Strange Findings in Drains
Sewer blocked by a large Pooh (and other weird items): Scottish Water launches campaign aimed at reducing 40,000 blockages a year.
As the ‘bear of very little brain’ himself once put it: “People who don’t think probably don’t have brains; rather, they have grey fluff that’s blown into their heads by mistake.”
Scottish Water has launched a campaign aimed at getting some of their customers to use their ‘grey fluff’ a little more when flushing things down the toilet, after they released a staggering list of some of the weird and wonderful objects found blocking sewers.
Among the items people thought it was wise to flush down toilets, or dump in various manholes, were a pair of pants found in a pumping station, a goldfish, a snake at Dunfermline sewage works, 2×4 timber, a dead sheep, false teeth, golf balls, a credit card (which had been stolen from its owner and flushed down a pub toilet), a fax machine and a large Winnie the Pooh teddy.
In a storm tank at Gatehead, workers found a dead fully grown cow that had apparently fallen in after someone removed a manhole cover. Elsewhere workers discovered an Action Man figure (with his boots still on), a deckchair and an outboard motor for a boat.
Pink ladies bike and fax machine found at East Kilbride Scottish Water has launched their new campaign after it said it dealt with more than 40,000 blockages in the drains and sewer network. Most of these blockages were caused by cooking oil, nappies and baby wipes being put in sinks and toilets.
New Campaign
Their new campaign, which sees the screening of the company’s first ever television advert tonight, aims to cut down on the blockages which the water company says costs around £7m a year and causes misery and flooding to thousands of households across the country.
The advert will also highlight the importance of saving water.
“Cooking fat, oils and grease coupled with bathroom waste such as cotton buds, nappies and baby wipes creates a perfect storm of solidified fat and material that can’t breaks down easily like toilet paper and collects in large clumps beneath Scotland’s streets. These blockages create costs of over £7million a year for the publicly owned utility firm,” the company says.
Chris Wallace, Director of Communications, Scottish Water, said: “The waste water drain which runs from your house to the public sewer is usually only about four inches wide, which is less than the diameter of a DVD.
“This drain is designed to take only the used water from sinks, showers and baths and pee, poo and toilet paper from the toilet. Scottish Water believes the best way to tackle blocked drains and sewer flooding is to work with our customers to prevent blockages that can clog up the cycle in the first place.”
A snake was found in the waterworks at Dunfermline
Some of the objects found in Scottish Water sewers:
- An outboard motor for a boat
- A fully functioning clothes iron
- A scaffolding pole
- A football
- Toy soldiers (used to be mounted on the wall at the wastewater treatment works in Dumfries)
- Deckchair
- 2×4 timber
- A dead sheep
- A mattress
- Hand truck /parcel trolley
- False teeth
- Golf balls
- Lighters
- Watches
- Credit card that belonged to one of the guys – was stolen in the pub and flushed down the pub toilet.
- Mobile phones
- A frog was found inside the pump right next to the propeller – how he got in there is a mystery
- A live badger was found in a pumping station well at Drongan
- Traffic cone – Moodiesburn
- Timber – Moodiesburn
- A dead, fully grown, cow, found in the storm tanks at Gatehead. Turns out a cover had been removed from a manhole in a field and the cow had fallen in.
- A pair of trousers recently turned up at Kirkcaldy waste water treatment works
- A live otter from the aereation ditch at Dornoch wwtw
- A live salmon at Seafield WWTW
- A tractor tyre
- An Action Man figure, who still had his boots on
- An orange
- A railway sleeper
Read the Article Here: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/sewer-blocked-by-a-large-pooh-and-other-weird-items-scottish-water-launches-campaign-aimed-at-reducing-40000-blockages-a-year-9134054.html