- 1 week ago
Lost and Found in the Lakes - Season 2 Episode 7 -
The Shepherd’s Lost Ring
The Shepherd’s Lost Ring
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FunTranscript
00:00Lake District, England's largest national park.
00:04Absolute perfection. I don't actually think it gets better than this.
00:08Every year, over 18 million people flock to its spectacular landscape.
00:15But if any of them lose something precious here, finding it can be tough.
00:21I was absolutely distraught.
00:23Gave me a hardback.
00:25It was a devastating day, wasn't it?
00:27It's gone.
00:27I thought, no.
00:29I hope there's a chance.
00:31So I brought together local detectorists and underwater explorers.
00:36It's like Avengers Assemble, isn't it?
00:38To scour a lake and fell for treasured lost possessions.
00:42No way!
00:45Sometimes our searches bring up surprises.
00:48Looks like it's been in a while.
00:51Other times...
00:52I've got a hair curler!
00:53What we pull up is just rubbish.
00:56That's not the same bike.
00:58Ready to be transformed into new treasures.
01:01Oh, that's beautiful.
01:03By some of the finest crafters from the region.
01:06Run away!
01:07But best of all...
01:08This is our guy.
01:10Does it get better than this?
01:11...is when we can reunite our finds...
01:14With the people who thought they were lost forever.
01:21This is really special.
01:23Good.
01:24Now get back to the lake and find more stuff.
01:33Even in sideways rain, blowing a gale, they love it.
01:36On today's rain-soaked episode...
01:39A very sad one I lost it.
01:41We search for a treasured ring lost in the fells over 60 years ago.
01:45It's devastating, really.
01:47Oh, it was.
01:48A discarded find becomes the centrepiece for traditional crafters, Steph.
01:52It will blend into the stick very nicely.
01:54And a phone found on Windermere...
01:58The first name to meet, I think it sounds a little French.
02:01...sparks a worldwide hunt for mew.
02:04The area code is American.
02:07Oh, I'm sorry.
02:08You can't leave a message.
02:09But first, I'm in the boathouse with our archaeologist
02:14and archive detective, Sam,
02:16looking over a very intriguing piece of mail.
02:20So, Sam, I received this letter, which is so endearing.
02:24It was hand-delivered to me by a chap called Roy.
02:28His friend Mike lost his wedding ring when he was a shepherd.
02:32Now, this was lost 60 years ago.
02:35That's a long one.
02:36What would happen in six decades, then?
02:37How far could it go down?
02:39Some things could still be on the surface.
02:40We find things on the surface
02:41that have been there hundreds and thousands of years.
02:44And sometimes things that have just been there 10 years
02:46can get worked their way all the way down.
02:48What, worth looking for?
02:49100%.
02:50I mean, when has the taphonomy of a field ever stopped us?
02:54I love that.
02:55I don't know what taphonomy means, but I like it.
02:59There's just no way we can turn this search down.
03:06Mike and I, we've been friends for...
03:09About 69 years.
03:10Oh.
03:11It's a long time.
03:12I've known him all in my life.
03:14In the fortnight's turn, I'll be 84.
03:16Yeah.
03:17He's just a chicken.
03:21But even lifelong friends can still have surprises in store for each other.
03:26One day, after we'd watched Lost and Founding the Lakes,
03:31on the way to the golf club, Mike said,
03:34about 50 years then, I lost a ring.
03:36I said, did they wear that?
03:37He said, when I was shepherding some sheep in a field.
03:41I've shepherded all my life.
03:43I put my dog around the sheep and they were coming towards me
03:46and I clapped my hands to stop them and my ring flew off.
03:52So, unknown to Mike, I wrote to Helen.
03:59After all these years, it'll be a miracle, I think, if they're found.
04:03So, we're heading to the fells, to the stunning landscape of Icot Hill.
04:16Forged by lava nearly half a billion years ago,
04:19it's a wild habitat off the beaten track
04:22and it's the place where Mike's precious ring has been missing for 60 years.
04:27Beautiful weather.
04:28I mean, it doesn't matter if it's raining for your job, does it?
04:30No. No, we're all good.
04:32Waterproof.
04:33Braving the weather are detectorists Shirley, Kate and Graham.
04:45Right, guys, we're looking for a ring that was lost over 45 years ago.
04:50That is potentially a problem, is it?
04:53One thing we've got on our side,
04:55nobody would have been up here searching with a metal detector.
04:57Because it's private land?
04:58Because it's private land, it's isolated,
05:00the chances of somebody picking it up are very, very remote,
05:03so we've got a really good chance of getting this ring today.
05:05I'm highly optimistic.
05:07I love the optimism here, guys.
05:09Yeah.
05:09OK.
05:10Let's go for it.
05:11Let's make Mike happy.
05:17You count me, who's counting?
05:18Oh, right.
05:19One, two, three, four.
05:21Mike's worked every inch of this land
05:24and totals exactly where he remembers losing the ring.
05:28Nine, ten, eleven.
05:30Right, this is our starting point here, guys.
05:32Perfect.
05:33If we work as a team together,
05:35in a line,
05:36we could do this, you know.
05:40OK.
05:42The machines are on.
05:43The machines are on.
05:48But despite being lost for 60 years,
05:51of all the days to go looking for Mike's ring,
05:54we've chosen today.
05:55I'm not going to lie,
06:00this weather has taken a dramatic downturn.
06:04It's quite intense.
06:06You expect a bit of rain in the Lake District,
06:08but this is definitely, um,
06:10freak, as we would say, round here.
06:13But they love it.
06:14Even in sideways rain, blowing a gale,
06:18they're not complaining.
06:20Go team!
06:21When you lose something like that,
06:25it's devastating, really.
06:27Oh, it would.
06:28They've been married nearly now 63 years.
06:31Goodness me.
06:32It would mean everything to him.
06:34But not just to Mike,
06:36because it would to, uh,
06:38Sheila's wife as well.
06:40The rings, yeah, they mean a lot.
06:43They mean a lot.
06:44Very quiet.
06:50I've even had to test if my metal detector switched on.
06:53It's that quiet.
06:55There's not a lot of junk.
06:57So it gives us a chance of finding that ring.
07:00If we get a good signal,
07:01there's a possibility it is the ring.
07:03We're just going to have to look for that one
07:05positive signal.
07:08But it's clear the ring isn't near this part of the fence.
07:12Bit soggy, isn't it?
07:13Yeah.
07:14Might just stick me hook up, I think.
07:16I think we should go...
07:16I think we should just go a little bit further.
07:18Yeah.
07:18Oh, yeah, yeah.
07:19I think we should go right into the next dip.
07:21Just to that.
07:22Yeah.
07:22Yeah.
07:26Hopefully, by broadening our search,
07:28we'll improve our chances of finding Mike's precious ring.
07:37It's really rare for us to not find anything on our searches.
07:42Our detectors are usually in full chorus.
07:51What'd you get?
07:52What'd you get?
07:52I got a phone.
07:53Three sets of sunglasses.
07:55A brooch with, like, diamond-y things in it.
07:57Lots of stuff.
07:59Good stuff.
08:01Discovering precious finds, unearthing history...
08:04It looks like a TV aerial.
08:05..or bits of rubbish we can clear away.
08:08But this year, we've discovered a new way to seek out treasure.
08:13It's an underwater drone.
08:16It will go down easy at the bottom of Lake Windermere.
08:18And pilot Jay has already had great success,
08:22including fishing out a phone at the bottom of the lake.
08:27And back at the boathouse, for finds like this,
08:30our social media detective Mew is ready and waiting
08:33to try and track down an owner.
08:35It doesn't seem to be in bad shape.
08:37It has a few cracks here and there.
08:39But I'm going to open this case and see if maybe there's a bank card.
08:42Maybe there's something I can use.
08:44Oh, unfortunately, there's nothing in there.
08:46That's such a shame.
08:48Let's see if it turns on and maybe we'll get some clues.
08:52We have no idea how long the phone has been
08:55in the depths of Windermere or if it will still work.
09:01I see a picture.
09:03I think it might be three daughters.
09:05Gosh.
09:06I'm going to see if there's an emergency contact.
09:11OK.
09:12So, while checking for an emergency contact,
09:15the medical ID has come up with a lot of useful information.
09:20The first name to me is quite unique.
09:22I think it's Salil.
09:23Sounds a little French.
09:25A French name could mean our first ever European find.
09:29I also have a number for a father and mother.
09:32I'm going to look up the area code to see what location they're from.
09:36OK.
09:38The area code is American, specifically Colorado.
09:43The mystery deepens.
09:46Incredibly, new search has now gone transatlantic.
09:50OK.
09:51I'm calling the person listed as Dada in her phone
09:54and we'll see if he picks up.
10:00I'm sorry.
10:01You can't leave a message.
10:04That's OK because we have another contact to reach.
10:07So, we're going to try the mum's number.
10:10Hello, you've reached Alessandra.
10:17Thank you for calling.
10:18For a quicker response, you can text me at this phone number.
10:22I look forward to getting back with you soon.
10:24OK.
10:25The voicemail says to send a message.
10:27So, I'm going to shoot over a message
10:29and maybe we'll get in contact.
10:31Let's see.
10:41Meanwhile, ten miles up the road at Icot Hill,
10:45our detectorists are on the soggy hunt
10:47for the wedding ring lost while Mike was shepherding these fields
10:49over 60 years ago.
10:52But today's search isn't the first time it's been looked for.
10:56There was no way I could find it.
11:00I crawled about on my hands and knees
11:02searching for about two or three hours after I lost it
11:05and I went back again and I still couldn't find it.
11:08But there wasn't any metal detectors about then.
11:12It's that long ago, you know.
11:15Sadly, so far, even our expert detectorists are drawing a blank.
11:22What are you thinking?
11:24Very quiet.
11:25Up to now, me, Kate and Shirley have not had a single signal.
11:28Oh, between you?
11:30Between us.
11:31Yeah.
11:31So, we're going to keep going, we're going to keep trying.
11:34Once we've done this patch,
11:35we're going to go down a little bit lower
11:36and then work our way back up.
11:38Still confident?
11:39Oh, yeah, I'm ultra confident.
11:40Oh, good.
11:42I'm going to ride on that confidence wave, Graham.
11:44Yes, absolutely.
11:47Suddenly, there's a noise we haven't heard all day.
11:52I hear a beep.
11:53And it's got everyone excited.
11:55The detector, it has two different sounds.
11:57So, when it's iron, it gives more of a grunting tone.
12:00Right.
12:01And when it's, say, for instance, gold or silver,
12:03it'll give a nice, high-pitched, clear tone.
12:05And that sounds quite, quite nice in my ear.
12:07All right, so let's hope it's a good grunt.
12:12Sounds a bit better now, actually.
12:14Come on.
12:14Exciting, isn't it?
12:15No, come on!
12:19Oh, whatever it is, it's in there.
12:21Oh!
12:21Yeah, so that's clearer now.
12:23We've got it out the ground.
12:24So, let's have a look.
12:26I think that could be it.
12:27That is in the area.
12:28That's in the hot zone.
12:29Oh, it's a bit of rubbish.
12:34Are you joking?
12:35No.
12:36Was that it?
12:36That was it.
12:37It was very exciting, but it was also very disappointing, wasn't it?
12:41Sometimes you get a little bit desperate
12:42when you don't get any signals in a field,
12:44so you just start digging anything you get.
12:47What a shame.
12:48And with the weather closing in,
12:49we don't know how long we might have left.
12:52But it's got to be all hands on deck.
12:53Have you got a spare detector?
12:55I feel like I could help.
12:56Yeah, I do, actually.
12:57I've got a spare machine in the car.
12:58We can grab that for you and get you set up
12:59and you might as well give us a hand.
13:01I know you're excited.
13:03I just want to find it.
13:04Right.
13:04Yeah, we'll go and get it.
13:06If I got the ring back, I was certainly worried.
13:09It meant a lot.
13:11Yes.
13:12Really slowly, sweeping back and forth.
13:14OK.
13:15I was very sad when I left it.
13:17Of course, my wife gave me.
13:19Come on, Graham.
13:20You told me this was an easy one.
13:22I did.
13:23Don't ever listen to me again.
13:25I'm still optimistic, though.
13:27The grass is quite long, isn't it?
13:29Yes.
13:30It's a bit rough.
13:30It's welcome to the jungle.
13:32So you're constantly having to sort of manoeuvre around the humps and bumps.
13:36It's difficult.
13:37Very difficult terrain.
13:38But even with an extra machine, the number of fines on this search is distressingly low.
13:51Absolutely nothing.
13:54They're all starting to look a little bit sodden.
13:57Kate looks fed up.
13:59I've not even had a beep.
14:00Everything about this search has been a battle for the team.
14:07The weather's really kicking in now, isn't it?
14:09And we're getting a bit cool.
14:11And after six hours, we're all exhausted.
14:15If the conditions were slightly different and the grass was shorter...
14:17We're detecting in 15, 16 inches of grass in some parts.
14:21So I think, personally, we'll call it a day.
14:29It's time to down tools, for today at least.
14:32But we do have some exciting news.
14:40So I've headed 10 miles east over to our boathouse
14:43because we have an update about the American owner of the phone
14:47we found at the bottom of Windermere.
14:52Soleil's mum has texted us back.
14:55She has put us in touch with Soleil's boyfriend, Casey,
14:58who has agreed to put us in touch with Soleil.
15:02He's also agreed to help us arrange a little surprise.
15:07Londoner Casey met Soleil
15:08when they were both travelling in Colombia three years ago.
15:12Casey, hello.
15:14How are you?
15:15I'm all right, thanks. How are you?
15:16Good, thanks.
15:17So I have what I believe is your girlfriend's phone.
15:20There she is.
15:21Yeah, that's her.
15:22Does she suspect anything?
15:23I highly doubt it.
15:25The plan is you're going to call her,
15:27I'm going to jump on the call and surprise her with the phone.
15:29Yeah, let's do it.
15:30Hopefully, she'll be happy.
15:34And let's hope Soleil is a good spot.
15:40Oh!
15:41Oh!
15:42Hi!
15:43Hi!
15:44Hi!
15:45You're thinking, who's this random woman on the phone?
15:48Hi!
15:48Hi, Soleil.
15:49My name's Helen,
15:50and I have something that might belong to you.
15:54Come on!
15:55I think that's you, isn't it?
16:00That's me!
16:01And my sister and my brother!
16:03And my dad!
16:05And it still works?
16:06It still works?
16:08That's so exciting.
16:09Did you expect to see it again?
16:11No, no.
16:11I fully, fully had surrendered that to the bottom of Lake Wintermere.
16:16I thought it was long gone.
16:18Can you remember how you dropped it?
16:19Well, I was being an idiot is really what happened.
16:22I came over to the UK to visit Casey.
16:25We had just finished driving for, like, the five or six hours it took us to get up there.
16:28So we went down to the end of a dock.
16:33And we were eating, like, bread and cheese, and it was so beautiful.
16:37And I took a picture of a seagull.
16:39And then I put my phone down, and I kicked it in accidentally.
16:42And it was too deep and muddy and murky for us to find it.
16:46I lost, like, all of my photos.
16:49That's insane that you guys found it.
16:51We will get this back to you.
16:54I really appreciate it.
16:56I'm so grateful.
16:57And, um, that was the loveliest surprise.
17:00Casey, thank you for humoring us.
17:02Thank you, Casey.
17:04Bye, guys.
17:06A wonderful surprise.
17:08And Soleil's missing photos are now safely back with her.
17:20And I'm really hoping for good news for Mike and Roy, too.
17:24He's got a fly in his coffin.
17:25I've got a big fly in this cup.
17:27Pick it out with the hands.
17:28Just think there was hair timing.
17:32So we're heading back to Icot Hill for another look for Mike's lost wing.
17:36And we've got the perfect solution for that challenging long grass.
17:41I mean, it's cut a decent-sized patch for us.
17:44I mean, it's cut a decent-sized patch for us.
17:48Well, it's more than enough, I think.
17:50I think if we can't find it in there, we're not going to find it.
17:53Yeah.
17:55Today, Shirley and Kate have returned and drafted in our magnet fisher Sophie to help.
18:00The ground is great today.
18:02We're going to have one more go at finding the ring lost for 60 years.
18:09I don't think this is a sort of ring-sized signal.
18:13You can already see it's an aluminium can.
18:15So it's really good that the grass is short enough now for us to be able to get in and find all the stuff we missed last time.
18:28Last time, we did hardly any digging.
18:30But finally, we're getting signals worth investigating.
18:34I found a buckle.
18:35I don't know how old it is, though.
18:36Oh, that's nice.
18:37It's a nice belt buckle.
18:39Yeah.
18:39How deep was it?
18:41It was pretty deep.
18:41Pretty deep, yeah.
18:43So I reckon that might be medieval, around that sort of era, because you tend to find Victorian ones are a lot chunkier.
18:49Yeah.
18:50I'm happy with that find.
18:52Chuffed.
18:54Thank goodness for the tractor.
18:57The newly-moan grass is working a treat.
19:04Everything I do get, if I investigate it, at least then that will give me a bit more confidence.
19:08I've got a copper coin here, actually.
19:13Georgian and date.
19:13That's a bit better than the shredded aluminium can I found before.
19:17The fact that I've got that and it was probably about eight inches down, I mean, this coin's probably sort of 200 years old,
19:23so there's no way the ring will even be down that far.
19:25So if we're getting things like that, then if we walk over the top of the ring, then we're going to find it.
19:31It's a great discovery.
19:35But it's not our ring.
19:36You've got to stay positive, manifest it, is it there?
19:41But maybe not as positive as this morning.
19:46So we've pretty much exhausted the area now where we've been told the ring is.
19:50And I feel like, you know, things can get slightly distorted in your memories over time,
19:54so it's worth extending it just to make sure that we've covered absolutely every possibility.
20:02It's got to be here.
20:04It does.
20:05We just have to walk over it and it's just, if we're quite in the right area or not, could it have been just a little bit further on?
20:11Could it be a little bit further down that bank?
20:14It's probably under the fence.
20:15It could well be, yeah.
20:16We've had two search attempts and covered every blade of grass we can.
20:21We might have to admit defeat.
20:24Kate sat down in the grass.
20:25It has been pretty exhausting, to be honest, because we've been at it non-stop.
20:28We've walked back and forth.
20:29We've worked as a team.
20:31We've gridded it.
20:32You know, this is quite rough terrain we're getting into now.
20:35We have searched all of the area that we've been given as a possibility of where the ring was lost.
20:40It's heartbreaking not to find Mike's ring, but maybe there's something we can make him to help create a new memory.
20:5422 miles away in Kendal, there's a traditional craftsman I know called Steph.
21:00He's a champion stickmaker.
21:03The first step is to clean the coin and see how it turns out.
21:07And I've sent him the 200-year-old coin Shirley found, in the hope he can make something special for our shepherd Mike.
21:15Quite a fascinating object.
21:17They've passed thousands of hands probably over the years.
21:21I think the best place would be on the backside of the stick where the shepherd would hold it.
21:28I first started making sticks about 2001.
21:32I took a couple of sticks to my local show, started winning a few prizes.
21:38Still trying to keep the tradition going today.
21:42There's different styles of shepherd's crooks.
21:44They want to be four fingers width.
21:47That's the traditional size.
21:49They're made to catch a sheep.
21:51Also to steady the shepherd when they're walking the fells of the lakes.
21:56The only challenge is selecting a horn.
21:59Good enough.
22:00You need 16 inches to make a traditional shepherd's crook.
22:04Steph has a bartering system with local sheep farmers.
22:08Their horns in exchange for a crook.
22:10We'll get this on the boil and 20 minutes time we'll have it in the press.
22:13And to soften the bony horn material, Steph employs a technique that's been used for generations of stickmakers.
22:20It's very memorable now.
22:23You can bend it with your hand so it squashes flat.
22:28Just give it a quick wire brush up.
22:31It can take up to 20 hours to make a stick from start to finish.
22:35I'm very honoured to make this stick for Mike.
22:39He's lost something very sentimental to him.
22:43We'll let that cool down and hopefully it starts taking shape and we'll be able to see if it's going to turn out OK for Mike or not.
22:51It's been a heartbreaking search, looking for Mike's long-lost ring, but for now they're on the way to the boathouse so I can let them know how we got on.
23:06If I got it back, I'd be very happy, very, very happy.
23:09It's the only chance that Mike will have of getting the ring back.
23:14But if they haven't, then I know that it never will be found.
23:19Come on, gents.
23:21Oh, this looks like trouble.
23:23Yeah, definitely.
23:25My middle name's trouble, Helen.
23:26Nice to meet you.
23:27Roy.
23:28Roy.
23:29Mike.
23:29Nice to meet you, Helen.
23:30Have a seat.
23:33Now then.
23:34It seems like you two have a great friendship.
23:36Yeah, we have.
23:37We've been friends for a long time, Helen.
23:40Ever since 1974, we've known each other quite well.
23:44But obviously after his farming life up at Berrier, you know, you've become closer.
23:49It's an amazing place to have called that your office, Mike.
23:52Yeah.
23:54Have you been down?
23:55I've been down.
23:56I have been down.
23:57Yeah, no stranger to a field full of sheep.
24:01It isn't heaven, but it's the next door to it.
24:03So it's you that wrote to me, Roy, trying to put to bed a mystery.
24:09Yes.
24:09That's been going on for quite some time.
24:11Yeah.
24:12Well, it means a lot, really, because my wife gave us it.
24:16And it would mean a lot to me if we found it for him, because I know what rings mean.
24:21I lost my wife, Edith, last year, unfortunately.
24:25Oh, I'm so sorry.
24:27It must be a totally new chapter.
24:30Yeah.
24:30Without Edith.
24:31It is.
24:31Yeah.
24:32But I'm sure she's very glad of the friendship that you guys have.
24:37Yeah.
24:38Yeah.
24:40Would Edith have been saying, oh, what's he up to now?
24:43Oh, she would.
24:44Yeah, she would.
24:47She's a lovely person.
24:50Right, let me take you to the search.
24:52So, we had a team of metal detectors who went out and looked extensively, and they found
25:00a coin that was 200 years old.
25:03Oh, nice.
25:05So, to them, if you can find that coin, if your ring's there, they would have been able
25:11to find it.
25:11Yeah.
25:12I went with them.
25:15They looked, and they looked, and they looked, and they couldn't find it anywhere.
25:21They went back, and they looked again.
25:23Yeah.
25:27But I'm so sorry, gents, that we weren't able to find a ring.
25:33They wanted to have something made for you, Mike.
25:36Now, I hope that what we've had made for you is something that you will appreciate.
25:42Right.
25:45So, this.
25:48This has been made with the Georgian coin that has been in that field.
25:54Goodness me.
25:55For longer than your ring.
25:58It's been put into the crook.
26:01Right.
26:02Now, this is for you.
26:05Thank you very much.
26:07I don't know if you're herding many sheep these days.
26:09I've one of two of these.
26:10It's not the ring, but hopefully that's all right.
26:14That's fantastic.
26:15That will be well looked after.
26:17Thank you very much.
26:20It's just lovely.
26:22Absolutely beautiful.
26:25I've got a bad knee.
26:26Oh, well, good job we've got your stick, then.
26:28It's nice, all right, it's grand.
26:32Yeah?
26:32Yeah.
26:32It's lovely.
26:35Thank you so much, Roy, for writing to us.
26:37You're welcome.
26:38It has been a pleasure to meet you both.
26:40You look after yourself, Roy.
26:41Yes, all right.
26:41Take care.
26:43Nice to see you.
26:43Take care.
26:44It's good to see you.
26:45Bye now.
26:45Bye-bye.
26:45You know that phrase, he's got a twinkle in his eye?
26:52That is what they both had.
26:55Absolutely lovely.
26:56It'll remind me of a time shepherd in his will.
27:00It'll be grand.
27:01Very happy for him, to be honest with you.
27:03Might maybe could say, well, I wish he hadn't bothered, but I'm sure when he's got his stick
27:08in his hand, as long as he doesn't use it on me.
27:13A time in life when Roy needs a friend more than anything, Mike has given him that.
27:19Well, they can make me cry.
27:22What a treat, to have a friend like that.
27:31Next time...
27:33There's a lot of competition between scuba and freedivers.
27:35Our diving team search for a treasured family possession.
27:39I just saw it sink.
27:40I tried to grab it, but watched it drift away.
27:44And a drone is found in the lake.
27:46Oh, wow!
27:48But can we find the rightful owner?
27:50Oh, no.
27:51This is bad.
27:52The file's corrupted.
28:05Oh, wow!
28:06For sure.
28:07I don't know.
28:07Oh, no.
28:10That's stillcar!
28:10I don't know.
28:12Yeah.
28:12Oh, no.
28:14Oh, no.
28:14Oh, yeah.
28:17Oh, no.
28:18Here's a lot.
28:19Take away from a while.
28:22If they are all better.
28:24Take away from time.
28:24Oh, no.
28:24Oh, no.
28:25Oh, no.
28:26Oh, no.
28:27Oh, no.
28:28Oh, no.
28:29Oh, no.
28:30Oh, no.
28:33Oh, no.
28:34Oh, no.
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