ChatterBank1 min ago
Burying Tin Cans
13 Answers
Back in the 50s, at scout camp, litter disposal of the many baked-bean cans consisted of bashing them flat with an axe, then burying them in a pit we had dug.
I hadn't really thought of this till recently when it occurred to me to wonder why we didn't put them all in a sack and take them home with us.
Would hundreds of flattened cans do any harm buried in a field in Suffolk?
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I hadn't really thought of this till recently when it occurred to me to wonder why we didn't put them all in a sack and take them home with us.
Would hundreds of flattened cans do any harm buried in a field in Suffolk?
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Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by bainbrig. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Gness beat me to it! (The TV series 'Detectorists' was mainly filmed in Suffolk, so it no doubt encouraged plenty of people around here to try their hand at the hobby).
50 years seems just about long enough for those cans to decompose:
https:/ /www.do wn2eart hmateri als.ie/ 2013/02 /14/dec ompose/
50 years seems just about long enough for those cans to decompose:
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I don't think that there is any need to worry about flattened cans under a field in Suffolk. They will probably have rusted away by now. The reason why your scout leaders didn't have the cans put in sacks and taken home, is because it would have entailed a fair amount of work. Flattening and burying was the easier option. When I was in the Army, in the 60s, that was standard practice at the end of an exercise/manoeuvres in rural areas.
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