A woman who dug up a suspected bomb
in her garden washed it in her sink before police were called and a controlled
explosion was carried out. Carole Longhorn struck the metal object with her spade while gardening at her
home in Melton Constable, Norfolk. Her husband, Clive, said: "I heard a rattle in the kitchen and saw she was
washing it in the blooming sink." The object, which is about 25cm long (10in) and thought to have been a World
War II projectile, was blown up.
Mrs Longhorn, 66, said she shouted out to her husband, who was indoors, after
digging up the explosive. "I called my husband to come and have a look at it, but he wouldn't so I brought
it indoors," she said. Mr Longhorn, 60, said his wife put the object on the coffee table. "You can imagine what I said to her," he said. Mrs Longhorn washed the bomb in the sink before taking it outside.
"She took a few precautions," Mr Longhorn said. "She put a plastic seat on
the top in case it went off." Mr Longhorn, who said the object was "heavy", then called 999 and a police
officer advised they leave the house for a few hours as a precaution. They returned just as a bomb disposal squad from RAF Wittering in
Cambridgeshire arrived at their house on Wednesday. "They said it was live and that we were very lucky," Mr Longhorn said. The object was driven to a nearby quarry and detonated.
"It was brilliant," Mr Longhorn said. "The ground shook - you could feel the
shockwaves come across and bump into you. The bloke said to me: 'Tell the wife if she finds any more, put them in a
nice neat heap and we'll deal with them all at once'." A spokesman at RAF Wittering said the 4.5in (11cm) diameter projectile "more
than likely" dated back to World War II. "We couldn't be sure it wasn't live so took the precaution and detonated it,"
the spokesman said. He added that people who find an item they are unsure of should "leave it
alone and dial 999".
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