Remember the washed up fish...

well look what else 'washed up' in the same area.

Cannon

 

Two Georgian cannon have been uncovered on a beach in Porthcawl following the recent storms.

 

Full story here http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-south-east-wales-25709977

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Remember the washed up fish...

 

 

 I wondered what that was till I read the bit beneath ( well, it WAS a big fish ) Woman LOL

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Remember the washed up fish...

We had dead dolphins & a calf. Smiley Sad Your are better.

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Remember the washed up fish...

Interesting but what about the seal that was washed up in the Pennines.  

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I hadn't heard about that so I google!

Poor thing, it was very lost wasn't it? So glad it was spotted and taken 'home' 🙂

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At least it was a story with a happy ending Bryn wasn't it?

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At least that little seal was luckier than the one that went up the River Wyre and got as far as Great Eccleston

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Remember the washed up fish...

I saw the mess on the beach patch, looked awful, especially the cow still being there 4 days on.  Brilliant how many people went to help clean up.

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Ohhhhhhhhh poor animals!!!. I hope their at peace now!!.

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Remember the washed up fish...

I wonder what will happen to that petrified forest Brynteg, I bet people will be hacking chunks off that if they're not watched.

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Remember the washed up fish...

The canons have already been taken by the museum in Porthcawl

 

Two historic cannon found on Porthcawl beach

CannonTheories about the cannon's origins include a ship from the Napoleonic wars blown off course or a merchant ship caught in a storm
 

Two Georgian cannon have been uncovered on a beach in Porthcawl following the recent storms.

The cannon are approximately 5ft (1.5m) and 3ft (0.9m) in length.

One of the cannon, which were found on Pink Bay by two dog walkers, needed a team of around 17 lifeboat crew members, coastguards and local lifeguards to move it from the beach.

Porthcawl Museum will now work on preserving the find and carry out research into their history.

Carl Evans from Porthcawl RNLI was one of the team involved in the removal last Friday evening.

He said the recent stormy weather had washed away a lot of the sand from the beach.

Wheelbarrow

"Somebody was walking along the beach and saw the bit of metal and when they moved some stones they found the cannon.

"Paul Joseph from Porthcawl Museum went down there and found two cannon next to each other.

"He managed to get the 3ft cannon from the beach in a wheelbarrow.

"With the 5ft one he called me to see if we could move it and some some members of the lifeboat crew, the coastguard and Rest Bay lifeguards came along.

"We managed to move it using the trailer from the lifeguard hut."

Cannon on beachThe cannon was found on the beach by a walker
CannonThe cannon will have to be kept in salt water to preserve it

Mr Evans said the cannon was too heavy for six of them to lift.

At one stage, because of sand erosion, the team had to take it in turns to help lift the trailer over a 30ft (10m) stretch of rocks in front of the slipway.

Continue reading the main storyStart Quote

It could be from the Napoleonic war blown off course or it could just be a merchant ship caught in a storm, ”

Ceri Joseph Porthcawl Museum

Museum staff believe the cannon date from around the end of the 18th Century or the early 19th Century.

Ceri Joseph, a historian at the museum, told BBC Wales: "It's an incredible find for this area because it's a very rare piece of marine archaeology that we've never had before.

"We have got pieces from last century but this is quite something.

"We know there are wrecks off the coast here. At the moment we don't know if it's French or British.

"If it was a Navy ship, it could be that it was taking men from Bristol to Ireland.

"It could be from the Napoleonic war blown off course or it could just be a merchant ship caught in a storm, because of course in those days they would have carried cannon for protection."

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