Jump to content

Recommended Posts

This theft of metal is going mad at the moment. This is happened to us on several occassions.


We live off Lordship Lane and have left metal articles in our front shed, to come home and find the shed has been raided!! Now we cannot leave any of these things out the front, even though they are out of sight to passers by. This shows the offenders actually trespassed onto our property, raided our secluded shed and scavaged for anything to buy a bacon butty!!


Be warned people. This is what is happening whilst you are at work!

It happens all the time. I work out front of properties a lot and I see vans driving by just seeing what is in front gardens. If not a van then someone on a bicycle. It appears that belongings in front gardens are fair game, obviously they are not, but it seems the way now, so don't leave anything of value out there. Especially bikes - after "bedtime".

mynamehere Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Are they driving down the street with a metal

> detector in the van?



Na - not quite that sophisticated. They just enter your front yard and root through all your stuff. Sure if they came across a metal detector they would not use it but shop it in!

Umm

Well noticed scrap metal open back truck come threw our road this week twice same day looking in front gardens for items left unattended they tried take neighbours bike, but did ring bell told them not to be taken rang again following day told them take it id ring police.

did not come back!

scrap metal van however comes on and off weekly some months then not at all for a while.

no gates taken that im aware of.....

  • 8 months later...

A repeat program about local scrap collection and dealing, on Channel 4 tonight at 23:05, might be interesting:


" ... the licensed ?scrappers? who scour the streets of Sydenham for discarded cookers and sinks are at the far end of the supply chain.


"It?s a case of, where there?s muck there?s brass ? and copper and lead too. ?I don?t really know what the recession is,? says scavenger Adam, who can earn up to ?100,000 a year from the junk he gathers in his transit van ? all legit. No wonder he wears a Rolex." http://www.radiotimes.com/episode/cqg9qx/getting-rich-in-the-recession--series-1---1-getting-rich-in-the-recession-scrappers

Hi, there's a metal gate behind a fence in a bit of wasteland next to the railway line near Peckham Rye station on Blenheim Grove. It has a note on it saying it's for sale for ?50, call Stan and a mobile number. It's been there at least a couple of days. It may be legit, but it seems like a strange place to be selling a gate. Anyone who has lost a gate recently might like to take a look.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Thank you, this really made me chuckle. It's like you met my brother as he would be the one taking more than his share. Plus the 'pikey' chutney is a winner. Unusual as in can't be identified??? Sadly I'm not the host otherwise I would definitely do that I regularly shop in the Cheese Block and am a fan. But as people have pointed out, there is no cheese shop that charges less based on bulk, so Aldi unusual cheeses may be what the familam receive!
    • I like the look of SD's Sweet and Sour chicken. It's a really good dish when made freshly and well. I'll need to try it. Sad that Oriental Star and Lucky House by Dulwich Library both closed at a similarish time. They were decent, reliable, "British Chinese" takeaways.
    • William S Spicer was a family-owned firm that initially made horse drawn delivery carts for breweries (especially Fullers Brewery in W London) and horse-drawn trams. With the advent of the internal combustion engine, they successfully made the transition to coachbuilding delivery vehicles London's leading department stores using German engines. WW2 interrupted their business for obvious reasons, and their postwar attempt to become the local assembler and distributor of Bulgarian "Izmama" trucks was not blessed with good fortune. In 1953, the company pivoted to being a full-service garage, leveraging their reputation for honesty and excellence.  In 1972, the Dulwich site was sold to its present owners. William S Spicer III (the grandson of the founder) retired to Lancashire, where he founded a sanctuary for the endangered ineptia beetle, which he had encountered in Bulgaria while travelling for business. In 1978, Spicer was awarded an OBE for conservation, and a newly-discovered  beetle was named after him by the Bulgarian People's National Academy of Sciences - Byturus Spicerius.
    • I'm glad all this talk of cheese has enticed David Peckham back to the forum. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...