Thank you for the pointer Andyf - though I did not issue a challenge. The integrity of the Geograph site is prime importance. With 3 million photos on the site already contributors are invited to submit some descriptive text and these screeds are always held to scrutiny. The idea was originated by a dyslexic man so nobody has checked the mission statement for purity

Submissions do not all make it to the site. Many are rejected for wrong geographical location, inappropriate subject or duplication, in other words, moderated.
None are rejected for poor spelling alone. That is where SWMBO (and others) come in. The writers' prose is not altered save for moderators suggesting a substituted sentence to preserve the sense.
Her work is entirely voluntary and takes up much of every day. She likes to think of herself being part of Cameron's "Big Society"
There is a contact button for each photo - which has resulted in an alarming stream of queries, comments and sometimes abuse which should have been addressed to the owners of the shop, country park, government office or traffic roundabout depicted in the picture. We are often amused by replies to such inept internet users sent by some mods.
On the subject of Radio 4 what I really object to is the seeming lack of the meaning of words and tenses, the latter drives me mad when historians use the present tense when talking about events in centuries (or weeks) past.
For the last year or two the word "incredibly" (meaning in a manner which cannot be believed) liberally sprinkled through every piece I hear these days. David Cameron was incredibly sorry for not getting Brits out of Libya sooner. I didn't believe him. One film reviewer recently used the word 7 times in a piece on Front Row. Maybe she was right, but ... Repetition!
This sloppy language makes me quickly lose interest in the subject, which is a great shame.
But we drifted very early on this thread. Look at the first post again. You CAN read it after being trained by the first 2 lines. Quite incredible, don't you think?
Ray
"I literally died when ..." No you didn't, you're here telling the tale.