perhaps some of them refer to potholes and caves?<br /><br />Did not understand your ref. to "boloc." apart from its obvious relationship to an expletive.Sir Hughhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17908756392825206914noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1365582190126322848.post-42089437294197332062009-09-27T11:40:54.479+01:002009-09-27T11:40:54.479+01:00If that sequence of names represents a descending ...If that sequence of names represents a descending order of protuberances, some of them surely must be declivities if not downright holes in the earth's crust.<br /><br />Given my former profession I am fascinated to know how many journos attended the press conference devoted to the reclassification. Tell you what, the exchange of info would have been terribly slow, punctuated by requests for the speaker to spell out those Gaelic names.<br /><br />Word verification: boloc. You may take that whichever way you want.Roderick Robinsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16828395545197001637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1365582190126322848.post-74801161722531427122009-09-25T09:00:55.844+01:002009-09-25T09:00:55.844+01:00Gayle.
Go on! Set yourself a target – you could p...Gayle.<br /><br />Go on! Set yourself a target – you could perhaps be the first to complete all 2010 Marilyns in the the UK and Ireland unless somebody has now managed to get themselves onto the dodgy sea stacks – see below quotes from Wikipedia.<br /><br />...There are 1555 Marilyns identified in Great Britain and surrounding islands: 1215 in Scotland, 178 in England, 157 in Wales and 5 on the Isle of Man. (The Black Mountain, on the border between England and Wales, was formerly counted in both countries but is now treated as being in Wales only.[1]) There are a further 455 in Ireland (66 in Northern Ireland and 389 in the Republic of Ireland) bringing the total to 2010…<br /><br />…As of the end of 2008, no one has completed the list; however, six people are only four or five short of completing the Great Britain list (because of the inaccessibility of five of the St Kilda Marilyns)...Sir Hughhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17908756392825206914noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1365582190126322848.post-31570788708965729592009-09-24T20:58:34.941+01:002009-09-24T20:58:34.941+01:00Good find! I've had my iTouch since Christmas ...Good find! I've had my iTouch since Christmas and thus far have only used it for email and internet browsing (with a tiny bit of listening to audiobooks), without investigating this whole world of Apps.<br /><br />But, I've just dashed over to iTunes to buy that App. It's not that I'm about to start collecting hills (honest...), but what a fantastic little App it is for the princely sum of 59p.Gaylehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08648378503343413924noreply@blogger.com