What happens when you report dangerous items washed up on a beach?32 minutes agoDuration 4:3732 minutes agoNewsDuration 4:37Base Gagetown has a team that deals with unidentified and suspicious items, including those left over from the world wars. Sometimes, this means safely detonating them.Related Stories Artillery shell pulled from Bell Island waters delivered ‘a good boom,’ says navy diver Bell Island fishermen went out for lobster, but caught ‘apparent’ artillery shell Headed to the beach for a swim? Here’s what you should know before you go Dynamite discovered in Calgary home on same day bomb unit also called to Weaselhead Flats N.W.T. RCMP urge caution with explosives after old prospecting materials found in Hay River homeMore from NewsVideo4:10Take a seat in this living room where all the furniture pieces are instruments32 minutes agoVideo2:12Competition Bureau says more distributors needed for pet medsCBC News New Brunswick 32 minutes agoVideo2:27As transit ridership continues to grow, Charlottetown commits to adding more bus shelters32 minutes agoVideo2:31Trees out, wildflowers in: Why a P.E.I. couple is turning over land to birds, butterflies and bees32 minutes agoVideo4:03 ‘It stinks like hell’: seniors despair at odour putting ‘damper’ on their golden yearsCBC News New Brunswick 32 minutes agoTrending NowVideo1:26#TheMoment a moose stuck its head in a car in JasperThe National June 30Video1:10Meteotsunami-like wave caught on video near Thunder Bay, Ont.June 26Video2:37The story behind Mike Myers’s SNL ‘elbows up’ moment The National June 30Video1:24Are you living next to a toxic ‘forever chemical’ hotspot?CBC News June 21Video2:00Bezos-Sanchez wedding draws A-list celebs, angry protestersThe National June 27
What happens when you report dangerous items washed up on a beach?
