sledger
Spanish_Vicente
Back in the day I had a lecturer for environmental law who drove about 300 miles to go and visit the site of a power station that was at the centre of an important case (which had happened about twenty years prior).This reminds me of the retired school teacher who goes around Australia locating and documenting forgotten pitches. Pretty cool though I think driving 14 hours to find a pitch must surely be his front to have some time away from the missus
'They're a bit like Roman ruins': One man's quest to find Australia's 'lost' cricket pitches
Many of the long-forgotten pitches Les Everett finds are overgrown, and it's been decades since they last heard the echo of willow striking leather, but he says they all have a story to tell.www.abc.net.au
The power station itself was no longer there. It had long been demolished and converted into a car park. He knew this before setting off on his journey and went anyway.
I assumed it had to be a ruse of some sort.