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To infinity and beyond.

This caught my eye this morning, from the BBC website (again).  The beeb has many faults but for a lot of things they are still one of the best news sources available, and this is one of those things.

A chartered surveyor is hoping to erect Lincolnshire's new flag at the North Pole in an expedition this April.

Andrew Pearce, 42, is one of a team of six taking the 70-mile journey over a nine to 10 day period in temperatures as low as -35C. .....

His team will be led by Nottinghamshire-based explorer Mike Thornewill, whose company Polar Challenge International is organising the trip.

The explorers' physical aptitude for the task was tested by dragging an old lorry tyre along a farm track for about a mile within a given time.

Andrew Pearce in training
He said it will be his toughest challenge to date
And Mr Pearce's training for the expedition has involved pulling a 60 kilo tyre with a make-shift harness made of his wife's riding equipment in his home village of Fulbeck. He has also been cycling and running.......

Mr Pearce, who has met the costs of his trip using his own funds, is aiming to raise £20,000 for Macmillan Cancer Relief and the Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire Air Ambulance.
Read the article in it's entirety here.

Macmillan Cancer relief is a charity dear to my own heart. But what first caught my eye was the Lincolnshire county flag.  US readers will need to know that a County is a much more important regional unit in the UK than the counties into which your states are divided. The boundary rearrangements of the 70s apart they are centuries old, some date back unchanged to the Saxon Kingdoms of the 9th century. Certain former Saxon Kingdoms have had a shield as their emblem for many generations.  These feature the Saxon seax, not an axe, but a formidible notched sword. They look eastern but they are not. This was the weapon of choice for my ancestors, the freemen.

 essex arms

And recently several counties have designed flags which are proudly displayed.  The Cornish flag was adopted from the Saint of the tin miners, St. Piran. The black is said to represent the ashes of the smelting fires and the  white the colour of the metal.

The Lincolnshire Flag which it is hoped will be placed at the North Pole (or the bit of ice floating over the north pole at that time)  features a red cross with a fleur de lis in the centre on a blue and green background. A gold border represents the crops grown in the county. The blue on the flag represents the sea and sky of Lincolnshire and the green symbolises the fields, while the fleur de lys represents the City of Lincoln. 

Lincolnshire flag

I wish him well.  This sounds barking mad, but within a fine tradition of barking madness.



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