Pub Quiz thread

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!
Just to change the topic a little, which plant am I describing ?

1. It has a connection to the Volga.
2. It was cultivated more in England before than after World War II.
3. It was traded by the Romans for medicinal purposes.
4. It comes originally from a cold climate
 
BB by teat then! And you get a Brucie Bonus for knowing where I got the question from!!!!

I also have 'Does Anything eat Wasps', 'Do Polar Bears Get Lonely', 'How to Fossilise Your Hamster' and 'Why Don't Penguins Feet Freeze'... so I won't be using them in the future :headbang:

The same author has another in the series called 'Do bats have bollocks?'.....

The one bright spot in Australia's shameful Ashes effort so far has been 19 year-old Ashton Agar setting a record score for a number 11 bat on Test debut, 98 runs. But what is the highest Test debut score for a 19 year-old anywhere in the batting order and who set it?

Mohammed Ashraful, Bangladesh...

That would be Sachin Tendulkar but still 46 days older than Ashraful at the time.... unless it's a woman you're after????

Doug Walters for Australia in 1965. ?

Spot on.....

EPIC FAIL H-F Read the f*****g question <steam><grr>:headbang:<whistle>:emoticon-0181-fubar
 

Correct NZ. The name is derived from Rha = the old Greek word for the Volga & Barbarum (The Barbars having traded the plant over the Volga). The plant also grows wild on the banks of the Volga, but the traded object was the dried powdered root of the Chinese Rhubarb (The plant originally comes from the Himalayas). This was used medicinally for 2,000 years until an English medical student risked a bite into a red stalk and realized that, with cooking and sugar, it could be edible. The plant was cultivated extensively in England up to the war, but then disappeared from culinary use as a result of sugar rationing - and never again reached it's pre war popularity. The leaves are not only poisonous for us - but are avoided by slugs as well. Over to you.
 
This place was first mentioned in a book published in 1933. It has since been found in Uruguay, South Africa, USA, and can currently be found in China and Papua New Guinea. What is it called?


I'm off to bed so if you think you have got it right carry on without me.
 
All I know is John Hilton wrote about Shangri La in 1933!

So, according to popular myth, since debunked, how did the kangaroo get its name?

I do not understand you CD. A local was asked what the animal was and the reply was not understood by the person who asked the question who thought he heard the answer "I do not understand you" in the language of the local.
 
I do not understand you CD. A local was asked what the animal was and the reply was not understood by the person who asked the question who thought he heard the answer "I do not understand you" in the language of the local.

The myth has it that it was Captain Cook, who was marooned for seven weeks, but yes, it was a misunderstanding of the question! such a shame that it's not a true story! <ok>

Over to you Ak!
 
I have a good question.

King Harold Godwinson and his army beat a Norwegian army at Stamford Bridge. Who were the leaders of the Norwegian army and how were the leaders of both sides related?