What's new
British Ordnance Collectors Network

Join over 14,000 collectors of inert military ordnance. Get expert identification help for shells, fuzes, grenades, and more — plus access our classifieds marketplace and decades of archived knowledge. Free to register, takes seconds.

The Tunnels of Vimy (WW1)

kz11gr

Well-Known Member
Hallo

videos about the tunnel war and what remains today in the ground of the front.

Sure you'll enjoy , and better if you speak German.

British army pioniers & Eod at work today deep under the ground discover explosives and undiscovered tunnels.


regards

http://www.durandgroup.org.uk/Investigating_Vimy_Ridge.htm

http://www.durandgroup.org.uk/Investigating_Vimy_Ridge2.htm

http://www.durandgroup.org.uk/Investigating_Vimy_Ridge3.htm

http://www.durandgroup.org.uk/Investigating_Vimy_Ridge4.htm

http://www.durandgroup.org.uk/Investigating_Vimy_Ridge5.htm

http://www.durandgroup.org.uk/Investigating_Vimy_Ridge6.htm

http://www.durandgroup.org.uk/Investigating_Vimy_Ridge7.htm

http://www.durandgroup.org.uk/Investigating_Vimy_Ridge8.htm

http://www.durandgroup.org.uk/Investigating_Vimy_Ridge9.htm

====

TNskull%202_x.jpg


TNjawbone_x.jpg


TNToffee%202_X.jpg


TNUnexploded%20Munitions_X.jpg
 


Thanks for the links - very interesting website - I recall seeing an excellent documentary on this a while ago.
Interesting to see you use dowsing – I was a total sceptic until I tried this on an old tin mine in cornwall to find minerals as a lad and it worked! I confess I have not used it to look for aircraft and rely on modern technology, though several years ago I gave my son a set of dowsing rods (to keep him occupied and quiet!) which he then used on a He177 crash site in France – I had found only a few very small aluminium cornflakes with a detector – he found two instrument faces and an 18 inch long piece of armour plate!
 
Top