Anonymous C joined in and replied with this 1 year ago, 5 hours later, 9 hours after the original post[^][v]#1,303,329
@1,303,287 (B)
I always got a chuckle out of 'middle aged.' Yeah bud, you're 54 and 'middle aged' - glad you're hopeful about seeing your 108'th birthday you 2-packs a day dingus.
Meta !Sober//iZs joined in and replied with this 1 year ago, 3 minutes later, 10 hours after the original post[^][v]#1,303,336
@1,303,295 (Erik !saAqdaazn2)
Doesn't the UK have really generous laws about "rambling" across other people's land? You could just say you were out for a ramble and were caught short?
That's Scotland. In that country everyone has "right to roam", which is to say it's not illegal to walk on someone's land.
England is more restrictive, as it allows landowners to forbid walkers from entering. However, there are many ancient "Rights of Way" public footpaths crossing the country and walkers are perfectly entitled to walk those. Once I went right through somebody's garden as part of a public footpath when I was on a hike.
Anonymous H joined in and replied with this 1 year ago, 44 minutes later, 13 hours after the original post[^][v]#1,303,403
@previous (B)
I... actually really like this thought, very natural. Wouldn't work in the US, hobos would set up tent cities and tweakers would rummage through your shed.