Insel affe
HellBilly
Building sites are the best for pranks, seen so many, I love this though.
In the days before shredders, we had large paper bags for confidential waste to be taken to an incinerator. The bags were large enough to be placed over someone's head and then stapled to the hem of a WRNS skirt. Of course, she couldn't take it off of her head without her skirt lifting up!Saw some belters in the Navy.
Sending sprogs for tartan breadcrumbs for the scotch eggs.
Go and get your tropical raincoats from stores.
Sign up for the Malta dog shoot( Malta dog is Navy slang for the trots.)
When I was leader of a mess deck we had a young Yorkshireman junior cook who thought he knew everything.
After about a month a lot of us were fed up with him, so, I got the ship’s clerks to mock up a ‘bill’ for bunk light usage.
Basically, each pit had its own personal light, and the bill was for each person to pay for the electricity used.
Sharkys bill was twice what everyone else was charged. He was told he would have to pay his bill at the end of the deployment .
He moaned so much cos his was higher than everyone else’s, so, whenever anyone in the mess went past his pit, they’d turn on his bunk light.
He got so wound up about it he went to see the Master at Arms to put in a complaint that someone in the mess was picking on him as his bunk light was always on and it was costing him hundreds of pounds.
We told him the truth the day before we got back to Pompey.
Poor kid, he didn’t know whether to be angry, happy, embarrassed or what.
Any porthole duff Harry?Skyhooks, left handed paintbrush, or navy cake, anyone?
(Not that I'm offering navy cake).
That’s just annoying, not a prank.In our office, a security tag, the sort seen on a bottle of supermarket spirits, can do the rounds, being hidden deep in someone's bag or coat pocket. Twice I've set off the alarm walking into Tesco when it's been slipped into a side pocket of my small backpack. It gets to the point where everyone takes everything with them whenever they leave their desk to make a drink etc.
Lots of office ones. Rotating the screen and BSOD screensavers, yes. And switching round the key tops worked wonders for those who typed slowly with one finger.
One office had loose shelves on the desks, a few strategic pieces of fishwire and when they pulled their chair out *everything* would go off the back, work files, in-trays, photos, toys, pen pots etc with an almighty crash. Card confetti in customer files was another, great at meetings.
One place, we hacked an instant messaging system so those in the know could send a random insult to flash up at the top of someone's screen. It usually happened as they were typing and disappeared when they hit the next key, before they could show anyone. People got angry about it for years but never worked it out.
None of it matches the famous "kipper in the switchboard" incident at the old tax office (not involved, but I know who was...). They had to call BT out. What made it was the note, I really hope you can read this grainy copy as it's classic office bellcheesery.
Exactly the same on our floor, using the coin trick because people from other floors come down to use ours purely for lengthy number 2s rather than literally 'shitting on their own doorstep' Very annoying. Along with the coin lock trick we also aggressively rattle the door handle to irritate whoever is inside. Pathetic admittedly, but satisfying tooA minor prank, but it worked better than intended. We used a coin to turn the gents loo to “Engaged”, the only gents on that floor. The target, desperate for a p, spent part of an evening banging on the door with “Is anyone in there?” etc, eventually lying on the landing floor trying to see under the door for signs of life.
Too lazy or dogmatic to go down two flights to use the loo below.
You can replicate a little of the automated fun by using the autocorrect feature in Word if someone leaves their machine unattended for a minute or two.We mucked around with those instant messages, I think the product was called Stickies? Soon after, banned by the fun devoid owner.
You can replicate a little of the automated fun by using the autocorrect feature in Word if someone leaves their machine unattended for a minute or two.