Panbiker wondered how bad roads needed to be before Lancashire County Council did something about them.
I've got a few examples to get going, mainly from a survey I did walking around Barlick last February. The survey will be repeated over the next few weeks, which should provide some new examples as well as seeing what's happened with last year's crop.
The first pothole picture isn't from Barlick (unless you use the Royal Mail definition) but it's the longest pothole saga I know and it has a happy ending...
This is the gaping hole left in Elm Close at Salterforth pictured in April last year after a machine doing snow clearance ripped the metalwork off the top of a road gulley. However, problems with the short stretch of road had begun many years before.
Over 40 years ago, residents had paid for the road to be 'made up' and adopted by the highway authority, which at that time was the West Riding of Yorkshire. But with local government reorganisation in 1974 the adopted status of Elm Close was forgotten.
Years passed and the road began to crumble but the new highway authority (Lancashire County Council) said it wasn't adopted and refused to carry out any repairs.
This is the potholed and broken carriageway in February 2013.
Only after documents proving that it was adopted were dug out of the archives at Craven District Council did Lancashire agree to maintain it at public expense.
Here it is pictured on the day it was finally resurfaced later in 2013.