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Your Top Worst Explores

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The Lone Ranger

Safety is paramount!
Staff member
Moderator
Early days at Pyestock for me, happened to be working not so far away, but as alone it was a sole explore. Met security through the fence the first evening so took photos of flowers and discussed why the woodland environment is so important and pointed out a few choice plants and fungi.
Following evening I popped in without any issues, things started going tits up when I left a basement by a builders ladder, it collapsed just as I got to the top and trapped my feet between the rungs. Eventually kicked it free and pulled up onto a ledge.
Once I'd settled down after that the obvious exit was between 2 steel panels that had been propped open with a bit of scaffold tube, I put my head through and must have disturbed something as the scaffold tube hit me on my head and the 2 steel panels then snapped shut like a mouse trap.
I saw stars for a bit, dribbled some blood and then made a hasty retreat over the fences and back to my B&B so I could turn up at work the next day. Never managed a revisit unfortunately.
 

mookster

grumpy sod
Regular User
There was one belter of a bad experience that I somehow forgot entirely.

Wispers School for Girls in Haslemere at the arse end of 2009 so among my first batch of explores. It was the second time I'd met up with someone who was to become one of my best exploring buddies and still is to this day and we arrived, parked up nearby and walked into the school site. The school, based inside an old manor house, had only been closed for a short period of time at this point and so to all intents and purposes looked pretty much like an active school - no fences, nothing at all like that had been put up yet and the gates were left open for access to a couple of nearby buildings so it wasn't exactly a challenging place to get into. We found the access point my friend had been told about, the only open door on the whole building and ducked inside quickly and began shooting. All went swimmingly for maybe half an hour, we had located a bizarre room on the ground floor with cupboards filled with large knives, full face masks and all sorts of weird things that shouldn't have been in a school and so were having a bit of fun when we heard a car pull up outside the window of the room we were in. Immediately we stopped what we were doing and heard two car doors open and close, then the boot open and a dog bark. I think we both simultaneously thought 'oh shit', and backed out the room into the corridor.

We were stood in the corridor listening for any movement or noises and we both heard a key turn in a locked door at the end so without even speaking we belted it up the nearby stairs and ended up in a shower room. We listened to the noises downstairs for what seemed like an age but must have only been a couple of minutes and decided we would head as far away from the noises as we could upstairs, then go down the main staircase and out. As quiet as mice we made it down the main staircase and then realised that whoever they were, they were between us and where the only apparently unlocked door was. The next bit I remember as plain as the day it happened, me and my friend made our way into the old cafeteria area and in front of us to our right were two doors. One lead into the kitchens and the other one slightly further away lead into one of the corridors. I walked to the second door and as my hands moved the latch, a cacophony of angry angry dog noises erupted from right behind it - cue immediate running in the other direction from us both. We hastily headed back through the school away from the barking and ended up in one of the huge front rooms with big bay windows, and it was then I remembered that earlier I had seen this tiny little half height door beside the bay window in the room we had ended up in and thought it was odd. Realising where we were I prayed that the tiny little door was unlocked and miraculously it was, I flung it open and both of us caned it back down across the front lawn and off the property.

To this day I don't know whether it was security with dogs, police with dogs, god knows but I think they were simply doing some training and we managed to somehow avoid becoming a live training exercise through sheer pot luck with our movements.
 

Jj0

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
I squeezed through a very small window at an old Asylum (can't remember which one, they all involved a squeeze at some point), that with my height was a complete bugger to get through, to only discover that the window in the next room was complete missing.
We did this at Denbigh, but as I jumped down I landed on a very slippy piece of plywood and literally ended up on my arse In slime which my son found hysterical We then walked round a corner to find an open door.
We said after this we’d always finish looking before attempting a tricky entrance, but we don't learn I climbed a hera fence at Redbank fell off the top of it and impaled myself on a branch, luckily my pants were more ripped than me, but had a massive bruise for weeks. When we’d got to the end of our visit we walked out the completely open entrance at the end.
Ive also fallen into a pond at a hotel that was hidden by overgrown plants and had to drive home freezing and soggy.
I do sometimes wonder if I’m getting too old for this.
 

Giymo85

Amateur and proud
28DL Full Member
For me it has to be the Central Methodist Hall in Birmingham.

Drove down early on a Sunday and as we were parking close by 3 police cars flew down the street, stopping at the off licence over the road from the front entrance. Something had clearly gone down in there because they quickly cordoned the shop off. My wife asked if we should bin it and I said no, they weren't interested in us so let's crack on.

Found the access and made our way up and in to wait for the light to come up. Got into the main hall and started to unpack our brekkie when we heard movement so we displaced and started to look around the rooms around the outside. When we moved into one of the former bars we spotted what looked like a pool of blood, with a length of scaffolding pole partly into it in the middle of the floor. There were also bloody footprints leading out of the door at the other end of the room.

At this stage we became more concerned that the movement we had been constantly hearing had seemed to be moving away from us the entire time so started to head back the way we had come. As we got to the top of the metal staircase we heard shouts and running from inside towards us.

We hustled back out and to the door that got back to street level. She pushed the door a little then froze. When she turned back to me she had gone white and told me we couldn't leave. I asked why and she said that there were a couple having sex in the doorway. Well I just thought fuck that, gave the door a good shove and scared the hell out of them.

On reflection once we had calmed down outside, the thing was clearly a set up and the blood fake. It was too wet not to smell and that much blood would be pretty whiffy. Probably some YouTube prank. Still, scared the shit out of both of us.

Amusingly enough, we then went to the Shakespeare County Raceway and got caught walking along the strip just as we were planning to leave. Not our day I guess.
 

Alley

Conspicuous Loiterer
Regular User
Hmm, so many kinds of worst: wettest, dirtiest, scariest, underwhelming, disappointing. Here are a couple of the latter. Apologies for dramatic reminiscing about the old days.

ABC Cinema in Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent This was in 2007, and the ABC is long gone so I think the statute of limitations has passed on describing access. A smallish, high street cinema with offices on one side and a casino in the basement.

For a while back then there were periods of reports on similar locations. For example, when the asylums closed everybody was doing hospitals. There was ‘Year of the Boat’. Along came the rise of the multi-plex and everybody was doing cinemas. This was ‘Year of the Cinema’. The ABC was due for demolition. As far as I know there were (and still are) no other reports. Access was ‘impossible’. We had to crack it.

The cinema itself had no ground floor windows, and all doors were sealed shut. The casino, we assumed, would be connected to the cinema on the inside. So, getting into the casino would get us into the cinema. We discovered that the casino had a broken vent cover. Yes, an actual air vent that we would crawl along, like in the movies, and magically drop into the vault.

I (probably) wouldn’t do this nowadays, but being young and reckless we got on all fours and ventured into the unknown. It was tight, hot, and extremely dusty. (And so was the vent). We had absolutely no idea what we were doing. It got smaller and I was considering sliding back out, but then appeared a ‘plate’ on the floor. We lifted it and were delighted to find ourselves about two metres off the ground in a small room. Luckily over some fixed shelves so we could climb down from the pipe, and more importantly get back out again.

Finally, the anti-climax to our adventure! A trashed room with sticky carpet and broken glitter ball. No casino goodness, no access to the ABC.

Several attempts later we made it though, and it was worth it.


Woodford Aerodrome, Cheshire @FreshFingers, SoundLightGo, and I visited towards the tail end of demo/deconstruction so we didn’t expect to see a great deal. However, when it came to it, we actually got to see even less than expected. We knew there was a security patrol so we decided darkness was the first requirement for this trip. Looking back, it’s not – how do you light up for photos? Whatever, we got there late in the evening; FF and I had cameras and tripods. SLG carried an umbrella. The long kind, not a pocket-size. It wasn’t even raining.

We found a discreet hole in the fence which someone had kindly mentioned to us. Skirted a building then made our way down the runway. It was a huge site. We were hundreds of yards from the buildings so when we saw the flicker of torchlight in the distance, it wasn’t a big deal. We were in the dark, loitering around the tower, taking long exposure pics. Laughing and joking, quietly of course.

We watched as the torch-wielder made his way to the perimeter fence. Walked up and down. Stopped at our hole. Stayed there a long time, presumably fixing the hole.. or waiting for us.

Ok, that’s fine, we will leave by another route. We just need to make it to the fence. From the middle of the airfield, with barely any cover. No worries, he won’t see us from this far away in the dark. Then he swung the torch around, and goddammit if the beam wasn’t a hundred yards long, and a million lumens. I mean, where do you even get a torch like that?

In between sweeps of illumination from the human watchtower, we dashed from bin to shed to barrel until we ran out of cover. All we had left was unmowed grass. We threw ourselves to the ground and started slithering.

As the distant grass glowed bright white again, I pressed my face to the ground to avoid the beam of light. And then it started to rain – you know that light drizzle that gets you really wet? SLG opened his umbrella and lay underneath it, just millimetres below the tips of the blades of grass. We soaked for what seemed a very long time.

The light of danger passed, and we dashed the final yards to the fence, under cover of a tree. Now, for some reason (either it was an unclimbable, greasy monster of a ten foot fence; or we were scared of being seen, or one of us was incapable of climbing even a six foot fence – who can say… the reason is lost to the mists of time. I will let you make up your own mind) we ended up digging our way out. Fingers in the mud, scrabbling before he came back to make a shallow pit to slide through.

So, disappointing in one way, but kinda fun too. I managed to get a couple of rubbish pics.

852044


852045
 

Stitch

SWC
28DL Full Member
Many many many bad explores! Hard to choose from, and which to share or not haha...

One I will share is my experience with the old Battersea Power Station tunnels that run under the Thames from the other side of Chelsea bridge. After gaining entry through sliding down the small brick air shaft in the park and then squeezing my body along the shimmy section, the tightness of which CANNOT be overstated, we were in the tunnel. After walking under the Thames and up the other side only to find all entry to the Power Station had been bricked off we plodded back from whence we came.

When we got to our exit point, facing the shimmy section again we all took 5 minutes to prepare ourselves. It was this point when one of our group 'Luke' heard voices on the other side of the shimmy section coming from above ground. Luke then turned and said to the rest of us "they're sealing it up!" and he scurried through the shimmy like a mouse to cheese. I was 3rd to exit the tunnel and could hear the voices of some unhappy people on the other side.

One by one all 5 of us popped out of the air vent that was not much bigger than a manhole. The parks security goblin was not pleased at all with the naughty crew that just emerged from the dusty depths, although not in much real legal danger I still put my SD card in my sock but the situation never got that intense. On the footpath next to us I could see sparks of the rest of the parks grounds team cutting some metal grating to fix over the air vent. If we were any later leaving the tunnel we would have been sealed in, that would have been life threatening and is a worrying thought.

But such are the dangers of the hobby/lifestyle/religion that we subscribe to.

Here are a couple of the shots from the tunnel.

smol tunnel.JPG






smol tunnel 2.jpg
 

zombizza

Sore Knee
Regular User
Hmmmm
Third time I attempted to do the gasometer next to battersea power station. Sliding under the gate. Get stuck, a 'security man' comes over with a machete. He told me to stay still because he was going 'to cut me up'. All while people on the street opposite were laughing and filming me. It was quite surreal and funny at the time. Gutted to have not got in though - never managed it.

Also jumping into a ditch at Corringham after a security guard drove by just at the moment we were getting over the fence-so annoying as we scoped it out for a good hour. Rensnapped my ACL, and landed in some water at the bottom. Nearly threw up with the pain, missed out on the site and ended up on crutches for 4 weeks. urgh, i was pretty down.
 

FreshFingers

Choose life, choose tunnels
Regular User
There's a flippin Avro Vulcan in your line of sight and this is a 'worst explore' ?!

That's just made me realise i've lost a drive with images on! I think it was mid-restoration at the time, but I did have images of it when parked on a remote stand closer to assembly hall. Scruffy old bird, but scrubbed up well now.
 

Mondeo

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Did an old farm yesterday near Chester, hoping it would have something that would be of interest in it, sadly disappointed that the best thing about the place was a manky trailer tent by the side of the road, not even bothered taking the photos off the camera it was that bad,

M.
 

mookster

grumpy sod
Regular User
Had a random memory pop into my head today of a place that I think deserves an honourable mention in mine.

Last year during my trip to the States I was up in Canada for a morning shooting a large car graveyard I'd arranged a visit to. That went off without a hitch although it was ended prematurely by the arrival of some truly torrential rain. So we packed our stuff up and headed back across into the States via probably the least used border crossing in the whole of the state and find ourselves in a town looking for some food. We duly found a suitable establishment and whilst waiting for our food settled down to scanning the area on Google maps looking for places to explore as neither of us had visited this town before.

Within a few minutes we'd located a likely place just down the road and although we didn't know what it was it was large and industrial which was good enough. After lunch we drove the short distance there and quickly found a way in, and immediately realised we'd found a former cheese factory. The smell in the room filled with storage tanks was the single worst thing I've ever smelled, the factory had been closed for nearly a decade and the smell was almost indescribable. It was like being punched in the face with a wheel of decade old gorgonzola, unsurprisingly we didn't spend long in there before leaving.

Actually now I think of it, it had a cracker of a boiler room I should post in the boiler room thread!
 
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