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Not throwing stuff out of windows, but an earlier post reminded me of this rather dull anecdote.
Back when I was a student, I used to earn a bit of cash helping out a mate's dad who had a coach-works business. Mostly this was either collecting a Transit cab+chassis or delivering said vehicle back with a fresh flatbed / tipper on the back, but we did other odd jobs too.
One day we were tasked with cleaning out the yard, which was a mess of box section offcuts and assorted detritus. I picked up what I thought was a length of PVC piping several feet long and flung it into the Big Pile O' Crap, only to discover after the effect that it was in fact an incredibly dusty fluorescent tube. There was an astonishingly loud bang like a bloody bomb had gone off, followed by everything going very very quiet indeed. Scared me half to death.
Got it in one Dez👍😊
I once threw a pint glass out of a first floor window, which then bounced when it hit the ground. I was amazed!
I once threw a pint glass out of a first floor window, which then bounced when it hit the ground. I was amazed!
Oh. Once when I was young and stupid (as opposed to old and stupid) I threw a Holsten Pils bottle off the top of a multi-story car park. That bounced, too. Maybe six storeys high IIRC.
When I as young and stupid we pinched a TV from the skip outside next door and threw it down the cellar stairs because we were curious how loud the bang would be. It bounced. We lobbed bricks at it until it broke. Very underwhelming.
By the time I could afford a night in a hotel chucking things out of the window was the last thing on my mind.
I can't remember ever throwing anything other than a paper dart out of a high window.
I’ve just thrown the remnants of half a pack of Aldi pistachio nuts or the window!
Anyone else would have just thrown the packet with the empty shells out the window.
For a hardcore throwing paper planes out of a window experience might I suggest Glasgow College of Building and Printing ( the tall building on the right) where generations of students have been tempted by the fortuitous combination of technical drawing classrooms on the top floor with a ready supply of A0 sized paper and opening windows which face onto the inviting target of the courtyard of Ernst & Young’s building below and George Square beyond…
