On one hand I see a huge need to preserve our heritage and our archeologically significant past.
On the other hand, anyone who has lived in a old house knows just how much crap they used to throw away in the 1800’s if they have dug about in their gardens. The late Georgian era wasn’t that long ago and I would hesitate to say that their rubbish was much of a “treasure trove”.
Maybe the golden lining in this is that we can all start dumping rubble sacks at the local assessment office rather than paying for the local tip to dispose of it?
1 comment
This is kinda interesting.
On one hand I see a huge need to preserve our heritage and our archeologically significant past.
On the other hand, anyone who has lived in a old house knows just how much crap they used to throw away in the 1800’s if they have dug about in their gardens. The late Georgian era wasn’t that long ago and I would hesitate to say that their rubbish was much of a “treasure trove”.
Maybe the golden lining in this is that we can all start dumping rubble sacks at the local assessment office rather than paying for the local tip to dispose of it?