gazzamagoo wrote:Wedgie wrote:you don't go pipi'ing, you go cockling!
Only in certain nightclubs....
by Pseudo » Thu Nov 16, 2023 7:34 am
gazzamagoo wrote:Wedgie wrote:you don't go pipi'ing, you go cockling!
by Booney » Thu Nov 16, 2023 8:25 am
gazzamagoo wrote:Wedgie wrote:Today, went down to Goolwa and then onto the Coorong by boat to Cattle Point for a re-burial of artefacts brought back from England that were taken from Ngarrindjeri land 130 years ago. Perfect day for it too weather wise.
Deeply moving ceremonies and some amazing scenery along the Coorong I hadn't seen in years (and the missus had never seen before). Stir Fried cockles (why is everyone calling them Pipis now?) cooked on the boat with a bit of chilli, garlic, etc went down a treat too (as did a couple of white wines as the choice of beer was ordinary). So much wildlife down there at the moment, its incredible, a truly unique part of the world.
An ABC cameraman tagged along so hopefully some footage on the way.
Tell ya what though, my legs are feeling it tonight hiking over those sand dunes, I doubt I'll be able to walk tomorrow, struggling now!
Eastern states influencers calling them Pipis, to suit their market,
on Sunrise yesterday morning they were in NZ & called them clams!
They're bloody cockles!
I go to the bait shop & get a bag of cockles,
you don't go pipi'ing, you go cockling!
And yes, they taste fantastic!
by gazzamagoo » Thu Nov 16, 2023 8:26 am
Pseudo wrote:gazzamagoo wrote:Wedgie wrote:you don't go pipi'ing, you go cockling!
Only in certain nightclubs....
by gazzamagoo » Thu Nov 16, 2023 8:30 am
Booney wrote:gazzamagoo wrote:Wedgie wrote:Today, went down to Goolwa and then onto the Coorong by boat to Cattle Point for a re-burial of artefacts brought back from England that were taken from Ngarrindjeri land 130 years ago. Perfect day for it too weather wise.
Deeply moving ceremonies and some amazing scenery along the Coorong I hadn't seen in years (and the missus had never seen before). Stir Fried cockles (why is everyone calling them Pipis now?) cooked on the boat with a bit of chilli, garlic, etc went down a treat too (as did a couple of white wines as the choice of beer was ordinary). So much wildlife down there at the moment, its incredible, a truly unique part of the world.
An ABC cameraman tagged along so hopefully some footage on the way.
Tell ya what though, my legs are feeling it tonight hiking over those sand dunes, I doubt I'll be able to walk tomorrow, struggling now!
Eastern states influencers calling them Pipis, to suit their market,
on Sunrise yesterday morning they were in NZ & called them clams!
They're bloody cockles!
I go to the bait shop & get a bag of cockles,
you don't go pipi'ing, you go cockling!
And yes, they taste fantastic!
Technically they are a clam. Ngarrindjeri people call them kuti.
by Booney » Thu Nov 16, 2023 8:40 am
gazzamagoo wrote:Booney wrote:gazzamagoo wrote:Wedgie wrote:Today, went down to Goolwa and then onto the Coorong by boat to Cattle Point for a re-burial of artefacts brought back from England that were taken from Ngarrindjeri land 130 years ago. Perfect day for it too weather wise.
Deeply moving ceremonies and some amazing scenery along the Coorong I hadn't seen in years (and the missus had never seen before). Stir Fried cockles (why is everyone calling them Pipis now?) cooked on the boat with a bit of chilli, garlic, etc went down a treat too (as did a couple of white wines as the choice of beer was ordinary). So much wildlife down there at the moment, its incredible, a truly unique part of the world.
An ABC cameraman tagged along so hopefully some footage on the way.
Tell ya what though, my legs are feeling it tonight hiking over those sand dunes, I doubt I'll be able to walk tomorrow, struggling now!
Eastern states influencers calling them Pipis, to suit their market,
on Sunrise yesterday morning they were in NZ & called them clams!
They're bloody cockles!
I go to the bait shop & get a bag of cockles,
you don't go pipi'ing, you go cockling!
And yes, they taste fantastic!
Technically they are a clam. Ngarrindjeri people call them kuti.
Fantastic BUT I'll always know them as a cockle,
the same as a crayfish, never used to be called a lobster, it's a bloody cray.
by gazzamagoo » Thu Nov 16, 2023 10:24 am
by Booney » Thu Nov 16, 2023 10:39 am
gazzamagoo wrote:Tell that to all the old crusty blokes down at Robe, Jaffa etc
by gazzamagoo » Thu Nov 16, 2023 10:50 am
Booney wrote:gazzamagoo wrote:Tell that to all the old crusty blokes down at Robe, Jaffa etc
The ones who hold Rock Lobster Pot licences?
by Booney » Thu Nov 16, 2023 11:03 am
gazzamagoo wrote:Booney wrote:gazzamagoo wrote:Tell that to all the old crusty blokes down at Robe, Jaffa etc
The ones who hold Rock Lobster Pot licences?
The ones I buy crays from.
shutup![]()
by Lightning McQueen » Thu Nov 16, 2023 11:29 am
Booney wrote:
Crayfish live in fresh water. Lobster live in salt water. We've been wrong for years.![]()
You caught it in salt water and it has no claws… It is a rock lobster
You caught it in salt water and it has claws… It is a lobster
You caught it in freshwater and it has claws… It is a crayfish.
by dedja » Thu Nov 16, 2023 11:31 am
by gazzamagoo » Thu Nov 16, 2023 11:34 am
Lightning McQueen wrote:Booney wrote:
Crayfish live in fresh water. Lobster live in salt water. We've been wrong for years.![]()
You caught it in salt water and it has no claws… It is a rock lobster
You caught it in salt water and it has claws… It is a lobster
You caught it in freshwater and it has claws… It is a crayfish.
Freshwater with claws is a Marron isn’t it?
by gazzamagoo » Thu Nov 16, 2023 11:34 am
dedja wrote:LOL, you’ll tip Gaz over the edge.
by woodublieve12 » Sun Nov 19, 2023 5:12 pm
DOC wrote:Bluey Fest.
by Wedgie » Sun Nov 19, 2023 10:42 pm
Armchair expert wrote:Such a great club are Geelong
by DOC » Sun Nov 19, 2023 10:47 pm
woodublieve12 wrote:DOC wrote:Bluey Fest.
Literally came here to write the same thing![]()
My top 3 are
Cricket 1
Take away 28
Rain 8
by Mic » Sun Nov 19, 2023 11:44 pm
by whufc » Mon Nov 20, 2023 9:09 am
Mic wrote:My 5-year-old boy saying (at 7:30pm this evening) that he wants to stay up all night with Dad (me) to watch the cricket.
Look forward to when he's old enough to do so.
by Jimmy_041 » Mon Nov 20, 2023 11:16 am
whufc wrote:Mic wrote:My 5-year-old boy saying (at 7:30pm this evening) that he wants to stay up all night with Dad (me) to watch the cricket.
Look forward to when he's old enough to do so.
100% the best.
My 5 year old will often get up at all hours of the morning to watch West Ham games with me.... yeah i know we shouldnt be giving her broken sleep etc, normally she sleeps in on the Sunday to make up for getting up in the middle which keeps the misses happy.
The bond we build over the games though is something special, especially given all her family on my side are still based on east london we often spend the match talking about family over there etc.
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