quote:Amen to that!
Originally posted by QLib:
One of my Dad's favourite sayings! (Background story for another day and probably Another Place.)
Thank you, Wodders. And a Happy New Year to one and all - as midnight winds its way around the globe, let's hope for a merciful dawn.
quote:Well ! Good on you for trying. Writing Cornish raises hackles everywhere and I have to say you seem to have one of the more contentious spellings in your book. Have a look and see who the authors are.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
?..
I'v got a couple of booklets of Cornish phrases, so apologies to Morlader if it's wrong - Bledhen Nowyth Da - Happy New Year, as we've already had it in Welsh!
quote:Me too. Though mine's a neuroscience assignment, which, from here, looks like a lot less fun than the work you're avoiding.
Originally posted by Balaam:
I'm here because I am procrastinating.
quote:And I though we were overun with musical instruments! Though we'e actually passed the harp (3 octave) to a young friend who's learning, and Darllenwr's passsed two guitars to another friend as he had a new 6 string last year, and is currently awaiting a new 12 string. Oh, and I sold the mandolin (just a cheap one) as neither of us was using it.
Originally posted by Balaam:
Yesterday I removes the strings from 3 guitars and a mandolin and has spent time polishing the frets and oiling the fretboards. The other 3 guitars and the banjo will have to wait.
quote:No need to blush about being a couch piglet - you deserve it. But Top Gear? Blush away!!
Originally posted by piglet:
Consequently, I've been a complete couch-piglet today and spent the whole day curled up in front of the Top Gear marathon on BBC Canada ...
quote:Here it is.
Originally posted by daisymay:
Are we not having a Scots' one, like we usually have had?
quote:Well, it's your blood ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... The results also belong to the patient ...
quote:Awww - I'm sorry. That happened to us a few years ago, instead of fields we now face a housing estate. Ho hum, pig's bum.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
The palm over the way is down now, it looks like they are clearing the land ready for more building - hardly surprising as it was sold as building land. We'll still be sad as it was nice whilst our solitude lasted.
quote:I slept all the way through the gale last night. When I got to school everyone was saying "Wasn't the wind terrible" and I said, "Nope, slept through it...I will admit the road was decorated with bins when I went to do my run this morning and my walk to the train was a lot slower than normal.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Our bedroom window is usually ajar, and I got home today to find it had blown fully open and the net curtain had blown outside the window. Thankfully, it hadn't been raining - or if it had, the wind had dried the curtain.
We'll be taking our Christmas tree down this evening.
quote:Remind me never to come to you for post-operative care ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... after Mrs E's operation ...
quote:Not even close, Wodders. I'll let you know when, OK?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
A friend in UK had a SAGA brochure actually ON his 50th birthday!! He was NOT amused!
In March I'll be 63 - does that qualify as mid-60s?
quote:Me too!
Originally posted by Tubifex Maximus:
I slept all the way through the gale last night. When I got to school everyone was saying "Wasn't the wind terrible" and I said, "Nope, slept through it...
quote:Me three!
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:Me too!
Originally posted by Tubifex Maximus:
I slept all the way through the gale last night. When I got to school everyone was saying "Wasn't the wind terrible" and I said, "Nope, slept through it...
quote:Saga is a travel company catering for over-50s. They used to use the hall of residence where I lived in Aberdeen during the long summer holiday, and some of my friends worked there as domestic staff. They referred to it as "Sex And Games for the Aged" ...
Originally posted by PeteC:
... SAGA?
quote:Which pope was that?
in fact when the Pope died in 1978
quote:Probably the Roman one, I don't think the one from Antioch died that year - neither did that nice Canadian Pope, whose name I forget.
Originally posted by PeteC:
Piglet travels down memory lane:quote:Which pope was that?
in fact when the Pope died in 1978
quote:I will be clutching my rosary for sure!
...and I drove the jeep there today, first driving since the accident and I managed fine - this is good as we go away on Thursday and I want to be able to share the driving.
quote:Especially when they all speak different languages.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Can you imagine the complexity of registering 1.2 BILLION people?
quote:Do you really want to admit that?
... known to the Special Branch ...
quote:Given the three heads, naybe 'friendly alien'.
Originally posted by Enigma:
You might need to be identified as a friendly foreigner!!!
quote:I'm quite proud of it really - here I am known because I am a three headed alien [three heads mean I can both eat more and talk more - and even at the same time] and in UK I was one of those nasty, subversive peace activist people and so, I am led to believe there was a file on me for that at one time. It must be a VERY boring read!
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:Do you really want to admit that? ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:[QUOTE]... known to the Special Branch ...
quote:Thank you F(r)iend.
Originally posted by QLib:
...Re the driving: hope you're on good terms with St.Christopher, Pete.
quote:I now have it on good authority that Beer Pong is played by setting up 10 glasses half-full of beer at each end of a large table (billiard/ten pin bowling style). Then each player uses a bat and ping pong ball to see who can 'score' by getting a ping pong ball into one of their opponent's glasses. The object is to make the opponent have to drink all ten half-glasses first.
Originally posted by piglet:
BL, you must be so proud ... What the blazes is Beer Pong?
.
quote:There's a pub near us called The Merchants House [sic] which has a Special's Board [also sic].
Originally posted by Boogie:
...In other news, Waterstone's is going to drop its apostrophe. :shock:
We need at 'Keep the endangered apostrophe' campaign. Mind you - apostrophes where they shouldn't be are far worse!
quote:There are at least two such society's in Britain already:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Good morning all - windy windy windy windy today. The cladding has blown off the front of our house, grrr - it just missed my car - phew!
In other news, Waterstone's is going to drop its apostrophe. :shock:
We need at 'Keep the endangered apostrophe' campaign. Mind you - apostrophes where they shouldn't be are far worse!
quote:Depressing, but people will probably still continue buying book's.
Originally posted by Boogie:
In other news, Waterstone's is going to drop its apostrophe. :shock:
quote:arrrrgggghhhhhh!
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:Depressing, but people will probably still continue buying book's.
Originally posted by Boogie:
In other news, Waterstone's is going to drop its apostrophe. :shock:
quote:I know it's a long while ago but I've been thinking about this recently. It was prompted by my comment that my default option is to say sorry. On reflection, I don't think it's anything to do with lack of assertiveness (I would confidently expect anyone who knows me to fall about laughing at that suggestion). I just think 'sorry' can mean anything from 'I apologise profusely for what I have done' through 'How terrible that should have happened to you' to 'Oops, we seem to have accidently brushed each other's sleeve'.
My default is apology as well although I'm better since I did the assertiveness bit - well, a little bit better.
quote:You're not Canadian* are you?
Originally posted by M.:
... my default option is to say sorry ...
quote:(edited for the relevant bits)
Originally posted by M.:
... my default option is to say sorry ...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You're not Canadian* are you?
* Canadian n. someone who apologises when you stand on his toe.
quote:This made me laugh: apostrophe fallen on hard times.
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:Depressing, but people will probably still continue buying book's.
Originally posted by Boogie:
In other news, Waterstone's is going to drop its apostrophe. :shock:
quote:From rose-tinted to normal? Love your descriptions.
Originally posted by Ariel:
What an utterly beautiful morning ... I hadn't realized my fingers had gone numb until I went to change the lens on my camera ...
quote:eeeek! does the same go for Chorley cakes?
Originally posted by Moo:
Don't you know what the Bible says about raisin cakes?
Moo
quote:I knew the Old Testament had some barmy dietary rules, but that's A Bit Much.
Originally posted by Moo:
Don't you know what the Bible says about raisin cakes?
quote:Better still if bought from the stall in the covered market in Chorley. (Daughter 1 lives in nearby Coppull.)
Originally posted by Boogie:
Yes - but Chorley cakes are much better.
quote:I know a woman (British) who apologises to lamp-posts if she bumps into them.
Originally posted by M.:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:(edited for the relevant bits)
Originally posted by M.:
... my default option is to say sorry ...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You're not Canadian* are you?
* Canadian n. someone who apologises when you stand on his toe.
A thing the British are also often accused of. I think it's a pleasant trait - it's just a nice way of seeking to defuse any possible irritation and help oil the wheels a bit.
M.
quote:Thanks. I did in fact try that for the best part of half an hour on Sunday with no great success. It took an hour and a half for it to settle down tonight - a combination of factors perhaps - but it got there in the end. In quite cold weather, the key for my car doesn't work well either so it may be something to do with physical location.
Originally posted by Drifting Star:
When we had Sky and that happened regularly they told me to remove the Sky card and turn everything off for 10 minutes, then reconnect and turn back on. Might be worth you trying the turning off (at the mains) part - maybe disconnecting the aerial cable too (can't remember if that was a part of it).
Good luck!
quote:And I thought cycling home from w*rk last night at -5° was bad.
Originally posted by piglet:
It's still bl**dy cold here (-10°C as I type this - **brrrrrr**), although it was a gloriously sunny day.
quote:There's a large holly in front of our Sky disk and we have to keep that trimmed. Snow doesn't help either and, as Sky apply schedule changes early in the morning, any channel hopping if you're watching the cricket then can mess things up, much as Ariel (sic) describes.
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:Thanks. I did in fact try that for the best part of half an hour on Sunday with no great success. It took an hour and a half for it to settle down tonight - a combination of factors perhaps - but it got there in the end. In quite cold weather, the key for my car doesn't work well either so it may be something to do with physical location.
Originally posted by Drifting Star:
When we had Sky and that happened regularly they told me to remove the Sky card and turn everything off for 10 minutes, then reconnect and turn back on. Might be worth you trying the turning off (at the mains) part - maybe disconnecting the aerial cable too (can't remember if that was a part of it).
Good luck!
quote:You poor things. As I cycled into work this morning, the gears on my bike froze. And as for my hands ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We had some colder nights whilst we were away - probably down to the mid-teens Celsius!
quote:Yes, ours does too. I make a loaf every day - so we have fresh bread the day it's made, toast the day after and the birds get the leftovers on day three. Lots of different types of loaf too.
Originally posted by piglet:
... as the bread-making machine absolutely rocks! D. met me at the door as I came in from w*rk proudly brandishing a slice of his very first loaf, and it was utterly yummy.
quote:The problem with breadmaker loaves is that they are not stuffed full of the preservatives like commercial bread. This is a GoodThing™, but has the side effect of going stale very quickly.
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:Yes, ours does too. I make a loaf every day - so we have fresh bread the day it's made, toast the day after and the birds get the leftovers on day three.
Originally posted by piglet:
... as the bread-making machine absolutely rocks!
quote:I suspect it won't get the chance.
Originally posted by Balaam:
... Don't let it go stale ...
quote:Me too. But I am still tempted.
Originally posted by cheesymarzipan:
.. we don't have a bread maker - our kitchen is small enough already without filling it with more Stuff
quote:We could give it a try. With the light on and curtains open this idea could brighten many a dull evening for passers by!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Ah well, it's still a little warmer than life over there in UK-land - I don't think topless with the windows open would be on the cards over there, would it?
quote:So is ours.
Originally posted by cheesymarzipan:
... our kitchen is small enough already without filling it with more Stuff ...
quote:I suppose if we average it out ...
Originally posted by piglet:
... we're supposed to get about 8 inches of sn*w ...
quote:They aren't. They are changing it all the time. A major rewrite every two years or so, a couple or more of big changes each year, and minor tinkering almost every week.
Originally posted by Ariel:
I'm finding the interface of Facebook a bit tricky [...] things seem to be not where I thought I'd last seen them.
quote:He doesn't seem to be suffering. I think he's enjoying it.
Originally posted by PeteC:
You suffer from selective amnesia, Weasel dear.
quote:Oh, I don't know, he might look rather chic!
Originally posted by Dormouse:
Of course, a teddy can be one of these
which makes WW's statement that Pete's teddy is still up here in the office a little bit
I'm not sure I can get my head round PeteC in one of those!!!
quote:Mind you, I suppose that could be taken as referring to our guest
To the pure all things are pure
quote:Thanks - not as bad as I feared. It's going ahead and I just feel so All the other troubles suddenly seem very small.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
You have my sympathies, Qlib. Lets hope you can rescue something.
quote:You have my sympathy. I've never sung in it, but D. accompanied it a few times when we lived in Ireland and he says it's the hairiest organ part in the entire repertoire. I can vouch for this; it was even difficult to turn pages for ...
Originally posted by St Everild:
Just off to choir now. I can't say I like Durufle's Requiem...
quote:The perfect end to a perfect day - what a horrible surprise! I hope you weren't stung for a lot.
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
...and to top it all off I open my credit card bill to discover two fraudulent transactions on it!
quote:Ah, but if it's Saturday -
Originally posted by piglet:
We've got about 6 inches of snow in the forecast for Saturday - what the hell use is snow if you don't get a snow-day?
quote:One with no taste whatsoever.
Originally posted by Balaam:
... What sort of spell checker is this that doesn't recognise "Orcadian?" ...
quote:Same here. Also, aren't they smaller than they used to be?
Originally posted by piglet:
I used to like creme eggs (about 30-odd years ago), but I doubt very much if I could eat one now - they're so sweet I can feel my teeth rotting just reading about them.
quote:Everything is, everything is
Originally posted by Ariel:
Same here. Also, aren't they smaller than they used to be?
quote:Trouble is, the soft version is the only one our teeth can manage these days!
Originally posted by Ariel:
Mars Bars aren't the same either. They made them softer and sweeter about 10 years ago so they'd appeal more to women. A proper Mars Bar is something you could sink your teeth into. On a cold day, you had to basically saw a chunk off it. The current version is more like Milky Way. (Yes, I do know it's supposed to be a take on that.)
Even nostalgia isn't the same as it used to be.
quote:<tamgent two>
Originally posted by Dormouse:
A sort of tangent on the Mars Bar - chopped up, melted and with a bit of milk added to keep it soft, it makes a great topping for a chocolate cake.
quote:Our teeth? This reminds me of the story of the three witches who shared one eye and one tooth between them.* I'll have you know I'm fine with a Mars Bar - provided it's been allowed to melt for a bit first, of course.
Originally posted by Chorister:
Trouble is, the soft version is the only one our teeth can manage these days!
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
... "Teeth will be provided" ...
quote:I've got lots - would you like some?
Originally posted by Ariel:
... still no snow.
quote:It's why we do it - we're sure you'll appreciate these evocative little reminders of the country of your birth.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I do enjoy reading about everyone's winter travails - such an eloquent reminder of my previous life.
quote:Too late. We now have Patches of Treachery™ and enormous heaps of snirt.*
Originally posted by Ariel:
... Piglet - yes please, so long as it doesn't hang around and turn to ice on the pavements ...
quote:I'm so jealous. There was an M&S here which closed shortly before we arrived - in fact we were talking about it in the pub after choir practice this evening - and I can't tell you how much I want one of their prawn and mayonnaise sandwiches. Right now.
Originally posted by La vie en rouge:
I visited Marks & Spencer on the Champs Elysées this lunchtime ...
quote:None here so far, but I still remember last year's vividly. I don't think I'll forget them in a hurry. They were like taloned goblin fingers that crept slowly over the edge of the roof while I was inside looking out, and then over my windows, forming bars that prevented me from fully opening the window. Most were about 2-3 feet long, but there was one monster by the drainpipe that was 8' long.
Originally posted by piglet:
It's -8°C here at the moment, and we've got some pretty spectacular icicles hanging from the roof chez Piglet.
quote:Should do, though someone did mention a possible 4" of snow on Saturday.
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Hoping it stays cold until sunday - showing someone the joys of Port Meadow, and it'll be much nicer if it's still hard underfoot.
quote:It's getting close - there was ice up the edges anywhere the water was still!
Originally posted by Ariel:
[QUOTE]
I ike the idea of commuting up the river, and sailing into work. Or possibly, given the canal, barging into work. Though in this weather, one might skate in...
quote:Although I've never yet managed to drag Sandemaniac to an ice rink...
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
quote:It's getting close - there was ice up the edges anywhere the water was still!
Originally posted by Ariel:
Though in this weather, one might skate in...
quote:Its doing so here, I am below the Sheffield snow line where it does not normally settle, but it seems to be having a go. Question is do I need to be on standby for church. Worship will happen, but if there is snow in the morning a number of people won't make it including some elders. It is Communion Sunday.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Snowing here in a half hearted fashion - enough to stop us going out, but not enough to cause major problems yet.
quote:What, and spoil the fun of a mug of hot chocolate and a toasted teacake with melted butter soaking into it, while the snow falls gently down outside? The pleasure of mulled wine to come, a rich, satisfying winter casserole and one of those sponge puddings or substantial crumbles that are really best enjoyed on a cold winter's day?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Do you need me to report in with the weather from here?
quote:Well always trying, anyway ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Erm, I think the best place is on top of the last lot.
Yup, that's me, always trying to be helpful.
quote:Leave a cold tap dripping in your house while you're away in case your cold snap continues - the last thing you want is to come back to a flood.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Mr Boogs set off for Mexico today, I'm joining him on Thursday ...
quote:Luckily the dog sitter will be around to look after the house.
Originally posted by piglet:
Leave a cold tap dripping in your house while you're away in case your cold snap continues - the last thing you want is to come back to a flood.
quote:You're coming to the UK. Yay.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I'm trying to sort out my flights to UK for May but it really is a maze - I may give in and go to a travel agent!
So many airlines, so many choices - it is quite bewildering.
Once I have firm dates and an itinerary I shall consider a possible Shipmeet whilst there - watch this space!
quote:I know, it's a real headache trying to book anything on the internet - too many provisos and contradictory special offers with attached conditions ("This flight only £2.50 but you must be at the airport for a 3.30am departure. Standing only, no seats. Baggage allowance nil. Sandwiches £10 each on board, please reserve 30 days before travel.")
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I'm trying to sort out my flights to UK for May but it really is a maze - I may give in and go to a travel agent!
quote:Don't try to be tough. Go native. It is British to complain about the winter temperature if it falls below +5°. That it is cold in winter should come as a shock every year.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Maybe by next winter I might've toughened up a bit?
quote:Give me your dates and I'll see BUT Pete is still here until mid-April.
Originally posted by piglet:
...Wodders, do you have to go to England in May and not April, when we'll be over? ...
quote:Give it time, give it time - it's an acquired taste but once acquired, totally addictive!
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I'm afraid I'm never going to be British enough to like actual tea (sorry!)
quote:I can't imagine it being cold enough in Somerset to justify thermal anything, but I'm a very warm-blooded piglet.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... thermal running bottoms are a good idea if it gets really severe ...
quote:Oh dear. Yes. I completely understand this.
Originally posted by piglet:
We bought a new TV today and I can't imagine anything more frustrating than trying to get the damn thing to work. You'd think that connecting a TV set, a DVD machine and a digital-box wouldn't be rocket science, but all I've managed is a blue screen.
quote:Yes, but at least they would be doing that. There wasn't any sign of any gritters round our way, let alone snow ploughs. We just got snowed on, full stop (and look what happened on the M40). Luckily it's almost entirely melted and we haven't had any more to create further problems on top of it, but it's the basic lack of anything being done that annoys people. Every time this happens we get the same response from the powers that be: this isn't typical of our winters so we haven't thought it necessary to prepare for it. Then the country grinds to a halt.
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
I got so fed up I pointed out to the moaning woman, that in Canada in these conditions they'd only be keeping the main roads open and that they'd be having to send a squad of ploughs and gritters down the carriage way every hour - and the Canadian in the room backed me up.
quote:Awww. It's been all over the news, and has been highly acclaimed as formidable reaction to kiddo feedback.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I nearly posted this in Hell, but it's not worth it.
Sainsburys is being a smartarse for renaming Tiger Bread. It is now 'Giraffe Bread'. Some customer suggested this, based on the pattern.
quote:Kiddo feedback my arse. Guardian reading, Radio 4 listening parents more like. I'll bet Lily* goes to Center Parcs (ie, Butlins for the middle-classes) for holiday.
Originally posted by Wesley J:
quote:Awww. It's been all over the news, and has been highly acclaimed as formidable reaction to kiddo feedback.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I nearly posted this in Hell, but it's not worth it.
Sainsburys is being a smartarse for renaming Tiger Bread. It is now 'Giraffe Bread'. Some customer suggested this, based on the pattern.
quote:It tastes the same 'cos it is the same. I find that the loaf loses its shape when cut so one gets a compacted slice four/five inches long but only an inch high. Pretty nasty really. Traditional bloomers keep their shape better.
Originally posted by Wesley J:
I agree. Just teasing. Sorry about that.
I'm sure giraffe bread tastes just as lovely as tiger bread. Please carry on.
quote:Surely that depends on who is wearing them!
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
...Traditional bloomers keep their shape better.
quote:I'll have to agree with Ariel that -orrison- Tiger bread is better than the S**nsb*ry's equivalent.
Originally posted by Ariel:
You can still get tiger bread elsewhere and it's a lot nicer at M-------s.
quote:Yes we needed a specific cable to connect the new camcorder to the TV, normally I buy cables two at a time as I always seem to lose them but this time I bought just the one as I didn't want to upset my bank manager too much - how can a little bit of wire cost so much?
Originally posted by piglet:
...Unfortunately, the new DVD machine will only work in black-and-white unless you connect it with the right sort of cable (which costs more than the machine did), so we're exchanging it for one that has the cable included ...
What a faff.
quote:If you can put a tiger in your tank, you can put one in your bread-making machine.
Originally posted by piglet:
I didn't know you could make bread from tigers. Or giraffes for that matter. Do they work in bread-making machines?
quote:More likely "Produced in a rehabilitation centre which helps reintegrate disadvantaged tigers into society".
Originally posted by Ariel:
Though it could be that the bread is made by tigers - you know, one of those "handmade by members of a tiger community in the wilds of Sumatra" types of bread.
quote:It's funny you should say that – I was sent something similar once for my birthday years ago, with a rather fancy bit of jade green knotwork at the end and a nice jade (or lookalike) drop hanging from it. To this day I have no idea what it is or does, and was obliged to write a thank-you email that went something like "thank you very much for the lovely jade thing." Mine is about 6" long and silver-coloured, btw. Taking the jade (or more likely, jadeite) into account, I'm guessing it's not from SA.
Originally posted by Firenze:
Vaguely apropos of which, I was given a small gift in SA - an item produced by some struggling fraction of society. It is embossed brass, about 3" long, shaped a bit like a teensy-weensy crozier and with a pendant bead on the end. I have absolutely no idea what it is - does anyone else?
quote:It'll be what archaeologists call A Ritual Object.
Originally posted by Ariel:
It's funny you should say that – I was sent something similar once for my birthday years ago
quote:It could be used as a bookmark, but why not straight and tapering, instead of curved and a bit fatter at the end? If I ever come across some old jewellery findings (which I know are somewhere), I'll make it into a brooch.
Originally posted by lily pad:
Are you sure it is not a bookmark?
quote:You'll find you don't look any older than you did the day before. As with 40, it's the start of another new decade, you're still alive, still able to move around and do all the things you did yesterday. Enjoy your birthday!
Originally posted by piglet:
Just back from dinner with friends to celebrate my birthday (50th ) which is on Friday.
quote:So cooled down a bit since a couple of weeks ago.
Originally posted by shamwari:
come Monday and it will be 33 degrees in Cape Town.
quote:... then again we might just get some rain which was enough to create four-inch puddles but not really enough to displace much of the accumulated snow. Mind you, they're forecasting up to 45mm (about 1¾ inches in English) of rain on Sunday - that could facilitate some heap-diminution.
Originally posted by piglet:
... we might get a sn*w-day ...
quote:I'm not sure why, if a burro is a donkey, a burrito isn't a smaller donkey.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Then burritos for lunch!
quote:I suppose we should be thankful for small mercies.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... I was tempted to get out of bed to go and dance naked on the roof but fell asleep ...
quote:That takes me back. Many years ago, some friends and I would occasionally go to a certain pub whose entertainment was "The Kent Trio". This consisted of a (bad) pianist and a worse singer - I think the third of the trio had died - of advanced age. One of their repertoire was Tom Jones's "Delilah" - complete with dropping weights into the grand piano for no discernible reason apart from making a discordant noise.
Originally posted by piglet:
... and they had the worst pianist I've ever heard tinkling away on the ivories. He was so bad he was funny - we were in stitches for much of the time ...
quote:Couldn't let this gem go without appreciation! Burritos are usually filled with mince, so it could well be minced donkey! (Unlikely, though)
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:I'm not sure why, if a burro is a donkey, a burrito isn't a smaller donkey.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Then burritos for lunch!
Anyway, I expect you're hungry enough to eat a horse, so enjoy
quote:EJ, please tell me that isn't a Kiwi delicacy you've brought over.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... minced donkey ...
quote:I, too, had wondered about that.....
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:I'm not sure why, if a burro is a donkey, a burrito isn't a smaller donkey.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Then burritos for lunch!
Anyway, I expect you're hungry enough to eat a horse, so enjoy
quote:No, no... we only mince possums (there are just too many of the buggers, gotta do something with them all!)
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:EJ, please tell me that isn't a Kiwi delicacy you've brought over.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... minced donkey ...
quote:Goodness, that's nearly cool enough to be civilised.
Originally posted by Boogie:
... The temperature has dropped to 17 ...
quote:[Runs and hides]
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
minced donkey!
quote:Is this linked to this excellent burrito stall?
Originally posted by Balaam:
I missed this:quote:[Runs and hides]
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
minced donkey!
quote:It's at the Ritzy in Brixton, costs £20 + booking fee and the first showing has sold out - link
Originally posted by Huia:
Just a note in case any Londoners are interested - a documentary called "A City Falls" will be screening somewhere in London on 22/2. It shows footage of the central city area of Christchurch during the large quake on the same date last year.
quote:Have you been to the Botanic Gardens yet? Fantastic setting, and the elevation gives it that bit of freshness.
Originally posted by shamwari:
Quiet day in Cape Town. Weather perfect. Already getting browned off
quote:If we're in the Forest Taurus might be a [very good] possibility! I'll e-mail my friends and see what is planned.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
It would be nice if you could fit a western ship meet in Wodders - we don't all live within easy reach of London you know!
quote:Oh! I've never heard it used like that, only to mean cheesed off!
Just sunburn M!!
quote:Taurus would be great - there's a nice restaurant there and some nice shops, also a very good garden centre.It's nice and easy to get to from quite a big area, and also has a big car park. To paraphrase Darllenwr's father, all you want for a tourist attraction is a car park, toilet and tea bar!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:If we're in the Forest Taurus might be a [very good] possibility! I'll e-mail my friends and see what is planned.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
It would be nice if you could fit a western ship meet in Wodders - we don't all live within easy reach of London you know!
quote:Where is that then? Pardon my ignorance!! I only know of it as a sign of the zodiac with which I am not interested.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
quote:Taurus would be great - there's a nice restaurant there and some nice shops, also a very good garden centre.It's nice and easy to get to from quite a big area, and also has a big car park. To paraphrase Darllenwr's father, all you want for a tourist attraction is a car park, toilet and tea bar!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:If we're in the Forest Taurus might be a [very good] possibility! I'll e-mail my friends and see what is planned.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
It would be nice if you could fit a western ship meet in Wodders - we don't all live within easy reach of London you know!
quote:Or not, as the case may be.
Originally posted by shamwari:
If you want an unexpected story check Purgatory
quote:Ooh, I'm a punter and I love it too!
Originally posted by piglet:
Huge funeral today went off very much according to plan - they all thought the music was wonderful. The Archdeacon's widow even made a point of coming and thanking D. and saying how much he would have loved it.
The Fauré Requiem isn't my absolutely favourite thing, but the punters love it ...
quote:Sounds good. Broccoli makes a good pakora, don't know what other spices go into it, but there are visible flakes of red chilli in the good ones.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
For supper tonight we had pakoda/pakora [vegetables in batter and deep fried] - mainly mushroom but HWMBO and Mrs E also peeled some large cloves of garlic and battered and fried them - YUMMY!!
Piglet, you have to give these a go some time - a simple and fairly thick gram flour and rice flour batter with a few pinches of spice. Were we to do them again I might add a few finely chopped herbs to the batter too.
quote:The thing we use is like a wok in shape, can't remember it's name here, so probably pretty authentic.
Originally posted by Balaam:
Additional:
They were fried in a wok, but I don't know how authentic to Indian cooking that was.
quote:Oh yes! Once put a whole lot of stuff (very non-edible) in the oven! Luckily I found it before I turned the oven on!
Anyone else hide things when they go away and completely forget where?
quote:Would you not mention rugby - we got stuffed again ...
Originally posted by shamwari:
Went to watch a Super 15 rugby match yesterday evening.
quote:My mother once lost her pearls for about 10 years by hiding them in the chest freezer! Not sure if it would have done them any good...
Originally posted by piglet:
When it comes to hiding things in Silly Places, my mum's strategy for stopping me and my dad from eating the grapes she'd bought for the cheese-board at a dinner party takes some beating - she put them in the tumble-dryer.
quote:It wasn't my grey squirrels that did it, so I'm not going to blame them for the sins of their ancestors... I'm just going to enjoy them chasing one another up and down the trees at breakneck speed and doing the odd back-flip.
Originally posted by St Everild:
Grey squirrels? Vermin...they have driven the native red squirrels almost to the point of distinction. Tree rats - shoot 'em, I say...
...but I'm glad you are entranced with them, EJ!
quote:Would that be A- or B++? Or are such distinctions extinct?
Originally posted by St Everild:
almost to the point of distinction.
quote:I like them too.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
On another note, I was extrememly excited to find the park where all the squirrels hang out yesterday. I guess they're not a big deal to you native Britons, but gosh I love their furry little selves!
quote:Phew! That would have been an annoying and wasted trip. Hope you have a good journey home.
Originally posted by shamwari:
A bit of advice to all travellers. Check your times and dates. I thought I was leaving Fri pm for overnight flight. Turns out the flight is a day time one and we get back to London 17.45 on Fridaay.
quote:Oh dear - preview post clearly NOT my friend on this occasion...
Originally posted by PeteC:
quote:Would that be A- or B++? Or are such distinctions extinct?
Originally posted by St Everild:
almost to the point of distinction.
quote:I always find jet-lag's much worse after travelling west-east. The flights from here are quite often overnight (leaving around midnight Canadian time and arriving early in the morning London time) and if I'm still awake when we hit the M25 it's a minor miracle. Then we get to D's parents' place in Essex and I wake up long enough to say hello and have a cup of tea, and the eyelids start to stick together ... I know you're supposed to stay up until the time you'd normally go to bed, but bugger that ...
Originally posted by Boogie:
... I still have a touch of jet-lag today, snoozed most of the afternoon away ...
quote:Phew! Apparently it's book week in school this week (we were talking to a very small and female Shrek in the queue for the pizza van). Obviously Darth was returning his copy of "How to Win Friends and Execute People".
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
I think there in something funny in the tap water. This morning I saw Darth Vader marching into the local primary school as I cycled past.
quote:Our moggy stalked a squirrel up a tree. Cat gets on a thick branch, squirrel gets on thin branch. Cat goes to thin branch, squirrel goes to thinner branch. Eventually cat gets onto a very thin branch, squirrel jumps to another tree. Cat and squirrel stare at each other for a long time. Cat gives up.
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
We had a cat whose life's ambition was to catch a squirrel.
quote:Presumably not liquorice ones.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... potato and onion and mushrooms and all sorts.
quote:Did I say that? I thought it was you ... I mostly agree though.
As piglet says, you can never have too much garlic.
quote:Never post your email address online where a web robot can read it. And never use the same password for your email as you do for the rest of the web (I know this from having my email used for distributing hardcore gay porn ).
By shamwari
Damn and blast. My e mail address book was hacked into and all manner of people got spam.
quote:Same to you, St. G., and all our other Welsh chums.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Happy St. David's Day - Dydd Dewi Sant - tomorrow
quote:I hope you're right about the short-lived thing! Husband and I have had nasty colds for a week now - mine turned into a sticky cough and his turned into a gummy nose. It's been quite a pest as we should be job hunting, flat hunting and exploring Bristol...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I have a cold, I am a lousy patient, I feel absolutely crap! ...
Happily it promises to be a shortlived event and I should be back to being my usual sweet and lovely self in a day or two.
quote:You have temporary lights? Luxury!
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Further evidence surfaces of the distorting effect this place has on reality.
Today, while a hole in the ground was being dug in our road, they had temporary traffic lights put up.
quote:Just to prove that social workers aren't quite thoroughly hard bitten and cynical, one of my colleagues brought in a couple of packs of welshcakes and a bunch of daffodils.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Lots of red shirts etc and our team leader made about four dozen Welsh Cakes to mark St Davids day.
quote:There is nothing wrong with British roads, it's the volume of traffic that causes the chaos - one little bump and major disruption ensues. Our town was totally gridlocked yesterday, many journeys abandoned. My husband teaches piano on the other side of town - he had to cancel.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
(Normally English roads are much better than NZ roads. It is a bit disconcerting that they're not really lit at all, but otherwise...)
quote:I'd say that's three ingredients too many. Only the last one is essential.
Originally posted by piglet:
Lots of sympathy to those of you with colds - I'm at the tail-end of a minor sniffle kept in check by Piglet's Patent Cold Remedy™ (lem-sip or similar made palatable with Manuka honey, lemon juice and a wee drop of whisky).
quote:I'd turn the cake out of the cake tin when done, apply icing over what would normally be the bottom side of it, stick some extra large glace cherries on top in a pleasing pattern and tell people it's a cherry-upside-down cake.
Originally posted by amber:
Ah yes, my cherry cakes have all the cherries at the bottom, even if I flour them first.
quote:Unfortunately said minor sniffle has found a boomerang and come back with a vengeance. Is a computer virus when you communicate with people on the interweb and then get their colds (MENTIONING NO NAMES )?
Originally posted by piglet:
... I'm at the tail-end of a minor sniffle ...
quote:Ooops, hope that wasn't me! I'm still sinus-y but SO pleased to able to get out of the house and walk about without being too exhausted and sick.
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:Unfortunately said minor sniffle has found a boomerang and come back with a vengeance. Is a computer virus when you communicate with people on the interweb and then get their colds (MENTIONING NO NAMES )?
Originally posted by piglet:
... I'm at the tail-end of a minor sniffle ...
Tea, sympathy and GIN will all be appreciated.
snuffly piglet
quote:Yum! That looks delicious! I propose a shipmeet at Boogie's house (though I guess it'd be prohibitively expensive to get there...)
Originally posted by Boogie:
Hehe - yes they did! Here is a photo of it - the cake tin liner didn't fit so the cake has frilly edges, I've glazed it with orangy stuff.
quote:Dear Nicodemia,
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Dear Piglet
Given that Canada is pretty near the Arctic, which means snow, ice etc. for quite a few months, do they actually go to work in the winter?? ...
quote:I could get there - take a while, but I am sure there is a bus/tram/train or all three that would do it!!
quote:Eleanor Jane posted:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Hehe - yes they did! Here is a photo of it - the cake tin liner didn't fit so the cake has frilly edges, I've glazed it with orangy stuff.
Yum! That looks delicious! I propose a shipmeet at Boogie's house (though I guess it'd be prohibitively expensive to get there...)
quote:Marvellous!
Originally posted by chive:
Day off today. Stayed in bed til eleven then since then I've been curled up on the sofa reading books.
quote:Just like worms!
Originally posted by Lothlorien:
I kept my sourdough San Francsico culture in the fridge for months. It just slows them down. Take out and feed and it will spring back to life.
quote:I am aiming for the same kind of thing today - not quite 11 and so far apart from getting drinks and being on the ship and Saturday Kitchen nothing much has happened. Lovely (though I will need to go shopping later to get provisions for the week).
Originally posted by chive:
Day off today. Stayed in bed til eleven then since then I've been curled up on the sofa reading books. I should have more days off.
quote:At least a week's worth!
Originally posted by Firenze:
...and I have bought a new vacuum cleaner online (that counts as housework, doesn't it?)
quote:Day off for me today - I'm avoiding all marking and uni work.
Originally posted by chive:
Day off today. Stayed in bed til eleven then since then I've been curled up on the sofa reading books.
quote:Nope. I think it depends on your cat, but ours never walked anywhere with us. She mostly lay about in sunbeams and occasionally rolled over displaying her tummy enticingly (but more fool you if you stroked it, 'cos then she'd pounce!).
Originally posted by Ariel:
Lovely mild spring day. Also the National Trust places that closed for the winter have mostly reopened this weekend.
I was greeted at the gate of one place this morning by a friendly black cat, who led me along a steep woodland path. We paused at intervals to admire the view, then without warning he quite suddenly shot up a tree at about 80mph in pursuit of an equally speedy squirrel. Half a second later the squirrel had easily reached the topmost branches, with the closest thing to a grin on its face, while the cat philosophically shrugged, dived headfirst back off the tree to earth and rejoined me for a sedate walk as if nothing had happened.
I suppose cat owners are used to this kind of thing.
quote:Only if you actually use it ...
Originally posted by Firenze:
... I have bought a new vacuum cleaner online (that counts as housework, doesn't it?)
quote:Happy birthday! Hope the day is a good one. Lovely sunny morning here.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We took sweets to church this morning as it is my burfday, not a significant but everyone seems to be making a bit of/far too much of a fuss.
quote:One of our past cats wouold follow us considerable distances - he once followed us up to my Dad's, so at least half a mile. Others have followed us along the back lane and had to be shoo'd home. As you say, depends on the cat.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I think it depends on your cat, but ours never walked anywhere with us.
quote:I'd have thought with hyacinths it was pretty obvious, and I have NO gaydar!
Originally posted by QLib:
Happy Birthday, Wodders.
A good gardening day. Planted strawberries and outed the Christmas hyacinths.
quote:Hope you had a great birthday.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
29?
OMG, NO!! I'd hate to be that age again! Fancy having all those years to go before Blessed Retirement?
quote:A cat sounds like a valuable evanglism tool to me- I'd actually talk to a door knocker who brought a cat along, instead of a quick 'no thanks' and shut the door as usual.
Originally posted by Enigma:
On the subject of cats following you around in embarassing fashion -- I had a cat that followed me round when I was younger and trying out the knocking on doors evangelism route. She was very cute but when she started weeing on front lawns I felt the gospel was being compromised!!
P.S. I'm better now.
quote:I read this rather too early this morning and was mystified by the idea of an evangelical cat going round knocking on doors (then - presumably if the message wasn't well received - weeing on the lawn before walking off).
Originally posted by Enigma:
On the subject of cats following you around in embarassing fashion -- I had a cat that followed me round when I was younger and trying out the knocking on doors evangelism route. She was very cute but when she started weeing on front lawns I felt the gospel was being compromised!!
quote:Unfortunately it was the other way round - she was walking off while I was apologising for the behaviour!! Sorry for my cat and by the way can we talk about faith/Jesus etc -- not the best!!
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:I read this rather too early this morning and was mystified by the idea of an evangelical cat going round knocking on doors (then - presumably if the message wasn't well received - weeing on the lawn before walking off).
Originally posted by Enigma:
On the subject of cats following you around in embarassing fashion -- I had a cat that followed me round when I was younger and trying out the knocking on doors evangelism route. She was very cute but when she started weeing on front lawns I felt the gospel was being compromised!!
quote:I see quite a few ducks every morning on my way in to w*rk - there's a pond just beside the car-park where D. drops me off, and we sometimes bring left-over bread for them and say hello.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... I think I've seen about a year's supply of ducks ...
quote:I'm quite happy admiring animals *and* eating them (grew up on a farm). There is a clear line in my mind, though, between animals that are food and animals that are pets.
Originally posted by QLib:
I used to work in a special school which kept chickens, ducks and goats. If the boys were 'acting out' outside the classroom block, the ducks would waddle over to watch, from what they judged to be a safe distance. Sometimes,they would seem to be discussing it amongst themselves: "Well, I never did in all my days..." etc. When the show was over, they waddled off again.
Pity they're so delicious.
quote:I heard of a family that bought three piglets to raise for meat. Just to make sure the kids remembered what they were for, the parents named them Breakfast, Lunch, and Supper.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
There is a clear line in my mind, though, between animals that are food and animals that are pets.
For those wondering, it's about naming them, and how you treat them and how many of them there are. I could have pet ducks, or I could farm ducks for eating but I'd have to treat them and think about them differently from the start.
quote:
Originally posted by Moo:
... three piglets ... named Breakfast, Lunch, and Supper ...
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
won't.
**flounce ... oink**
quote:Yes, and reminds me of the saying that one can eat every point of a pig except the squeak. Or, indeed, the oink.
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
**flounce ... oink**
That forms a great mental image
quote:Or as the sign in Yorkshire says
Originally posted by QLib:
quote:Yes, and reminds me of the saying that one can eat every point of a pig except the squeak. Or, indeed, the oink.
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
**flounce ... oink**
That forms a great mental image
quote:I'm sure she is, but I'm not Dormouse, I'm Piglet.
Originally posted by Enigma:
Well done Dormouse - you goddess! ...
quote:And we haven't even met ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderick:
I find that a rather disturbing image!
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:I'm sure she is, but I'm not Dormouse, I'm Piglet.
Originally posted by Enigma:
Well done Dormouse - you goddess! ...
quote:And we haven't even met ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderick:
I find that a rather disturbing image!
It's been the sort of beautiful, v. sunny but v. cold (high of -4°) day here today, just the sort of weather I like (mainly because you don't have to shovel it).
quote:Three days is not enough time. I'd expect at least a week, more likely 10-14 days, and I think the short notice says something about the company you've applied to.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I'm struggling with having to come up with a hypothetical project for the organisation and do a hypothetical trust application to a specific trust. To me that seems like a bit much to ask an applicant. (And I've only got three days to do it...)
quote:Wot no role play, no "live" phone conversations with someone posing as a particularly difficult caller? (Luckily I wasn't involved in that last.)
Originally posted by piglet:
That makes me feel quite glad to be as far down the food-chain as I am; I've never had to do anything scarier than a typing test.
quote:I've done the role play! I had the whole board take on crazy personas for me to try and convince to do a certain thing within about 15 -20 min! It was actually quite fun, in a silly kind of way.
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:Wot no role play, no "live" phone conversations with someone posing as a particularly difficult caller? (Luckily I wasn't involved in that last.)
Originally posted by piglet:
That makes me feel quite glad to be as far down the food-chain as I am; I've never had to do anything scarier than a typing test.
quote:Absolutely - while the Curate was intoning the final Collects (they were printed in the order of service) we realised that someone was saying them along with him. Nice to imagine that they were hearing something familiar that they may not have heard for a long time.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... I expect those of them 'with it' enough to notice enjoyed it a great deal ...
quote:Well done - fingers crossed for a good result.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I had a good job interview yesterday, so I'm quite excited and hopeful...
quote:When on a bland diet due to sickness I find a variety of fruit juices — orange, grapefruit, apple etc. — adds some variety to the blandness. You could suggest this to your young friend.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Our young friend ... is fed up ... and can only eat bland food so is even more bored!
quote:Virtuous Piglet checking in ...
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
... I have to try and sort out the mess of notes and doodles I took at the rather trying and very argumentative committee meeting I went to yesterday ...
quote:Not here it bloody isn't. It sn*wed this afternoon - the phenomenon known locally as Sheila's Brush - a snowfall just after St. Patrick's Day. Mind you, it wasn't really that much, and if we get the 6° and rain they're offering us on Thursday maybe it won't last.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... So warm, I had one layer of clothing and a light coat and was even a bit too warm in the sun ...
quote:Yer - right! <whispers to WW, remember - that temperature is what constitutes a heatwave over here in the Isles of Albion!>
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
No heatwave here, just the standard high 20s and low 30s Celsius.
quote:Fantastic news - well done!
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
And, I got a job!
quote:That's Global Warming for you! They say the Arctic will be free of ice in the summer in a few years. Can't remember what number the few was - but it didn't seem very far away.
It's very early for icebergs - we don't usually get them this far south until at least May or even June.
quote:They are butcher's vans, not ice-cream vans. That's what my parents told me anyway.
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
I have heard 2 ice cream vans this afternoon, but neither has turned into our road! Despite the kids playing really noisily. They could make a packet from us.
It's a real shame, it's a good 30 seconds since I last ate anything unhealthy.
quote:Cue to jump up and down clamouring "Can we have sausages for tonight??"
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
They are butcher's vans, not ice-cream vans. That's what my parents told me anyway.
quote:And teaspoons. Where do our teaspoons go??
Originally posted by Nanny Ogg:
It's another sunny day and the man has come round to take me metal detecting Probably only find fish hooks and ring pulls.
quote:If you ever find the answer please post it as we have the same problem.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
quote:And teaspoons. Where do our teaspoons go??
Originally posted by Nanny Ogg:
It's another sunny day and the man has come round to take me metal detecting Probably only find fish hooks and ring pulls.
quote:I can assure you that is not the case. As sock singletons sometimes turn up in my washing machine (sans mate and doing a good impression of being one of my socks but I was only washing sheets at the time when I detected it, and the wash previous to it was towels). I just put them in the sock draw, where they await the next sort out, when they get paired with one of my left behind ones, whose true mate has gone off wandering.
Originally posted by PeteC:
Silly boys! Teaspoons are in the same location as sock singletons.
quote:Well, just recently the teaspoon with the pretty silver pattern on the handle, which I'd bought as a teenager, and used as my "default" teaspoon for years (through university and every job) turned up in the office kitchenette. I'd lost it seven years ago - never expected to see it again.
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
No extra teaspoons have ever turned up.
quote:It's been a good afternoon - 3 fishing weight (one broken) and 2p.
Originally posted by Nanny Ogg:
It's another sunny day and the man has come round to take me metal detecting Probably only find fish hooks and ring pulls.
quote:A couple of years ago when the Choir was doing its turn running the Cathedral tea-room, it was suggested we take in posh teaspoons for serving the jam and cream with the scones. I brought in a set of little coffee-spoons that had belonged to my granny and one of them got lost - if they want them again they can whistle for them.
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
... No extra teaspoons have ever turned up ...
quote:They are all in the mini dresser thing with a drawer in the back of the chapel I attend - together with several pairs of spectacles. All with a claim contact me - if you can name you can claim!!
Originally posted by ken:
Ballpoint pen lids, umbrellas, hats, gloves (especially left-hand gloves) and scarves will be in the same place. Along with a surprising number of seven-of-spades cards, unused sticking plasters, the password to your old Yahoo account you never use any more, and that money you were sure you loaded onto the Oyster card.
quote:I missed the first 15 minutes but what a fascinating programme it was. Bringing a human face to the workers behind the scenes. Really interesting.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
If anyone in the UK has been watching "The Tube" on BBC2 - were you, like me, absolutely astounded at the amount and gobsmacking variety of the lost property there???
quote:Every now & then I help with a beach litter clean where we make a note of what we collect so that the organisation that runs it can use the information when lobbying. And yes, on the beach too the shore-based fishermen are responsible for most of what we pick up, with boat-based ones and whoever leaves 1" lengths of rope coming a close second.
Originally posted by Nanny Ogg:
quote:It's been a good afternoon - 3 fishing weight (one broken) and 2p.
Originally posted by Nanny Ogg:
It's another sunny day and the man has come round to take me metal detecting Probably only find fish hooks and ring pulls.
Fisherman are real litter bugs though, lots of carrier bags, bottle tops and food wrapping around. Why can't they look after the countryside?
quote:I'm hoping to do the same, Ariel - on the way to work this morning, the motorway overhead signs were informing which of the services had run out of diesel. Hopefully I have enough unleaded to get me home
Originally posted by Ariel:
...How are people doing for fuel - our local garage has run out of diesel and the other one has queues to fill up with petrol. I've postponed filling up the car until the weekend, when hopefully it should be a bit quieter.
quote:Brilliant thought EJ!
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
No car at the moment - my feet have as much fuel as usual (i.e. not a great deal, but I need to get places so I walk there and back).
Gosh, imagine being so powerful that if you mention 'go and do this thing' everyone crowds around to do it! What if the PM said 'go and buy a pasty'? Greggs would stop complaining for a bit, I guess! (Being a bit facetious...)
quote:All the best. I was singing alto in the Messiah one year when the conductor realised his bass section seemed to have fallen apart. My son who is a very good bass singer was called in like you, at last moment. We had score and tape given to us. Car trip in saw cassette being played over and over and score being perused at red traffic lights. Fortunately he is very good at sight singing and also playing a keyboard instrument the same way. he frequently while still at school found himself called in to play at a funeral where he could do old hymns by sight which no one else could do.
Originally posted by St Everild:
I shall be (virtually sight) singing (at very short notice) the St John Passion tonight in Ashbourne.
Small choir, one of their sopranos has gone sick...someone who calls themselves a friend mentioned that I might be available.
Prayers - please! But I am quite excited really...
quote:No. They're only thinking about it. It hasn't even got beyond that, yet my garage has now been out of everything for two days.
Originally posted by piglet:
I can't quite get my head round the fuel crisis - are the tanker-drivers on strike or aren't they?
quote:Terms and conditions.
And considering that they're paid £47,000 a year, if they are on strike, then why?
quote:I'm so sorry
Originally posted by Ariel:
...Incidentally, speaking of snow, the papers are saying Easter will bring an Arctic Freeze - that'll be something to look forward to.
quote:So am I, WW. Perfect early autumn day down here. 27° max in Sydney. Mornings and evenings are getting cooler and the air feels different. Autumn is on its way.
I'm so sorry
quote:Yes - I hope it doesn't confuse the plants too much - my lettuce is growing nicely!
Originally posted by Ariel:
Incidentally, speaking of snow, the papers are saying Easter will bring an Arctic Freeze - that'll be something to look forward to.
quote:Yes, things are a bit like that around here - husband finally got paid, but it's only one medium income for the two of us, so it's down to essentials only until I finally start work then get paid!
Originally posted by Boogie:
Bit of a lazy day here at BoogievilleMansions - or is that BoogievilleHovels since Mr Boogs has just said 'Don't spend anything until next Thursday'?
quote:You lie beautifully.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I'm so sorry
quote:And that's not productive of serenity, relaxation, a feeling being at ease?
Originally posted by Ariel:
I meant to use the morning productively, as it was full of sunshine, although chilly.
Instead I ended up at a sunny table in the window of a cafe, with a cup of hot chocolate with whipped cream and Belgian chocolate sprinkles, and an Italian palmine biscuit, watching the world go by and listening idly to the sounds of cheerful chatter and classical music.
Life is hard sometimes.
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I've always thought that having a SIN number suits some people better than others.
quote:Not off it for Lent then, eh?
Originally posted by Ariel:
... a cup of hot chocolate with whipped cream and Belgian chocolate sprinkles ...
quote:No, I opted for going low-carb vegetarian-with-fish instead. It's a great way of forcing yourself to eat healthily.
Originally posted by piglet:
Not off it for Lent then, eh?
quote:Yep - very odd weather - the plants must be completely confused!
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
snow on Wednesday.
Can't wait to see all my plants shrivelled up in the east winds........
quote:Pick them Boogie - mine have been ruined! It didn't help that the dustbin was blown over, across the patio, to rest gracefully squashing tulips, pansies and lots of grape hyacinths!
Boogie posted:
Dilemma - do I leave my tulips out to the elements (freezing wind and snow) or pick them and put them in a vase?
quote:Don't encourage him, EJ.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... except WW who can continue boasting ...
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
... Spirit of God in the still running Wodders
quote:Haha! _ Now go sit on the porch to dry out!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
A Quiz:
Who is daft enough to be leaning over a bucket, hand washing a brand new shirt to get the starch out, and turn the shower/tap control the wrong way and thus soak their own back with cold water?
Answers on a postcard, please, to the usual address.
quote:Can you get to Neath by 7:00? We've got one! It's been a very thought provoking and moving week - worship inter-denominationally (is that a word?).
Originally posted by Ariel:
Well, my plan to get to Oxford for Tenebrae has fallen through. I could either get there an hour early, well before the shops opened, or else arrive slightly late. It's not available locally.
I should probably do some practical things like sending Easter cards instead. It's a beautiful sunny day - hadn't expected that.
quote:Porch? Surely not being an American you mean veranda. A porch is something you you sit IN not on.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Now go sit on the porch to dry out!
quote:Sadly not. [pan-loaf accent ON]
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Actually most people reading this will be far too young to remember and will dismiss this post as the ravings of an old fogey ...
quote:[/pan-loaf accent OFF]
"Dr. Cameron, I've got the most terrible heartburn"
"Stop your havering, woman, and get your t*ts out o' ma porridge!"
quote:One of the big companies hereabouts is actually called Eastern Curry Powders so I suppose I can't complain - what they sell, however, is a variety of Masala Powders - and masala just means mixture so I suppose they are, really.
Originally posted by piglet:
...* sorry, WW - you probably don't approve of curry-powder ...
quote:Not Morningside then? Say it isn't so!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Did you know Barbara Mullen was actually born in Boston, Massachusetts? ...
quote:Here too. The skies are greying up. I'm glad I'm on the right side of the Pennines though, the wrong side is going to get the brunt of it.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I think they'll be rain before morning.
quote:As usual!
Originally posted by Balaam:
The skies are greying up. I'm glad I'm on the right side of the Pennines though, the wrong side is going to get the brunt of it.
quote:Funnily enough, I've just started a thread about this in Ecclesiantics.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Yesterday at Mass the priest went around doing the Asperges - those sprinklers send out quite a bit, don't they?
quote:I'm just wondering what one does on a wet Bank Holiday? Everything is shut, as far as I can tell, and I don't fancy wandering about a wood or some standing stones in the rain (although otherwise that'd be lovely).
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Well, its now Bank Holiday Monday, and its pouring with rain and doesn't look like stopping, at least this side of noon!
At least we don't get hosepipe bans up here!
quote:My choice would be sleep!
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
...I'm just wondering what one does on a wet Bank Holiday?...
quote:I need to get out of the house for a few hours every day or I'll go stir crazy... you wouldn't like me when I'm crazy!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:My choice would be sleep!
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
...I'm just wondering what one does on a wet Bank Holiday?...
quote:Not sure where you are but the main shops and restaurants are open round here. Otherwise I'm afraid it's probably going to have to be indoor pursuits like TV or a good book.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I'm just wondering what one does on a wet Bank Holiday? Everything is shut, as far as I can tell, and I don't fancy wandering about a wood or some standing stones in the rain (although otherwise that'd be lovely).
quote:She came back for the weekend with her family this morning, despite being told she didn't have to - and she wouldn't let me wash up or anything - but then you know what she is like! We told a neighbour's daughter she was 105 today and she just laughed!
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
Happy birthday Mrs E - I hope you are being spoiled...
quote:Darllenwr led the Lighting of the Paschal candle service on Saturday. He now realises it's not a good idea to say "damn" when the alter candles won't light when wearing a radio mike.
Originally posted by St Everild:
I didn't set myself or anything else on fire exempt the Paschal Candle, which not only lit but stayed lit) so that was a success...
quote:Death by chocolate is nothing compared to that, Ariel
Originally posted by Ariel:
... Have spent the afternoon making the chocolate cake from Hell.... .
quote:Because it was a Bank Holiday and it's traditional.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
It's been lovely and sunny today. Why couldn't it have been like this yesterday???
quote:Do your experiments include paprika? Paprika works with cauliflower if you don't overdo it.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We tried a new recipe at lunch for cauliflower cooked with garlic - it was nice but we think it can be improved so will be experimenting a bit
quote:Paprika works period. Mrs S rarely uses chili without a little paprika. It 'rounds out' a lot of things.
Originally posted by Balaam:
quote:Do your experiments include paprika? Paprika works with cauliflower if you don't overdo it.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We tried a new recipe at lunch for cauliflower cooked with garlic - it was nice but we think it can be improved so will be experimenting a bit
quote:Your cricketers may have a little way to go yet
Originally posted by shamwari:
Great.
Another Zimbabwean.
We are destined to take over the world.
quote:Here that would be called a lead=up to Vishu, celebrated tomorrow, but some kids (5-99) just can't wait to let off their fireworks!
Originally posted by Ariel:
A bit of local news:
The Big Bang
I was just on my way to get a takeaway when I heard this - a couple of quick, massive explosions. Like those (now banned) mortar fireworks going off. No idea what it was, no smoke, no police sirens on the trail any time shortly after either so I'm guessing it wasn't local after all. Did anyone else hear it?
quote:Yes, it isn't just a matter of 'breaking the sound barrier', but one of travelling at a speed above that of sound. If the plane travels 80 miles at Mach 1+, people along the whole flight path will hear the boom.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Sonic boom from RAF jets, apparently. Interesting that it was heard all the way from Birmingham to Swindon at the same time, when the jets started in Lincolnshire.
Though I suppose they might have broken the sound barrier over our area...
quote:Well, yes. Especially as the helicopter pilot had accidentally broadcast a distress signal on the "help, I'm being hijacked" frequency instead of the normal one. He must be so embarrassed, poor man.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I wonder what the cost to the taxpayer [and I still pay UK tax] was for that little sortie of two fighter jets?
quote:That really varies depending on which part of the country you're in. I was quite taken aback by someone saying "Good morning to me" after I'd moved out of Oxford. (Yes, I was lost for a response.) Not what I was used to at all.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Another thought... I wonder if I'm going to manage to adjust to the more polite/ communicative style of the Brits in public areas. People say 'sorry', 'excuse me' etc. a lot more in places like supermarkets and are a lot more chatty with strangers. I still get a bit taken aback when a perfectly nice stranger passes a comment on something. It's nice, but odd to my self-contained NZ soul.
quote:True, that. One reason I didn't want to move to London is that people are more likely to swear at you than say hello. (Exaggerating, but they're not friendly. I didn't feel safe/ relaxed/ comfortable, especially as a 'foreigner' who was probably a damntourist. I've stayed in London four times over 10+ years, in case anyone was wondering.)
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:That really varies depending on which part of the country you're in. I was quite taken aback by someone saying "Good morning to me" after I'd moved out of Oxford. (Yes, I was lost for a response.) Not what I was used to at all.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Another thought... I wonder if I'm going to manage to adjust to the more polite/ communicative style of the Brits in public areas. People say 'sorry', 'excuse me' etc. a lot more in places like supermarkets and are a lot more chatty with strangers. I still get a bit taken aback when a perfectly nice stranger passes a comment on something. It's nice, but odd to my self-contained NZ soul.
quote:Would "hello" and a friendly wave have done? Or, presuming he knows you're English, "toodle-pip, old chap!"
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... I quickly recovered myself, remembering he is Muslim, and said Salaam Aleikum instead ...
quote:We say "Namaste" to each other, bending with our hands together. Some of our family used to have our head down and placed their hand on it.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
On the saying good morning thing I embarrassed myself this morning by saying Namaskaram
quote:I hope he giggled all the way home haven't created such a disturbance.
Originally posted by Morlader:
...But one Friday evening on arrival in Guildford, one of the group SAID "I shalln't be with you on Monday, I retire today. Goodbye." ...
quote:And a Parti----.....dge in a Pear Tree!!!!!!!! Glad you didn't go hungry.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Gosh, let me see if I can remember:
There were three different sorts of banana chip - plain, salted and cooked with raw sugar.
There was chick pea and potato in a fried coconut sauce.
There was bottle gourd with yoghurt.
There was a variety of green bean.
There was bittergourd with onion.
There were two shallot dishes, one raw and one cooked.
There was fresh garlic pickle and fresh ginger pickle.
There was mango cooked in yoghurt.
There was sambar [in the thing with the lid] and rasam, the red stuff in little bowls, a sort of peppery tomato soup drunk with the meal.
There was a cabbage dish and another greens dish - and that is about all I remember.
Apart from the payasam we had for pudding which was a special dal payasam made with jaggery [raw sugar] but no milk.
We like food.
quote:Make your booking now!
Originally posted by Ariel:
I don't think he'll be going hungry for quite a while...
It sounds like a delicious feast and all good stuff. I wouldn't mind trying the chickpea and potato in fried coconut, in particular.
quote:Me too.
Originally posted by Celtic Knotweed:
Must get round to doing something today besides going online.
quote:I have finished a 4,000 word assignment, got rid of (nearly) all my dandelions and cleared a couple of eyesores (dead shrubs). Where's a smug smilie when you need one?
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:Me too.
Originally posted by Celtic Knotweed:
Must get round to doing something today besides going online.
quote:I am indeed, Nicodemia. We live in a "jelly-bean-row" house - we have a picture of it on the computer but because I'm a technopeasant I don't know how to reproduce it here. I must have a look at the Grauniad web-site to see what they said.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
...Are you sure you are OK there, Piglet??
quote:An elderly Friend once said to me that the ideal committee, Quaker or otherwise, has just three members with one off sick and one away on holiday. [Bitter] experience has shown that he definitely had a point!
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
...Dreaded committee meeting this morning - there's always one person (usually the same one) who says "yes, but....." just as you think you've got it all wrapped up!
quote:At that rate it's going to take you quite a while to use up your lb!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... A teaspoon of paprika in mushroom fry is exceedingly good!
quote:I guess we can all relate to that.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I am sure these early morning cycle rides are doing me good but I do hate getting up that early! Once I have been up a little while I am fine, it is the initial getting out of bed that is the problem.
quote:Really sorry for your loss piglet - hope your travels are not as bad as you fear.
Originally posted by piglet:
Absolutely, Balaam. I find jet-lag is far worse going east, but because we're over there for such a short time, the old body-clocks won't really have time to adjust. We'll almost be meeting ourselves going the other way ...
quote:I'm afraid to disappoint - we've had the same sort of weird weather over on the Continent since about Easter. Similar gear is not unknown at the moment here either!
Originally posted by Enigma:
We've had rain and hailstones today - together with bright sunlight!! Is it only in Britain that it is normal to wear a heavy duty raincoat, a scarf and sunglasses??
quote:Just discovered one of our local wine merchants is stocking wines from Chamonix. Had a very memorable lunch there on my birthday earlier this year, complete with parrot and thunderstorm.
Originally posted by Mary LA:
then to taste local goats cheeses in the wine-growing valley of Franschhoek and lunch with friends.
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
...In other news: ARRRRGGGGGGH
quote:Firenze - what did the parrot taste like? I'd have thought a bit stringy unless braised for a very long time!
Just discovered one of our local wine merchants is stocking wines from Chamonix. Had a very memorable lunch there on my birthday earlier this year, complete with parrot and thunderstorm.
quote:...and if you could, would it be printable?
Originally posted by St Everild:
...There must be a collective noun for a gathering of clergy, but I can't think of one just now...
quote:It's a bunch. Everyone on the radio seems to have one collective noun only - 'bunch'
Originally posted by kiwimacahau:
Surely a communion of vicars and a fulmination of bishops?
quote:And a synod a baleful ? Yep, seems right.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
As clergy are members of the cloth wouldn't Bale be appropriate?
quote:Deja vu all over again?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Another day without the bureaucrats - I imagine they will come Thursday afternoon when we are out at a temple festival!
quote:No.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:...and if you could, would it be printable?
Originally posted by St Everild:
...There must be a collective noun for a gathering of clergy, but I can't think of one just now...
quote:Didn't go elephant spotting this afternoon as it rained somewhat more than somewhat but the fun bit of the day was early morning when two lads and I went for a cycle ride on a route they didn't really know - strange as they both grew up here. They both seemed impressed with my local knowledge which I find a bit odd - when I move somewhere new the best way to get to know the area is either walking or cycling - and HWMBO grew up round here, too, so he has shown me loads.
Good results for local kids so far today - everybody has passed their exams - Ashiq, my cycling partner has got C in Chemistry and Maths but has done very well otherwise - one of his friends, name now forgotten, got 7 passes at A+, one A and 2 at B+!!!
Now the competition begins for places for the next level, here called Plus one and Plus Two.
quote:Good Lord above! You hope the cobras stay undisturbed!!
Originally posted by Mary LA:
Not a fox, but -- woke up and saw a mongoose drinking from the stone bird bath. Odd time of year for it to come into a domestic garden. There are very shy cobras right at the back of the garden and I hope the mongoose leaves them undisturbed.
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... I just lifted the cover, grabbed one and popped it in my mouth only to find that it was covered in ants! I had ants in my mouth, ants on my face - horrible!
I wonder how many I swallowed.
quote:The chances of seeing a wild snake are almost zero, even in winter, when they are at their most sluggish, an adder will flee if it knows you're around.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
(Remember I am orginally from New Zealand, we didn't have any snakes, let alone highly venomous ones...I do hope I never see a wild snake in the UK.)
quote:Yup, raining pretty thoroughly here now. It has been fine for most of the day, so I'm counting my blessings. Plus I don't actually need to go outside today, so that helps too. I would *like* to celebrate Friday with a pub and my husband but if it's too nasty, there's already pizza delivery!
Originally posted by Ariel:
Anyway – still raining. The fields have turned into small lakes, the sky looks like a bruise, the trees are full of blossom and when the wind and rain get going, it looks like a spring snowstorm as the petals shower across the car park. Passing cars going through the puddles can drench you from head to foot: welcome to the English spring.
quote:He was obviously a very Wise and Good Man. **shudder**
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
my dad loathed snakes - he could hardly bear even talking about them!
quote:Still holding you and yours in prayer Piglet.
Originally posted by Japes:
Glad it all went OK, piglet, even if the last bit of travelling stuff sounds horrid. Sleep well!!
This has been a most horrible lurgy that's kept me confined to bed or sofa for the last four days. Worst thing has been the aching limbs and muscles. I'm really glad I did a major shop just before it set in, though less pleased that I'd bought a week's train ticket, which has only been used for one day.
I'm feeling a bit better today, though, and have got as far as changing my sheets and duvet cover, in slow stages, with a sit down and rest between each bit. I shall continue to languish on the sofa for the rest of the day, though.
quote:Wish I'd known about that, especially as it ended today. Just mentioned it to Sandemaniac, apparently because I usually let him know about markets in town (there was a Chocolate Fair last month...), he'd assumed that I knew about the Moroccans when he saw it on Wed & Thurs. No, I usually need be in town myself to have any knowledge of such events. (OK, sometimes I find them on the City Council website too.)
Originally posted by Ariel:
My train home was cancelled this evening, so I got a bus to Oxford. I was surprised and delighted to find a genuine Moroccan crafts market in Broad St, the white tents looking a little dejected with no lighting on a dark rainy day, beneath the walls of a 12th-century college.
quote:I wish I'd known about that...!
Originally posted by Celtic Knotweed:
...there was a Chocolate Fair last month...
quote:Inside out somewhere.
Originally posted by Miffy:
Where is an umbrella smiilie when you need one?
quote:Ah well. It's beginning to brighten up, in our part of the UK anyway.
Originally posted by Balaam:
quote:Inside out somewhere.
Originally posted by Miffy:
Where is an umbrella smilie when you need one?
quote:This is very much a rural thing, isn't it? In deepest rural Herefordshire no introduction is complete until you have worked out who you know, or might know, that the other person also knows are might know.
Originally posted by Chorister:
My mother is legendary for chatting to complete strangers and finding out either that they are related or she knows someone who is related to them.
quote:Where are you coming from? Short-haul is tolerable. Bring your own drinks/ snacks of course.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Talking of planes, I'm thinking of a couple of days in Edinburgh over the bank holiday weekend via Easyjet. Are they as bad as rumored? Any suggestions for getting there and back smoothly?
Cheers,
EJ
quote:and remember your passport, even though it is an internal flight (same applies to going across to the Channel Isles even by boat, but strangely not to The Island (of Wight that is).
Originally posted by Firenze:
quote:Where are you coming from? Short-haul is tolerable. Bring your own drinks/ snacks of course.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Talking of planes, I'm thinking of a couple of days in Edinburgh over the bank holiday weekend via Easyjet. Are they as bad as rumored? Any suggestions for getting there and back smoothly?
Cheers,
EJ
And warm clothes. We've not had the rains, but it's been wretchedly cold - and the immediate forecast is still only just in double figures. And Princes St is under tram works and the buses are all over the place and the town is just a guddle.
quote:BRILLIANT!!
Originally posted by piglet:
...the immigration lady at Halifax looked at them and said "welcome home"...
quote:Oh yes - both will be needed!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I am packing a waterproof and a fleece.
quote:Glad to hear it - my baby boy will be piloting for them this time next year!
Originally posted by piglet:
We flew with Easyjet from Stansted to Edinburgh last week and it was fine.
quote:Thanks Pete - that reminded me to pack my waterproof hat with the fleecy ear flaps!
Originally posted by PeteC:
Don't forget your earmuffs. You know, the ones you take to Munnar to wear at night. In bed.
quote:Oh dear God - Pete I think you may be my mother!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
You start worrying about packing three or four WEEKS before you leave!
quote:Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. On board this morning will be Captain Boogie ...
Originally posted by Boogie:
... my baby boy will be piloting for them this time next year!
quote:A long time ago when my husband and I were moving to Belfast for a few years, I packed my herbs and spices by wrapping them in my husband's extra underwear. Unfortunately the lid of the curry powder came off. It turns out that curry stains don't come out. He wore curried underwear until it wore out.
Originally posted by Mary LA:
I always arrive at Heathrow to find leaked peri-peri sauce or Mrs Balls' Chutney sloshing around socks and white tops.
quote:Brain bleach please!
Originally posted by Moo:
He wore curried underwear until it wore out.
Moo
quote:EJ, your MiL is so right. Winchester is wonderful. In those heady days when Mr. S and I used to entertain visiting Americans, a trip to the Cathedral would impress the best-travelled. And the city itself is fabulous just to wander around.
Thanks for the tips all, but we've decided money and energy would be better conserved by a wee jaunt to Winchester (why Winchester? My English mother-in-law suggested it as a nice old city with plenty to do...).
quote:Indeed, Winchester is a Nice Day Out, with plenty of opportunities for cake. And, sometimes, shipmeets, but not this weekend alas.
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
quote:EJ, your MiL is so right. Winchester is wonderful. In those heady days when Mr. S and I used to entertain visiting Americans, a trip to the Cathedral would impress the best-travelled. And the city itself is fabulous just to wander around.
Thanks for the tips all, but we've decided money and energy would be better conserved by a wee jaunt to Winchester (why Winchester? My English mother-in-law suggested it as a nice old city with plenty to do...).
The Envious Mrs. S
quote:Ooh, we like cake! Cake is one of my favourite things.
Originally posted by Ferijen:
quote:Indeed, Winchester is a Nice Day Out, with plenty of opportunities for cake. And, sometimes, shipmeets, but not this weekend alas.
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
quote:EJ, your MiL is so right. Winchester is wonderful. In those heady days when Mr. S and I used to entertain visiting Americans, a trip to the Cathedral would impress the best-travelled. And the city itself is fabulous just to wander around.
Thanks for the tips all, but we've decided money and energy would be better conserved by a wee jaunt to Winchester (why Winchester? My English mother-in-law suggested it as a nice old city with plenty to do...).
The Envious Mrs. S
quote:The lunch menu sounds great. £17.50 for two courses is quite affordable, too. There's nothing like a good meal to cheer things up!
Originally posted by chive:
I've just been here for lunch and had the best food I've ever eaten. Rabbit with pickled ginger, grey mullet with cockles and raspberry souffle with white chocolate ice cream.
quote:One of the side effects of the recession is that many more places are now offering a fixed price menu which is affordable and good value. Choices are usually restricted, in order to persuade you to go for the more expensive a la carte, but some places can still offer a pretty good deal and Chive's restaurant would be do-able, if you go for the set price lunch menu and choose the wine carefully. Everything on their wine list looks like good stuff so if you go for a glass of the lowest priced it should still be good.
Originally posted by piglet:
I didn't actually get the length of reading menus - I saw the Michelin star and thought "expensive". Must have another look - might be Worth A Detour the next time we're down that way - D's sister lives in Kent, and is usually game for Eating Out.
quote:Jolly good. Are you paying?
Originally posted by Ariel:
... Lunch for two off the a la carte, with aperitifs, digestifs and a bottle of the 1996 Chateaux Margaux at £680 a bottle (yes) should do it.
quote:Think you might have to wait until I win the lottery, sorry! Though do let me know if you win it first.
Originally posted by piglet:
Jolly good. Are you paying?
quote:Second lowest price brand for wines always works for me, never had a bad one doing that. And the price is still reasonable.
Originally posted by Ariel:
if you go for a glass of the lowest priced it should still be good.
quote:Ouch. Yes. I did that once while cutting chillies, absentmindedly rubbed my eye and immediately wished I hadn't. It takes a while but it does wear off. Hope you're OK now.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Very nice, nom nom nom etc, then I got something in my eye and rubbed it before washing my hands thoroughly.
quote:According to the Daily Telegraph on the interweb, it was supposed to snow.
Originally posted by Ariel:
... unexpectedly sunny bank holiday ...
quote:A friend of ours was a missionary to the Po-Karen tribe in Thailand, where chillis are a staple. They check if the chillis are ripe by wiping them across their eyes. OUCH!!!
Originally posted by Ariel:
Yes. I did that once while cutting chillies, absentmindedly rubbed my eye and immediately wished I hadn't. It takes a while but it does wear off. Hope you're OK now.
quote:Thanks! It's actually based on the Sixties musical "Camelot", where King Arthur explains to his bride-to-be how wonderful the weather is in Camelot, which I felt needed updating in view of how things are these days.
Originally posted by Tree Bee:
An apt ode, Ariel.
quote:Wow, that would be some dinner party! A case of 'light the blue touch paper and ...'
Originally posted by Mary LA:
Two kilos of Jerusalem artichokes to scrub and peel for a farty soup (or for a dozen farty soups, unless I give a dinner party).
quote:Incredible picture of the car - she really was very lucky to still be able to drive to work after that!
Originally posted by piglet:
There was a story on the evening news today of a lady near Gander who hit a moose, and something happened to her memory that meant she didn't realise what had happened.
quote:And I thought they were only found in crossword puzzles ...
Originally posted by Mary LA:
Out here in the Overberg mountains, we get eland ...
quote:Bearing in mind where you live, you can get your own.
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
Tiptree jam! I'll be first in the queue, please ...
quote:How interesting! I've seen a glacier, but never an iceberg.
Originally posted by piglet:
We went for a walk at Quidi Vidi this afternoon; there were two icebergs close in where the sea narrows, so we clambered across the rocks to get a better look.
quote:The difference is obvious. Glacier. Iceberg.
Originally posted by Boogie:
How interesting! I've seen a glacier, but never an iceberg.
quote:There's a tapas place on the new harbour development with good views over the harbour. The Sagrada Familia is another must.
Originally posted by Boogie:
I'm off to Barcelona with 5 girlie friends for four days on Saturday!
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
...six large squeezy bottles of the standard version of the nectar of the Gods ... should be enough to last a little while ...
quote:No wonder you're traumatized. That would put me off too.
Originally posted by piglet:
* possibly because on the one occasion I tried it I spread it on as one might spread honey: no-one told me you just spread a little on and scrape it off again ...
quote:No wonder you don't like Marmite if you abuse it like that! It must be dark and smooth and shiny, not scraped!
Originally posted by piglet:
no-one told me you just spread a little on and scrape it off again
quote:Quite right. Though I'm sure we must have had this discussion many times and neither side has ever budged an inch from their entrenched positions...
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
No the one true only way to spread Marmite, is to mix a small quantity with butter/margarine and spread that on your bread or toast.
quote:Margarine? Margarine?
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
No the one true only way to spread Marmite*, is to mix a small quantity with butter/margarine and spread that on your bread or toast.
quote:No wonder the poor souls haven't yet learned the True Art of Sandwiches. One day they will make their peace with Marmite.
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
quote:Margarine? Margarine?
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
No the one true only way to spread Marmite*, is to mix a small quantity with butter/margarine and spread that on your bread or toast.
quote:Thankfully old New Zealand still had a butter mountain when I was growing up, so it was Anchor butter in a block wrapped in paper. I still love butter and do enjoy Marmite but NZ Marmite is a totally different thing to UK Marmite or Aussie Vegemite. NZ Marmite is jet black and much thicker than UK Marmite.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
When I was growing up, margarine wsa definitely infra dig - Mam would never countenance using it on bread, it was only ever used for cooking.
quote:Ah yes! Even now I can see the disdain my grandmother poured upon one of her DILs for using margarine. They didn't get on well at the best of times but margarine just about finished off the relationship. Made worse because my aunt insisted it was "margarine" with a hard "g". My grandmother said aunt was putting on la-de-da airs but ate margarine.
Originally posted by Firenze:
My mother told me not to play with youse
Because you're in the dirt.
It isn't because you're dirty;
It isn't because you're clean;
It's because you have the whooping cough
And eat margarine.
quote:All the more reason to enjoy it if you can!
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
Hey we could not afford butter when I was a kid. It is still a treat to this day.
quote:I remember the first pizza I ever ate. It was at school, had a pastry (!) base with cheese and tomato paste on top. It was disgusting and the least popular meal on the school lunches menu, despite stiff competition. That was in c 1964, so lousy food at school is nothing new, and I don't recall Fanny Craddock or Marguerite Patten making a fuss. We were supposed to clear our plates and be grateful we didn't have to bring a matchboxful of rice to school, like children did in China.
Originally posted by ken:
quote:All the more reason to enjoy it if you can!
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
Hey we could not afford butter when I was a kid. It is still a treat to this day.
When I was a kid I didn't know what asparagus or artichokes or aubergines or avocados were. Doesn't mean I can't eat them now if I want!
Heck, I didn't even know what a pizza was. We ate different in them days.
quote:What bunting? What parties?
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Can someone explain the attitudes re: all the bunting, Jubilee parties etc.?
quote:I looked up its route on t'web and it's going right past the end of the road where I used to live; if I still lived there I'd have tried to see it.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... the O****** Torch is coming to Newport on Friday ...
quote:There's masses of it all over the place here down south... Maybe you could import some?
Originally posted by Firenze:
quote:What bunting? What parties?
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Can someone explain the attitudes re: all the bunting, Jubilee parties etc.?
quote:Well, I'd put the whole, royal family in a council house on minimum wage.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Can someone explain the attitudes re: all the bunting, Jubilee parties etc.?
My impression was that most Brits weren't actually that fond of the Queen and weren't necessarily that openly patriotic (but were deeply patriotic in a private way). NZers tend towards a stiff upper lip, 'let's not make a show of it' type of patriotism. I can't imagine *any* event making NZ break out in a such a rash of red, white and blue. Here you can buy everything from underwear to foot stools to tea cakes with Union Jack decorations...
What gives? (In a spirit of friendly enquiry.)
quote:None here that I've seen either. But then I live in inner London. Maybe its different in Much Binding in the Marsh.
Originally posted by Firenze:
quote:What bunting? What parties?
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Can someone explain the attitudes re: all the bunting, Jubilee parties etc.?
quote:Oh we love our Queen, Gawd bless 'er and all who sail in 'er. Its just the monarchy we can't stand. And most of us are pissed off with the government as well.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
My impression was that most Brits weren't actually that fond of the Queen...
quote:Well, they do say "ne'er cast a clout till May be out"
I think it's because we have gone from Winter woolies to Summer flimsies in 24 hours.
quote:Too young for liberty bodices, Nicodemia, but at my prep school we were only allowed to change out of our winter uniform (scratchy grey flannel skirts and equally scratchy blue twinset) into our summer dresses when the head deemed fit. It often seemed a long, hot, uncomfortable wait for us. I'm sure summers were much sunnier in those days!
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
St.Gwladys posted:
quote:Well, they do say "ne'er cast a clout till May be out"
I think it's because we have gone from Winter woolies to Summer flimsies in 24 hours.
My Mum used to make sure we had our Liberty Bodices on until she was sure summer had come.
How many remember Liberty Bodices???? Ken might, if he had been of a different gender
Sorry you are having problems, though St.G - I do wish you well for the rest of the summer.
quote:"Bah, humbug"?
Originally posted by leo:
Well, I'd put the whole, royal family in a council house on minimum wage.
However, most people like an excuse for a day off and a party. We (I mean my street) are having a street party and I will be looking for somewhere to go to avoid it.
quote:Yes - loads - but it was hard to do my usual obsessing as I didn't want to hold my friends up!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Did you take lots of photies?
quote:My blood sugar just shot up into the stratosphere. I haven't had so many maraschino cherries since I graduated high school. (Long, involved story)
Originally posted by piglet:
Cherry cake.
quote:Sorry about that.
Originally posted by PeteC:
... My blood sugar just shot up into the stratosphere ...
quote:That's why we're going to Amsterdam. OK, I tell a lie - actually, it's because a loooong bank holiday weekend is perfect for a cricket tour to Amsterdam, and the Knotweed (as have a number of spouses...) seems to have suddenly taken an interest in the game for the occasion.
Originally posted by ken:
So far the only direct impact the Jubilee has had on me is a few of my friends whinging that its too late to book any camp sites so they can get away from London for the weekend.
quote:Marmite on toast.
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
I have said I am going to provide English baking. What do the panel think I should make?
quote:As far as I understand the security arragnements you would need to queue from the night before to get within a mile of the river, and agree to be stripped naked and searched internally by one of the 873,000 armed police specially drafted in to ensure no Muslims get within long-range rifle shot of her Maj.
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
... actually I'm just bummed that I'll be missing the pageant of ships up the Thames.
quote:Clotted cream is a wonderful thing! (We didn't have it in New Zealand). I've tended to go cream first 'cos it sticks better to the scone then dollop jam on top. And add extra little bits of jam and cream as I go... mmm.... sounds good... (there isn't a drooling smilie).
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
I thought about Bakewell tart but I've made it before - it went down very well with the French people. I'm making some sterling progress on convincing this particular group of French people that English food is tasty. And afternoon tea is definitely the bestest of all British meals (except for breakfast possibly).
In the end I'm sticking with the original plan of scones because I have just made the frabjous discovery that Marks & Sparks sell clotted cream - which you can normally never get in France . I shall endeavour to initiate the Frenchies into the mystery that is cream tea - jam first or cream first? (I say cream because it looks prettier, but we all know this is a tortured subject…)
quote:You'll be able to get it on iPlayer - in fact, it'll probably be streamed live at the time, too.
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
I suppose as a wannabe historian I should be interested in only the second ever Diamond Jubilee of a UK monarch, but actually I'm just bummed that I'll be missing the pageant of ships up the Thames. That's the bit I'm excited by, I've got a bit of a thing about ships, I think it's the sailors in the family...
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
... I might try piglet's recipe and not bother with the part where you share it with other people
quote:This right and proper - you may need to do it several times as a sort of quality control to make sure you have it just right.
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
I'm also thinking I might try piglet's recipe and not bother with the part where you share it with other people
quote:When my sons were young I did lots of baking, especially slices. For a long time they wondered how I could bake a slice with a neat corner cut from it! Quality control strikes again.
This right and proper - you may need to do it several times as a sort of quality control to make sure you have it just right.
quote:I'm probably teaching grand/mothers to suck eggs but Mrs S has measuring spoons that contain 1.25, 2.5, 5, 10 and 15 ml when level.
Originally posted by Lothlorien:
I have trouble with tablespoon as a measure. I tablespoon down under contains 20 ml, elsewhere 15. I need to check origin of recipe. In some places, the difference is negligible but i have put too much/little of some things by mistake.
quote:Had I not been on the bus and him on the footpath I'd have stopped him to ask where he bought it so I could get one to send to Smudgelet [I met him last week and he's lovely] - I know it is not true of him in the least but it would give him a standard to which to aspire.
Trouble Every Day
quote:Thanks for that, Nicodemia - that sounds tasty! One of my colleagues has a nut allergy which means that anything with ground almonds would probably be out, but I won't be the only one baking and I like the fruit decoration.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
There's a recipe for a rather fruity Jubilee cake here
quote:Yoghurt in a cake is fine. Makes it rich and dense and if you use a flavoured one eg mango or passionfruit or similar it adds a slight extra flavour. Dilute it with milk if you want to, but when I've used it, it's usually because I didn't have enough milk in house for cake.
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
Bother bother. Only just realised that the Mary Berry cake requires greek yoghurt, which I do not have in, and I am too lazy to sally forth and get any. Hm, will have to be left a day or two. Yoghurt? In a cake? Really? I have put it in pancakes before, but a cake?
Will have to bake something though, as we are currently in a house without cake , and that will not do.
quote:It certainly won't, Jt9. I have citrus cake - it's the cherry-cake recipe but with the grated rind and juice of some left-over clementines, plus a wee squirt of lemon and lime juice instead of the cherries. It was an experiment - I've done it with just lemon rind and juice before, but I didn't have any lemons, and D. pointed out we had some superannuated clementines. Not quite as nice, but not bad at all. Do help yourself.
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
... we are currently in a house without cake , and that will not do.
quote:As in all things, Delia saves
Originally posted by Ariel:
Piglet, your recipe sounds great but do you have any equivalent imperial measurements? I'm at a loss when it comes to cups.
quote:Then perhaps she should play in goal for Norwich!
Originally posted by FooloftheShip:
quote:As in all things, Delia saves
Originally posted by Ariel:
Piglet, your recipe sounds great but do you have any equivalent imperial measurements? I'm at a loss when it comes to cups.
quote:You'll both have to come over and visit then.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I think HWMBO, or indeed anyone from here, would be enthralled by the sight of an iceberg like that ...
quote:You're a man after my own heart.
I think I upset ... a ManUre fan, when I asked if he'd like my friend in UK to send him a Man City shirt
quote:See previous comment. An Ipswich Fan Has Spoken.
... Delia saves
Then perhaps she should play in goal for Norwich!
quote:How cool is that? I hope His Majesty is heralded by some Proper Music.™
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
... Today child A has gone to school in tudor costume to meet Henry VIII. As one does.
quote:We are proud of you too. It's all about quality. The French and especially Parisians have the idea that British food is awful, so countering that is work of great value.
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
My scones were a triumph. I have now successfully converted a group of food-snob Frenchies to the institution that is the English Cream Tea™. Her Majesty would be proud of me.
I would offer virtual scones but there's none left.
quote:I've seen some a jousting display with horses and very impressive it waas too. Needless to say it wasn't in Britain but in France, about five years ago. I think some Spanish guys did the riding which included knocking each other off their mounts. The Safety Elves would never permit it here.
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
Henry was visiting the school as part of their project on tudors. There weren't any beheadings, but apparantly there was jousting though I don't think any horses were involved. I must find out more....
quote:I've seen it at the Royal Armouries tilt yard at Leeds. Choreographed stunt falls rather than real fighting, but still good fun.
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
I've seen real jousting in the UK, at least twice.
quote:Still is.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Re the blog thing, there used to be someone writing as Chaucer ("Geffrye Chaucer hath a blog")
quote:Mrs S had this successively in her shoulders a few years ago. It's worth checking with a Dr as it tends to afflict women.
Originally posted by piglet:
I seem to have frozen my left shoulder, which is v. nasty; I can't lift my arm more than about 80° without going "ouch"*. Treatments with frozen peas followed by hot-water bottles haven't been entirely successful.
* or possibly %*@#.
quote:Why would he go, otherwise? He goes to the wedding too. Feast is an implied word.
Originally posted by piglet:
WW, your yesterday sounds like my sort of day. I don't suppose this pre-marriage event thingy will involve FOOD, will it?
quote:Another one here too Piglet. Apparently women of over 50 are particularly susceptible to this. I can with great difficulty lift my left arm to same height as shoulder but absolutely no further. Changing the plane in which arm is operating is also very painful. Elbow down is fine but above elbow is very painful. Pain also goes down the outside of the arm to the elbow and this is one way of assessing the problem. I am using a gel pack heated in the microwave on it at night in bed. Do you find that across shoulders is also painful and tight because the muscles used to move arm are not being used correctly.
I seem to have frozen my left shoulder, which is v. nasty; I can't lift my arm more than about 80° without going "ouch"*. Treatments with frozen peas followed by hot-water bottles haven't been entirely successful.
quote:I went through a period of that, waking up in agony and unable to even so much as carry a light shoulder bag on that side. That happy state of affairs lasted for weeks, the beginnings of it shifted slightly to the other side, then vanished. You have my sympathy as it's horrid to live with, and you don't have any idea how long it'll last - but it should go eventually. The menopause (or peri-menopause) can throw up a whole bunch of odd symptoms which are very real to the point where they may dominate your life, but they do usually fade out.
Originally posted by Lothlorien:
Apparently it can go as suddenly as it appeared and that time can't come soon enough for me.
quote:I think that's kind of what "island" means. An Islander Has Spoken.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... This island however has no land connection with any other ...
quote:Thank you for the clarification, piglet.
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:I think that's kind of what "island" means. An Islander Has Spoken. ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... This island however has no land connection with any other ...
quote:I'm happy for you, Piglet, that something seems to be helping the shoulder. I have osteoarthritis and have tried pretty well all those things. They rarely do and sometimes the cure is worse than the complaint as they upset my stomach.
D. went and got me some Napoxy-something-or-other tablets (having asked the advice of the pharmacist) and they seem to be helping; I can raise my arm almost straight up, although stretching back is still a bit iffy. As I only turned 50 in February, it's a rather depressing thought that I might get this every so often for the rest of my days ...
quote:You could put them in sheet protectors. That's what I do to keep papers from getting flimsy.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
After all these years the papers are getting a bit flimsy but they only have to last another 18 months. Does anyone know of anything that you can spray on papers [or otherwise treat them] so they stay strong?
quote:We had to get copies of our daughter's birth certificate from Northern Ireland where she was born. There are separate fees for looking up the record and making the copy. This means that you save money by ordering more than one copy at a time, assuming you may ever need more copies.
I now have to cope with the minefield of applying for copies of my birth certificate from the General Register Office in Southport - don't tell them but I was surprised how inexpensive their service is. I think I might get a couple of copies whilst I am at it.
quote:Yup, no Jubilee stuff at all. We did have mention of the Queen's Dragoon Guards, guests of the WRU, who have recently returned form Afghanistan (most of them that is; some never made it and a few others are in still in hospital or rehab). They got a huge round of applause, as the QDG is regarded as Wales own tank regiment and there's a campaign on to retain it.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Off to Cardiff for the rugby today (if my lift turns up), Wales v Barbarians. I don't expect too much Jubiliana.
quote:I was going to ask how you can tell the difference, but that may just be to do with the Welshmen I know ...
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... Wales v Barbarians ...
quote:Next instalment of the Anglo-Boer war begins in Durban on 9th June.
Originally posted by Mary LA:
Hope you get a good place on the embankment, moonlitdoor.
Here in the Overberg mountains of South Africa, everyone is getting ready to watch the flotilla on the Thames, even those who still resent the British for the Anglo-Boer war. The TV coverage here will be two hours later than in the UK and there is much excitement tempered by the possibility of a replay of the rugby from yesterday in which case that might be watched instead.
Lovely hot winter sunshine, a glorious day.
quote:Haha - hopefully you will get some today. We had puddles, but such low light the photos didn't add up to much.
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
I was hoping for seriously big puddles where there's a lot of bunting because I really wanted reflection shots. I know, I'm not nice.
quote:Oi, less of the elderly - I remember the coronation!
Originally posted by Mary LA:
...Enjoyed watching the stoic queen and washed-out but magnificent flotillas. My elderly neighbour remembered the coronation and how it rained that day.
quote:Which one?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Oi, less of the elderly - I remember the coronation!
quote:This round to Ariel.
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:Which one?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Oi, less of the elderly - I remember the coronation!
quote:Yes, indeed. I acknowledge defeat in this round.
Originally posted by PeteC:
quote:This round to Ariel.
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:Which one?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Oi, less of the elderly - I remember the coronation!
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma: Hope and pray Prince Philip gets well soon.
quote:The Pageant Master had taken 2½ years to plan it, and all the Beeb did was show the same boats over and over again. Too many reporters at too many camera positions. One commentator and a camera at each of the start, finish and somewhere along the way would have been better, at least then they'd have had to show more than a few boats. A case of too many cooks.
Originally posted by St Everild:
The BBC coverage of the River Pageant was worse than awful.
quote:The worst of the BBC is still better than anyone else does over here too.
piglet:
I still assume that the worst of the BBC is going to be better than the best of anything I can get over here.
quote:I'm not sure how appropriate Land of Hope and Glory is. It was used as an anthem for England at the Commonwealth Games (Jerusalem is now used there and before every day's play at England's home cricket matches) while GSTQ is used for England's rugby union and football teams.
Originally posted by Ariel:
I never realized what an earworm Land of Hope and Glory could be. As if that wasn't enough, at a certain point it devolves into the theme tune from "It Aint Half Hot Mum" and a twangly sitar bit before starting all over again.*
Glad they didn't have to cancel the flypast - everything seemed to go well today.
*If you remember this you are old enough to remember the last Jubilee.
quote:Our match against VRA in Amsterdam was rained off - does that count?
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Was a cricket match planned, only to be rained off? That would make the ultimate English day.
quote:I'm not so sure any more. All the Queen's Horses, ITV's coverage of the Jubilee Pageant knocked the Beeb's efforts on Sunday into a cocked hat.
Originally posted by Balaam:
... The worst of the BBC is still better than anyone else does over here too.
quote:Agree with most of above (definitely missed that obbligato!), although I was happy with the Bible version used (was it NRSV?) One point was that the language in the prayers of intercession varied between "trad." and "modern" - a bit bumpy.
Originally posted by piglet:
What did everyone think of the Service of Thanksgiving? My tuppence-worth:
Liturgy: mostly good; lessons should have been from the Authorised Version.
Choral singing: v. good (almost as good as the Royal Wedding from the Abbey). Pity they left out the trumpet obbligato bit in the Old Hundredth, and their descant to Cwm Rhondda wasn't a patch on James O'Donnell's one.
New anthem: I can't believe it's not Rutter.
quote:Mrs A was indignant about the skimpy quality of most of the bunting she's seen: smaller flags, she says, and further apart than e.g. in the glory days of '77. Hadn't noticed this myself but has anyone else?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Surely the Anglicans have to leave theirs up for at least the Octave!
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I rather think you're getting the tail end of Brenda!
quote:Sure, and my wife is face-painting for the Diocese all day and tomorrow at the Suffolk Show. She will be cold (although, just as I write, the sun has actually emerged for a moment!)
Originally posted by Ariel:
Yes, we're just waiting for the monsoon here too, according to Radio 4. It will be accompanied by 70 mph winds and probably the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.
quote:Just for you Balaam ...
Originally posted by Balaam:
...red white and blue shell?
quote:Yes you can - but there is NO predicting when!
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I'm sick of England now - can someone assure me it gets better? The last two times I've visted it's been in July/ August and the weather was generally warm and pleasant. Tell me I can look forward to that?
quote:There is only one way to describe English weather - completely unpredictable! I have an umbrella and sunglasses in my handbag at all times!
And it's so confusing! The roses are blooming, the days are long, but the weather is like winter in Auckland, New Zealand! (tears hair and gnashes teeth)
quote:I've been to Winnipeg in Autumn - it was pretty consistently amazingly cold! And very dry - my lips and nose etc all dried out. It was pretty and nice for a change but I don't think I could cope with months of snow.
Originally posted by PeteC:
Come to Canada where we often get 4 seasons of weather in a twenty-four hour period.
quote:Yes, but at least it's not boring. Now you see why everybody here talks about the weather so much.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
And it's so confusing! The roses are blooming, the days are long, but the weather is like winter in Auckland, New Zealand! (tears hair and gnashes teeth)
quote:Come down off that roof and put on some clothes, Wodders.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Monsoon has set in over southern and central Kerala ...
quote:As we say in Newfoundland, "if you don't like the weather at the front, look out the back".
Originally posted by PeteC:
Come to Canada where we often get 4 seasons of weather in a twenty-four hour period ...
quote:You have only to look to your sig. to find your answer!
Originally posted by Enigma:
Fed up now - where is our summer??? Where is my bin??
quote:Those times must have been a while back. July and August haven't been too special recently. Last year we just enough sun in the 'summer' to ripen the fruit so we had a bumper harvest of everything, so the farmers were grumbling about low prices!
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I'm sick of England now - can someone assure me it gets better? The last two times I've visted it's been in July/ August and the weather was generally warm and pleasant. Tell me I can look forward to that?
I'm finding it quite depressing being back in winter clothing, putting the heater on, having a lap rug on the couch etc.
And it's so confusing! The roses are blooming, the days are long, but the weather is like winter in Auckland, New Zealand! (tears hair and gnashes teeth)
quote:Where are the snows of yesteryear?
Originally posted by Enigma:
Fed up now - where is our summer??? Where is my bin??
quote:Not the bit I come from.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
...all of Britain is basically West Coast...
quote:I thought of you when I went into the supermarket a couple of days ago. They've replaced the Jubilee bunting with football bunting.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Could everyone please put their wet bunting away now.
It won't dry left hanging, you know!
quote:We can now. The local council kept their Jubilee celebrations till this weekend with a 3 day party in the park.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Could everyone please put their wet bunting away now.
quote:Bunting stayed dry for the Jubilee concert and fireworks on Saturday but the flags are drying out now... they got drenched in Pimms
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Could everyone please put their wet bunting away now.
quote:You CANNOT be serious!!!
Packing them up ready for next year when we celebrate the diamond jubilee of the coronation - this year is a rehearsal for that, isn't it?
quote:In my case, with tights under it (if it's a skirt), a wooly vest (if it's any kind of top), a cardigan and probably a coat!
Originally posted by Miffy:
Eleanor Jane, here's a handy fashion hint I once heard: When you're choosing summer clothes in the UK, never buy before you've considered what the garment looks like with a cardigan worn over it!
quote:If your budget runs to NT goods, I'm sure you can stretch to some trick summer things. I'd suggest shoes first as they are harder to find. Charity shops are another option (I kid ye not) but choose carefully. Go to the smarter towns and you'll find a better class of discard (ie, Winchester rather than Newport).
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
What I'd quite like now is trick summer clothes i.e. a light coloured wool cardie, light coloured lacy patterned tights, pastel coloured trousers, floral silk scarves, shoes/boots that are waterproofish but not heavy black things etc. Things that look summery but work for the current weather. Unfortunately budget doesn't allow at this stage.
I did buy a lovely marled grey wool lap rug from the National Trust. I love the National Trust shops!
And I guess another plus is the trees etc are incredibly lush and green. I do enjoy that as I walk home from work beside the river.
quote:I don't think Daisymay was that far off the mark; when I mentioned on Facebook that I thought St. Paul's choir was nearly as good as the Abbey, a friend who sings in the Abbey choir replied that we'll have them to look forward to at the Coronation anniversary next year ...
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
quote:You CANNOT be serious!!!
Packing them up ready for next year when we celebrate the diamond jubilee of the coronation - this year is a rehearsal for that, isn't it?
quote:That sounds like a local anaesthetic job. I remember eye surgery under local, it isn't pleasant. Prayers ascending.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
It's sort of squint surgery - she says 15 minutes or 20 at the outside - should be no problem.
quote:Oh yes, I feed them every day. We get sparrows, blue tits, great tits, greenfinches, chaffinches, long tailed tits and robins.
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Anyone else enjoy England's lovely birds? I love them. I saw some young long tailed tits outside my work the other day. So cute!
quote:You're quite right, Pete - she didn't - it was Daisydaisy. I am a Piglet Of Very Little Brain and send my apologies to all concerned.
Originally posted by PeteC:
When did Daisymay post, Piglet?
quote:At my age I try to avoid thinking as much as possible.
Originally posted by piglet:
...Anyone have any thoughts?
quote:Nonsense
Originally posted by QLib:
Hmmmm.... I had one in my old place (rented). It does look very plastic, but is not so bad if half hidden under shrubs. When full of water (or ice) it is a bit unstable - but yes, you can usually get ice out without too much difficulty.
quote:Right on, WW - when can you start?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... what you really need isn't a Dyson but staff ...
quote:No problem, piglet, as I said the other week to someone, I think it was you, you send me the air tickets [Business Class] and I'll happily pop over and clean up for you.
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:Right on, WW - when can you start? ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... what you really need isn't a Dyson but staff ...
quote:IANAD but could that be a muscle relaxant? A family member reacts to one or two of these and carries a card to that effect. The dramatic effect was that when the anaesthetic wore off she couldn't make any voluntary movements, though she could hear perfectly well!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Another test at the hospital today - something they injected into me and tested my eyes every 5- 10 minutes - gave me horrible stomach spasms and some weird muscle tremor for half an hour or so and it was all negative so it looks like I go under the knife next week!
quote:That's Wales. A naturally chopsy lot. After eight years I was still a stranger in the Norfolk village I lived in.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
I agree with Nanny Ogg. A friend moved back to our small town after living in London for many years. She's amazed at how many people talk to her or even just smile when they pass her. It's something you take for granted until you move away.
quote:WW, one of my sons was admitted to hospital last year with excruciating stomach cramps and spasms. He was given a specific drug for the cramps but was also told he would have trouble staying awake because muscles in eyes were same type of muscle and would be affected too. Perhaps this is similar? Hope all goes well.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Another test at the hospital today - something they injected into me and tested my eyes every 5- 10 minutes - gave me horrible stomach spasms and some weird muscle tremor for half an hour or so and it was all negative so it looks like I go under the knife next week!
quote:Don't call it hoovering! Not in earshot of James Dyson, the inventor of Dyson vacuum cleaners at any rate. He's very sensitive about this and hires lawyers to say so on his behalf.
Originally posted by piglet:
D. is still waxing lyrical about the Dyson - he suggested it might convert me to hoovering but he's so impressed with it I doubt I'll get the chance.
quote:Not a term much used down here in my neck of the woods. We call it vacuuming. Just as we don't do laundry, we do the washing.
Don't call it hoovering!
quote:You never need an excuse for a Yorkshire Pudding. You certainly don't need roast beef to justify it...
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Ooh, cake, that sounds fabulous! Had a huge roast for lunch (chicken but they gave me a yorkshire pudding for some reason?!) so I don't feel like much. I am, however, always up for cake.
quote:We had a whole blue sky today.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
... Bits of blue sky today ...
quote:To answer my own question - I caught it on the coverage of the Queen's Birthday Parade on Saturday at Miss S's house. It was fab!
Did anyone see Joey rearing up on the roof of the National Theatre, during the Water Pageant?
quote:Yup - we got rid of our students last week, don't get them back til the 17th September. Seems long to me!
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
And I heard today that Uni is off for four months!! What's with this, Britian?
In New Zealand, they tend to close down for summer holidays for January but life goes on after about the 20 somethingk. No choirs stop for a third of the year and Uni holidays are about 8-9 weeks depending on exams.
quote:I have known households in which Yorkshire pudding is served before the roast, with the roast and afterwards, all in a desperate bid to satisfy vast appetites.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I apologise in advance for upsetting Balaam but Yorkshire Pudding can also be smeared with jam and served as dessert!
quote:Well, each to their own, but you might have a bit of a job getting all the jam and syrup out of its fur...
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Yum, I've just had dinner and a yorkie with jam/ golden syrup sounds pretty good to me!
quote:Poor wee dog.
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:Well, each to their own, but you might have a bit of a job getting all the jam and syrup out of its fur...
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Yum, I've just had dinner and a yorkie with jam/ golden syrup sounds pretty good to me!
quote:Unfortunately, by the time we oldies pick up on teenage slang, they've changed the meaning.
I believe this is among the highest accolades in the teenage lexicon.
quote:Nope, I just eat it fur and all!
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:Well, each to their own, but you might have a bit of a job getting all the jam and syrup out of its fur...
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Yum, I've just had dinner and a yorkie with jam/ golden syrup sounds pretty good to me!
quote:If I am not very much mistaken, that is the whole point of teenage slang.
Originally posted by PeteC:
piglet thinks that awesome isquote:Unfortunately, by the time we oldies pick up on teenage slang, they've changed the meaning.
I believe this is among the highest accolades in the teenage lexicon.
quote:'Awesome' is current slang amongst Xtian yoof and it isn't reserved for the Almighty (Nando's is 'awesome', amazingly). IMNSHO that confirms it is obsolete amongst mainstream yoof.
Originally posted by Campbellite:
quote:If I am not very much mistaken, that is the whole point of teenage slang.
Originally posted by PeteC:
piglet thinks that awesome isquote:Unfortunately, by the time we oldies pick up on teenage slang, they've changed the meaning.
I believe this is among the highest accolades in the teenage lexicon.
quote:So am I.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... it is obsolete amongst mainstream yoof.
quote:Did that make you an insensible piglet, then?
Originally posted by piglet:
The annual Cathedral barbecue ... involved rather more wine than a sensible piglet ought to have had.
quote:Ouch. It sounds as much fun as conjunctivitis. I really hope the op has been a success and that once the stitches are out, you'll find it all an improvement.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I came out of hospital yesterday and felt really off but am a bit better this afternoon - I have some stitches in my eye for the next three weeks and the ends rub against the inside of my eyelids every time I blink - not much fun!
quote:Well, I was thinking stitches after childbirth! Another sensitive area.
Ouch. It sounds as much fun as conjunctivitis. I really hope the op has been a success and that once the stitches are out, you'll find it all an improvement.
quote:No - just a slightly hungover one.
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
quote:Did that make you an insensible piglet, then?
Originally posted by piglet:
... rather more wine than a sensible piglet ought to have had.
quote:They can say what they like - I'm an Anglican. Patronal Festival services safely dispatched - especially a v. nice Tudor evensong.
What will the Methodists be saying?
quote:I sometimes get asked that, usually when I'm just back from visiting Orkney, and my accent gets stronger ...
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
... would the Sri Lankan's mind speaking English a bit more slowly we are not able to keep up ...
quote:It's not a bad thing to do on a summer's morning when it's bright and warm, and it gives you the option of getting out at lunchtime too. It's less fun in winter, especially when it's dark and conditions are less easy. At least with the train you can fall asleep, eat, or read, and the chance of getting stuck behind a snail-pace lorry with an annoying motto on its backside for the next three miles is a lot less.
Originally posted by Japes:
It was back to the train today after three weeks with a car. I'd handed it back quite happily every year so far, but this year, I find I'm missing it and went quite reluctantly to the train this morning. I think saving up for a car is my next big project.
quote:This is Good News!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
No painkillers last night and I didn't miss them - WooHoo!! Vision is also, I think, improved a little - Dr says it will take 3 weeks to see full effects and it is not quite a third of that yet.
quote:Thank you for asking - Shaw is not far away but I wasn't affected in any way.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Boogie - you weren't anywhere near the gas explosion in Shaw, were you????
It must be awful not being able to get back into your house because its unsafe!
for all
quote:Yes, on the other hand it would be quite annoying to have to queue for the loo and find a bunch of peacocks all queuing up in front of you.
Originally posted by Boogie:
There is a restaurant near us called the peacock and they keep several in the grounds. Trouble is they poo on the patio - spoils the ambiance somewhat.
quote:As the peacocks would be going to the Gents I can't see how it would affect Boogie.
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:Yes, on the other hand it would be quite annoying to have to queue for the loo and find a bunch of peacocks all queuing up in front of you.
Originally posted by Boogie:
There is a restaurant near us called the peacock and they keep several in the grounds. Trouble is they poo on the patio - spoils the ambiance somewhat.
And I bet they'd take their time in front of the mirrors, too.
quote:Not a good approach if you are out of chicken.
Originally posted by Enigma:
Hope all goes well with coronation chicken. I love it! ... just see what I've got and add curry seems to work for me.
quote:Singles is a trial. I find doubles far more interesting.
Andy Murray in Wimbledon is a trial!
quote:A right royal dish!
Originally posted by Ariel:
Given the views expressed on this thread so far, maybe we should have a recipe for coronation peacock...
quote:
Given the views expressed on this thread so far, maybe we should have a recipe for coronation peacock...
quote:Congratulations! Silver next year :0)
Originally posted by piglet:
D. and I celebrated our 24th wedding anniversary today
quote:Shhh!!!!!!!
Originally posted by Boogie:
... I have joined the local library singing group ...
quote:Enigma - Happy Belated Birthday, and remember that although you are now older than you have ever been, you are younger today than you will ever be again!
I am struggling with the thought that I am one year older, no wiser, but thankful to be loved. When will I grow up?
quote:They will be around my birthday (21st September). Put a note in your diary.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Rumour hath it that we will have two dry days in September.
So much for "draught"!
quote:I prefer my iwet suit
Originally posted by Ariel:
Sent from my iSnorkel
quote:Enjoy it - at least over there you get proper British coverage without commercial breaks every 2 minutes.
Originally posted by leo:
Raining here but who cares when there is Wimbledon and strawberries?
quote:Will I get a welcome concert when I arrive in January?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
As you all know I love living here but sometimes it hits me more forcefully than others - I am sitting here and was reading and in the distance I can hear some of the local kids practising chendamelam - a drum music peculiar to this part of the country - and they are getting pretty good!
quote:Oh yes please!
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Just fancy some cherry cake plus of course a large coffee. Anyone join me?
quote:[Northamptonshire joke] Sounds like good weather for my ducks! [/Northamptonshire joke] (I know it's very sad, but I'm chuckling away at that. I'm so funny)
Originally posted by Tree Bee:
Been up to Northamptonshire for an 80th birthday party and found the sun!
Unfortunately the rain caught up with us enough to drench us on the walk back to the car - and it's followed us down the M1 to home.
Humph!
quote:Nice booby!
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
I'm growing webbed feet!
quote:A pretty typical July day in Skem, then.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I rang my UK bank just now to do my monthly transfer to my account here and the woman said it is cold and wet in Skelmersdale
quote:
Nicodemia, you need a pair of these.
quote:That's just what she said!
Originally posted by QLib:
quote:A pretty typical July day in Skem, then.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I rang my UK bank just now to do my monthly transfer to my account here and the woman said it is cold and wet in Skelmersdale
quote:Never! Impossible, they have so many ..
Originally posted by Balaam:
The weathermen are running out of clichés.
quote:Totally agree, wild horses couldn't pay me enough to go camping. The idea that only a thin piece of fabric would be between me and the outside world, weather, passing predators, etc, is enough to ensure staying awake all night.
Originally posted by piglet:
Inflicting camping on anyone, IMHO, amounts to Cruel and Unusual Punishment.
quote:Proves nowt. You would burn in a downpour. indoors.
Originally posted by ken:
Just been camping. In Shropshire, right on the Welsh border. Got quite badly sunburned.
quote:Oh YES. With Proper Bacon™. **sigh**
Originally posted by Ariel:
... a really lavish Full Breakfast, which I have not cooked ...
quote:Not to gloat or anything, but I am currently looking down on an almost- flooding River Wear from the sitting room of a suite rather larger than some flats I have lived in. If I move to this side, I can see the castle, and the tower of the cathedral.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Each to their own: when I go on holiday I want a comfortable bed in a quiet en-suite room with a view, television, and a door that locks, and the option of a really lavish Full Breakfast, which I have not cooked, in the morning.
quote:Huh!?!?
Originally posted by Firenze:
...Not to gloat or anything...
quote:Royal County?
Originally posted by Firenze:
Not to gloat or anything, but I am currently looking down on an almost- flooding River Wear from the sitting room of a suite rather larger than some flats I have lived in. If I move to this side, I can see the castle, and the tower of the cathedral.
quote:Hmmmm... I actually feel better for a night ot two sleeping in tents. In some ways my little tent is more comfortable than my bed. My back certainly feels better the next morning. There's a natural limit of about three or four nights after which things start to smell a little though. You probably don't want to be sitting next to me on the train back from Greenbelt.
Originally posted by Enigma:
As I age (dis)gracefully I need more and more to save my holiday energy for exploring, not surviving!!
quote:Where's the green with jealousy smilie?
Originally posted by Firenze:
Not to gloat or anything, but I am currently looking down on an almost- flooding River Wear from the sitting room of a suite rather larger than some flats I have lived in. If I move to this side, I can see the castle, and the tower of the cathedral.
quote:Time to get a new bed, or do what my brother-in-law does and stick a board under the mattress.
Originally posted by ken:
In some ways my little tent is more comfortable than my bed. My back certainly feels better the next morning.
quote:The board helps but under nylon the only things that wake me are my bladder, the whistling kettle or the smell of bacon frying (which I detect like NORAD does Russian bombers). A sleeping bed on top of a foam bedroll is very comfortable indeed. Mrs Sioni tells me it reduces the snoring too.
Originally posted by QLib:
quote:Time to get a new bed, or do what my brother-in-law does and stick a board under the mattress.
Originally posted by ken:
In some ways my little tent is more comfortable than my bed. My back certainly feels better the next morning.
quote:Well, today looks like a beautiful day here in Oxfordshire, though temperatures are distinctly below average for July. The sort of day when the Cotswolds will be looking their best, although maybe a little cool for an al fresco lunch in a pub garden...
Originally posted by Firenze:
Not to gloat or anything, but I am currently looking down on an almost- flooding River Wear from the sitting room of a suite rather larger than some flats I have lived in.
quote:Good - hopefully my boy will get some flights in, they are quite behind on their schedule.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Well, today looks like a beautiful day here in Oxfordshire, though temperatures are distinctly below average for July. The sort of day when the Cotswolds will be looking their best, although maybe a little cool for an al fresco lunch in a pub garden...
quote:Glad to hear that monsoon rains are picking up. The local valley appears to be in a drought at the moment. I caught a headline in the paper that said something about welcome to the dustbowl.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We seem to be in an ideal phase at the moment with warm, sunny days and wet, wet nights.
quote:Well, there's sunshine outside our office right now, and I'm in one of the buildings near Kidlington Airport, so with luck they'll get some more flight time! Doesn't look to be too breezy so far either.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Good - hopefully my boy will get some flights in, they are quite behind on their schedule.
(Give him a wave as he buzzes over :0)
quote:That's amazing! It can't have travelled too far, I don't suppose, given the speed at which they go.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Oh my - fun and games at Boogieville Mansions! As I returned from my lunchtime swim a tortoise was wandering down the drive! I have printed his photo and posted it on my gatepost in hopes his owner will see it.
Anyone know how to look after them?
quote:Good luck! I found there were a lot of tacit assumptions, that you just "know" how they turn on/off, or how to scroll/type a message, and what SMS is and so on - but I'm sure you'll get the hang of it pretty quickly.
Originally posted by piglet:
I have Given In: today, for the first time in my life, I became the owner of a mobile phone, so as you might expect I'm a more than somewhat confused piglet.
quote:Everyone does, in the end. A good strategy ... leave it switched off until you need to make a call.
Originally posted by piglet:
I have Given In: today, for the first time in my life, I became the owner of a mobile phone ...
quote:Oh dear! What age are the people going on the trip?
Originally posted by Dormouse:
Hah! For some reason best known to themselves, the Excursion Committee at this Hellhole of a Summer School, have scheduled an educational trip to Central London slap in the middle of the Olympics. So that'll be 5 hours on the bus getting into London, turn round and spend 5 hours going back again. Great.
quote:Here it was lovely and dry, even sunny towards the end of the afternoon.
Originally posted by Polly Plummer:
It's St. Swithun's day and no rain here! admittedly not a lot of sun either.
quote:You want to predict dry weather? In an English summer?
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
quote:Here it was lovely and dry, even sunny towards the end of the afternoon.
Originally posted by Polly Plummer:
It's St. Swithun's day and no rain here! admittedly not a lot of sun either.
Shame that the thing about St Swithin's day is about if it rains, not if it's dry.
quote:Like last year. Some good may come of it. Mrs Sioni made 10 jars of strawberry jam last week (now 6 left!).
Still, the soft fruit that I picked yesterday was lovely and plump.
quote:"Incident on the line" is wider, at one end is reported tresspass, then objects on the line, then animals (both of these necessitate delays) right the way up a human being killed. For instance if sheep are on the line, it is preferable to get them removed before a train hits them, that way there are less delays and happier farmers.
Originally posted by Polly Plummer:
I've not often heard railway announcements refer directly to someone being hurt/killed by a train; they usually say there's been "an incident on the line". All the same to the person hit, I suppose - and to the poor driver.
quote:me too - mine were just under £700.
Originally posted by ElaineC:
You're absolutely right, it does upset me!
I paid just under £600 for my last pair of varifocals...
quote:Hamster dance time! What about my dear B?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Well done Krishnaraj!
I think Pete will be pleased to hear that, too.
To Pete: the other three were the paper boy, the brother of no-brakes and the cat thief.
quote:I'm just loving the nicknames you two give them. I bet they'd be tickled to know, at least many of them.
Originally posted by PeteC:
meant to add, for the benefit of others : I know every one of those kids to whom Wodders refers. How pathetic is that
quote:Yes, I changed to that branch too, and paid less than half the price of my previous specs and they were almost identical.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Well, there is a certain high street chain that does them for considerably less. Their website says they start at £49. They were the reason I changed from a certain other high street chain - and at the time I got a free pair thrown in. I wasn't in a position to pay £600-odd - I have a complex prescription with short sight, astigmatism and one or two other joys so it was never going to be cheap, so it does pay to shop around.
I can't remember exactly what I paid but it was nothing like £600, nearer £200 or so, which did help because my prescription changes annually and I have to shell out for new lenses of one kind or the other every year.
quote:Not pathetic in the least, Pete - after all, you spend a quarter of the year there. Well done to them from over here too, and good luck to the ones who have to do re-sits or whatever.
Originally posted by PeteC:
... I know every one of those kids to whom Wodders refers. How pathetic is that
quote:
He has the ability, when is he going to make the effort?
quote:I know what you mean. Until I was about four and we moved to Orkney, we lived in a little village in the north-east of Scotland where the surname of many of the inhabitants was Mackay, and they were all identified by nicknames, a fact that I only found out much later. One of my brother's friends was called Bobby Straw, and it never occurred to me that his parents weren't Mr. and Mrs. Straw, but Mr. and Mrs. Mackay ...
Originally posted by PeteC:
... they have nicknames because, for the most part, it would be like referring to Billy Bob, Billy Bob and Billy Bob, without trying to differentiate them from other Billy Bobs ...
quote:We noticed that in graveyards, piglet (yes, we even go graveyarding on holiday...) - there were a number of surnames corresponding with placenames. We didn't see any Norseman, but we did see several people who had obviously lived... well, you know exactly where I'm thinking of, don't you?
Originally posted by piglet:
The same applied to the small island in Orkney where my grandmother grew up; there people tended to be called by their farm name - Tommy of Westbreck or whatever.
quote:Consider yourself fortunate. I have a fairly common surname that 90% of the population can't pronounce.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Its much easier having a really unusual surname!
quote:Yes - for identification purposes - but the varieties of spelling can be interesting. Before I got married, people would just get my Christian name wrong; now they get them both wrong.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Its much easier having a really unusual surname!
quote:You too? Even the francophones don't pronounce mine correctly. And I shudder inwardly when I introduce myself to an Anglo.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Consider yourself fortunate. I have a fairly common surname that 90% of the population can't pronounce.
quote:Tell him to change it by deed poll...
Originally posted by Boogie:
As if he'd call himself that if he wasn't.
quote:My first name isn't unusal, and my last name is that of a well-known town, but people tend to want to add letters to both. If I were Jane Smith they'd be spelling it Jayne Smyth.
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:Yes - for identification purposes - but the varieties of spelling can be interesting. .....
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Its much easier having a really unusual surname!
quote:We had a day a while back when every Pole at work (or it seemed like it) had a parcel delivered. Trying to work out who the parcel is for when the name appears to have been machine translated via Korean is not a great deal of fun...
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Its much easier having a really unusual surname!
quote:My (married) surname is very unusual, differing in one letter from a slightly less unusual one - think, say, Jobson vs. Jolson. In my days in customer service, I was always amazed/infuriated by how many people would respond to a letter that gave my name, correctly spelled, in block capitals and bold yet, addressing me by the slightly different one!
Originally posted by Nicodemia: Its much easier having a really unusual surname
quote:You mean it's not always spelt with a "W"?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... My first name, which you may be able to guess, is not that common but neither is it uncommon - and it is amazing how misspelt it can be!
quote:Yes, I have exactly this problem too. Each time they ask how many 'l's I do a mental double take.
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
There is a strange rumour about my surname; it says that somewhere there are people with it that spell it with a single "l". Each time I have been put onto such a person it has turned out that they like everyone else use the "ll" spelling.
I presume this is people who want to make it less effort for them to write or type and think by starting this rumour they will eventually get us to change how we spell it. Needless to say it just annoys us and we just automatically say "with a double l".
Now people who can't spell it are far, far more creative.
Jengie
quote:John Smith then NOT
Originally posted by amber.:
I spend a lot of time explaning that my first name is without an E and that my second name is not a Middle Eastern one, so they don't have to try to pronounce it or write it in unusual ways. I'm often asked whether we have special dietary requirements for our Jewish or Muslim faith (as the case may be). Er, no, it's a Yorkshire surname
quote:There are people who do that with my surname too; I just assume that they're an inferior breed (inferior to my husband, that is ).
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
... there are people with [my surname] that spell it with a single "l" ...
quote:The very best time to visit Canterbury Cath (and Westminster Abbey, for that matter) is to sing in a visiting choir. Cos (a) you are guaranteed a seat and (b) no tourists in the choir pews - though vergers sometimes can't get them to move! Mind you I have been greeted with "Gee, is this place still used?"
Originally posted by Lord Pontivillian:
I made the most of the weather by going to Canterbury Cathedral for the first time. I really like the cathedral but left as soon as a whole load of french tourists arrived. I sought sanctuary in the ancient church of St. Martin.
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... 'Olympig* Games' ... pig-themed competitions ...
quote:Mr. S had his out just over a year ago - though I would not have described it as cute, Wodders! - when he was 60 (which is why it took them so long to diagnose it - very rare to have a dodgy appendix at that age, apparently). Every time we saw a doctor after, they invariably said 'Nasty appendix, that!' which doesn't make you feel good; but the point of all this is to say that even with 5 scars, at that age, and with that level of infection, it didn't take him long to recover completely - so be encouraged be very encouraged
HWMBO had his operation this morning and his cute appendix has been removed! He says he is hungry, nothing unusual there! Heading back to the hospital now.
quote:I didn't know about that one, so will have to remember it when I next go out that way. Part of the joy of the ship is that there is always someone with insider information, if that makes sense.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Lord P - have you been to the ancient church (forget which saint, it might be another Martin) at Herne Village. (Not Herne Bay). Its really lovely. My mother was married there.
quote:I have resisted joining the choir so far, for one thing it would be most unkind to the congregation.
Originally posted by Morlader:
The very best time to visit Canterbury Cath (and Westminster Abbey, for that matter) is to sing in a visiting choir. Cos (a) you are guaranteed a seat and (b) no tourists in the choir pews - though vergers sometimes can't get them to move! Mind you I have been greeted with "Gee, is this place still used?" [/QB]
quote:I prefer it to St. Paul's in London. I really found St. Paul's to be too much of a tourist attraction. The crypt at Canterbury feels like the living part of the Cathedral, if that makes sense though it might not.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Last time I went to Canterbury Cathedral I found myself at the end of a long queue having to pay for admission to get into the grounds. It's £9.50 now and not optional, unless you're there for a serivce.
quote:I'm sure if they wait long enough one'll come along ...
Originally posted by Ariel:
... We are waiting for a problem with lineside equipment".
quote:And a camera - of course?!
Originally posted by Ariel:
It's a beautiful day - I'm off out, a-wandering. Somewhere with a river or lake, methinks.
quote:I was so stunned in awe and delirious with joy that I overslept and so avoided the decision of whether or not to participate in the bell ringing. On the other hand it meant I missed the glorious ringing of the local Abbey bells which was a shame. Hopefully they're ringing later this evening.
Originally posted by Ariel:
I think we're all stunned into awe or delirious with joy at the thought that the Olympics are finally about to begin, and therefore too incoherent to post. ...
quote:Goes without saying. Though don't do what I did and blithely assume without checking you packed the spare battery, so it wouldn't matter if your camera ran out when you got there...
Originally posted by Boogie:
And a camera - of course?!
quote:I watched it projected onto the outside wall of the Abbey here, and thought the ceremony was tremendous - a great balance of cultural and humour and wow. My favourite parts were the moths(?) on bicycles, the Queen parachuting in, and Mr Bean, but there were also some magnificent tributes that I thought were a good touch - Tim Berners-Lee, the NHS....
Originally posted by piglet:
.........
I've just watched the opening ceremony and I thought they made a brilliant job of it. Boris was right - when he was asked about it by Clarkson on Top Gear just after the bid had been won, he said it would be done very well, but in a particularly British way, and that's just how it was.
quote:My Hey Jude earworm has been replaced by another one. D. was playing for a wedding this afternoon and I acted as verger. For some reason the bride wanted to come in to the theme music from Game of Thrones, which is quite a nice tune (sort of Clannad meets Lord of the Rings) but has been in my head ever since ...
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
... "Hey Jude" is a terrible earworm ...
quote:I thought that was the whole point!
Originally posted by piglet:
...I feel sorry for people who get married when it's horribly hot and sticky.
quote:In the same way that the doves of peace were drawn to the cauldron in '88? I hope not.
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
Oh yes - the cauldron was an amazing concept and worked so well. Have I understood correctly that the individual "petals" are to be dispersed at the end of the games? Do you think the moths of peace will be drawn to it?
quote:This reminds me of an anniuncement I hear some years ago:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Had to laugh when getting on the train today and seeing the scrolling announcement that read:
"We apologize for the delay to your journey. We are waiting for a problem with lineside equipment".
quote:What a super job - enjoy!
Originally posted by piglet:
Now I must go bear-hunting - everyone should have a Small Bear, and D. and I have appointed ourselves official Bear Providers ...
quote:[Looking severely at Nicodemia over the top of her spectacles] Great Aunts are not necessarily old, but they are, of course, very, very Great, as well as being wise.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Congratulations Great Auntie Piglet! (Makes you sound very old and wise )
quote:Actually, of course Great Aunts are noted or taking the sides of their great-nieces and nephews in any trouble!
[Looking severely at Nicodemia over the top of her spectacles] Great Aunts are not necessarily old, but they are, of course, very, very Great, as well as being wise.
quote:Congratulations!
Originally posted by piglet:
I am now Great-auntie Piglet - Marla Daisy was born 28th July 2012. As she wasn't terribly large (6lb) she'll still be tiny when we go over; we're heading over to Blighty on 12th August for about 2½ weeks.
Further
Now I must go bear-hunting - everyone should have a Small Bear, and D. and I have appointed ourselves official Bear Providers ...
quote:We'd never get it on the plane ...
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... On the basis of your location wouldn't a Moose be more appropriate?
quote:Super cute bear.
Originally posted by piglet:
A Small Bear has been bought and will be looked after with all the other bears until we go over. I spoke to my sister (the proud granny) today and there is Much Excitement.
quote:I have a friend with a dog named Herman. Which meant the above caused me to
posted by Enigma:
In other news, last Friday I was presented with a s starter mix for 'Herman'. He is now 4 days old and I think I fed him too much this morning.
quote:I want to go and collapse in a heap on the sofa just reading about what you've done today.
Originally posted by Japes:
... once I have hoovered through, and mopped the kitchen floor, I will collapse in a heap on the sofa ...
quote:Wayhay - there's a bit here too. I was up and attem early today and have cleaned the kitchen. Now I need some energy to go food shopping - hate food shopping!
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
On the other hand I can see some blue sky
quote:What a good idea - then you get the scent as you leave and enter.
Originally posted by Jack the Lass:
Part of today's plan (alongside tackling the front jungle, I mean garden) is to see about buying a jasmine and/or honeysuckle for one side of the front door.
quote:You're welcome
Originally posted by Boogie:
I may copy this idea
quote:Even if it wasn't the one it was bound to be related - a sluggish funeral must be underway!
Originally posted by Jack the Lass:
I also killed a slug with my trowel. I have no way of knowing if it was the one that ate my beans or not, but I like to think so, it made it even more satisfying
quote:I think I can top that one. I've just had a full strength panic for about 48 hours over the whereabouts of my phone. It turned out to be attached to its charger.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
AAAAARRRRRGGGGGHHHHH!!!!!
I have just had a 10 minute panic searching for my mobile phone - I found it eventually...
.
.
.
...it was in my pocket!
quote:We live quite near but have very different micro climates.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Guess what! its dull dank and grey here today and threatening rain. Very little wind so it will probably stay for a long time.
quote:I think I have been inbetween you two today, rain in the morning but clearing around the middle of the day with sun shine this afternoon. I went geocaching with my sister and her kids, which is why I was between you two and we found our first two geocaches. Second attempt for them and fourth for me!
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:We live quite near but have very different micro climates.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Guess what! its dull dank and grey here today and threatening rain. Very little wind so it will probably stay for a long time.
We have had plenty of sun with the odd shower!
I watched the dressage for a while but dozed off.
quote:Every time I saw it mentioned on the news I thought of you. How are things on Mars? I've heard a few things about those bars...
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Am I allowed to wish that the Mars landing craft wasn't called Curiosity? It's one of several things I answer to, so every time there is a report, or I see something I end up noticing. It's getting wearing.
quote:Actually I suspect that they are someone elses pages who she sees because she is a friend and she just forgot that the rest of the ship may not be.
Originally posted by PeteC:
She's limited her page to friends, WW. I guess you know where you stand!
But having said that, I see nothing either!
quote:I don't want to trump you but, thanks to Mrs Sioni having sisters quite a bit older than she, and their offspring being, ahem, prolific, we have just confirmed that she now has a great-great-nephew!
Originally posted by piglet:
It's v. hot and sticky here - it got up to 27° with a Humidex of 36 today. It's now just gone 11 o'clock at night and it's still 22°.
Beginning to get excited about coming over to Blighty and meeting my new great-niece.
Can you please have weather that's a bit cooler when I get there? About 18° and sunny would be the ideal conditions.
quote:Ditto here yesterday. I've been on an outdoor watercolour course all week, and bar Monday, when the tutor had to gamely demonstrate technique from under an umbrella, we've had fine weather.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Lovely day today, at last, proper heat and a real August day.
quote:She says thanks ... but doesn't want to be reminded of it too much! She's not enamoured of being a great-great-aunt before she is a grandmother, which with five children aged between 16 and 29, living in South Wales, is pretty rare!
Originally posted by piglet:
Congratulations to Great-great-auntie Mrs. S!
quote:Oh my - I forgot about The Fringe. I'm heading to Edinburgh in just under 2 weeks for a couple of days and thought I'd be a regular tourist. I see a major change of plan.... from being planned to totally unplanned and spontaneous - should be fun.
Originally posted by Firenze:
quote:Ditto here yesterday. I've been on an outdoor watercolour course all week, and bar Monday, when the tutor had to gamely demonstrate technique from under an umbrella, we've had fine weather.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Lovely day today, at last, proper heat and a real August day.
And it's the first week of The Fringe. The craft fair tents are up around St Giles, the hoardings specially provided are already plastered with posters, the flyer-pushers and the mimes and the jugglers and the escapologists and the performers still in costume are coursing the streets. The Mile, from the Lawnmarket to the Bridges, is just one dense crowd. The Old Town is always a jumble of a cityscape, streets bridging other streets, cliffs of tenements, buildings scrambling up towards the Castle, threaded with and closes that are like windows into other cities - add thousands of people, shouting, music, dancing, images on every surface - and a fine sunlit evening, and it really is a thing to see.
quote:You could catch the end of it: it finishes on the 27th. By that time, the awards will have been given out, the hits acclaimed, the hopefuls less hopeful...
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
Oh my - I forgot about The Fringe. I'm heading to Edinburgh in just under 2 weeks for a couple of days and thought I'd be a regular tourist. I see a major change of plan.... from being planned to totally unplanned and spontaneous - should be fun.
quote:I got a double-whammy - I turned 50 in February ...
Originally posted by Japes:
My niece and nephew have very strict instructions not to make me a great-aunt before I am 50 ...
quote:Just be thankful that it was the Olympic games not the Thracian Games that were revived.
Originally posted by Ariel:
I suppose it must have been much the same in Ancient Greece, with everybody wondering if Agathon would win gold for the 400 cubits race and (if he did) whether he'd been trying out that new potion from Thrace.
quote:It would be only if she has three legs.
We can't decide whether it's a good thing that this isn't the foot that's been giving her trouble for the last year.
quote:I can't beat either of those, CK or Pete, not within my family. But I was in the same class at school with a boy whose uncle was in the class below us.
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Generations get very screwy.
quote:The warm summer weather ends tonight, according to the Met Office we're in for a week of showers, coolness and rain.
Originally posted by piglet:
In other news, we'll be heading over to Blighty tomorrow night so put the kettle on and have that nice temperate weather ready, eh?
quote:Yes, it's the Vicky, and yes you can still punt right up to it. Well, to be more accurate you punt to the bit of meadow between it and the river, then send someone up to the bar whilst the rest find space on a picnic table. Pretty good pub IMO - personally I prefer it to the Trout - good beer and food, although the food does cost a bit...
Originally posted by Ariel:
It used to be possible to punt right up to one of the pubs (the Victoria Arms, IIRC) and stop off for a drink before resuming your journey, I don't know if you can still do that.
quote:One year the Boston Marathon was run when the temperature was in the nineties. People who lived along the route were encouraged to bring their hoses out and spray the runners.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I remember walking in central London on a hot day being uncomfortable, but that Marathon must have been hell. There was a guy who had just finished laid flat out with someone sprinkling water on him. All the finishers had water poured on the back of their necks as they finished and I just hope they are OK.
quote:Thank you - I am looking for more this morning
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
And I love your drops!
quote:The oldest man was 71 and the oldest woman was 76 (she used to pace for John some days).
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Great achievement by Mr Boogie! Thankfully I am far too old to even contemplate such a trip.
quote:Erk! (Get a closer bedside table!)
Originally posted by Ariel:
When the alarm went this morning I stretched out to turn it off and promptly fell out of bed.
(Not sure what lessons to learn from this: dispense with the alarm clock? Get a bigger bed?)
quote:Makes a change from what you sometimes do on the roof ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
It's Independence Day here - 65 years on from Nehru's famous "Midnight Hour" speech. In a minute we'll go on the roof and raise the flag ...
quote:Makes a change from what you sometimes do on the roof ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
It's Independence Day here - 65 years on from Nehru's famous "Midnight Hour" speech. In a minute we'll go on the roof and raise the flag ...
quote:It didn't rain here (Rochdale) but I was at my Brother's near Clitheroe and it
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
And today rain clouds should come from the SW and dump their load straight on us unfortunates who live in Pennine country. (you there, Boogie - its coming your way!)
quote:You need to practise at this! I find its easier as you get older.
Some days I am not good at idleness.
quote:Have some of ours, cars were sailing rather than driving across the Pennines early this morning.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Here we are nowhere near drought conditions but we are seriously lacking in rain so send it on over!
quote:Has he gone? Is it safe to come out now?
Originally posted by PeteC:
...Exits stage left.
quote:It's just a little tricky practising the piano, at the same time as doing the mopping or whilst up a step ladder. Especially as none of the chores took place in the room where the piano lives.
Originally posted by PeteC:
Can't you practise the hymns while you are doing all those chores?
Wash me and I shall be whiter than snow
Exits stage left.
quote:Yes please - I have logged in just before coffee time.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
I can also offer coffee, digestives and hobnobs
quote:Mmmm - I like a nice wetroom!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Good luck with the bathrooms, Boogie. I bought myself a good, long handled scrubber recently which is great for the bathroom floors - all our bathrooms are wet-rooms with non-slip vitrified tiling and they need a good scrub every few weeks - I find it quite therapeutic.
quote:So pleased to hear that Nicodemia - it's so hard when they can't tell us how they are feeling.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
I am pleased to say dog perked up no end in the Vet Hospital yesterday, and we fetched him later in the morning. Still on antibiotics and got to go back for a check-up tomorrow, but I have never seen a more normal dog!!
quote:I've never had trouble with polynomials until just now, when I googled them.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... like most of us at some time or other, has trouble with polynomials ...
quote:Wikipedia appeared to be written in some strange language, (possibly Polish, or Chinese Mandarin) and the next reference, laughingly called "Maths is fun" was no help either.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... like most of us at some time or other, has trouble with polynomials ...
quote:Oh ... we do, we do!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
He, like most of us at some time or other, has trouble with polynomials ...
quote:{tangent alert}
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I had a mongoose run almost over my feet today, only a yard or two away - they are SO cute! We still have a family in the empty land next to us which we see occasionally but this one was crossing the road.
quote:Oh my, that stopped me in my tracks.
What finished it, other than her getting ill, was my frustration with Lord of the Rings which I started as a bedtime story with her as a way of rereading it myself, only to find that the next joint instalment was several chapters later because she'd read ahead.
quote:Oh yes - happy memories of Mum reading both of these to me. I disliked the disney Jungle book because the characters were nothing like the ones I had imagined.
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Did none of you read Kipling growing up? Rikki Tikki Tavi was one of those stories I loved from the Second Jungle Book (Mowgli is in the First one).
quote:Is this the same person who just a week or so ago was moaning about the lack of rain? Just curious, y'know?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
It has been a gorgeous day here so, heading towards evening, I had a shower and got dressed in cycling togs and went for a ride to deliver a few photos. The weather changed in minutes and it bucketed down.
quote:If it were me, that would be after about half a page* ...
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
... read Lord of the Rings to her until she fell asleep ...
quote:I know - now I use an audiobook of it to send ME to sleep in the middle of the night!
If it were me, that would be after about half a page*
quote:There's a lot of history between Oxford and Swindon, and it has been known to be a bit nasty. One match when Oxford were still at the Manor ground (in the 80s) resulted in the fences/signs on the mini roundabouts downhill by the Cherwell Drive shops/BP garage being pretty much obliterated. These days the police don't want to take the chance...
Originally posted by Ariel:
Arrived at the railway station this evening to see police vans and cars parked outside, and any number of police standing around inside on the platforms and at the stairwells. Wondering if war had broken out or a terrorist attack was imminent I approached the nearest, who was also the tallest (he must have been nearly 7' but maybe that's my imagination) to ask what sort of national emergency had happened.
"It's the Oxford-Swindon football match," he explained cheerily.
For the record, Oxford had at least double the number of police, plus mounted police in the car park, when we got there (after a very peaceful journey on a train with police on board). I've never seen that kind of response for a football match in this area before - London and Birmingham yes, but I hadn't expected it here.
quote:I love the Jungle Book. I 'inherited' my copy from the family friend who once owned our childhood home- he left lots of books. It is a lovely leather bound edition, with a swastica embossed on the spine. This worried me as a child, until I discovered it is an Eastern sacred symbol. The book is enscibed 'With Mother's love to Eric on his birthday June 1st 1924'
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:Oh yes - happy memories of Mum reading both of these to me. I disliked the disney Jungle book because the characters were nothing like the ones I had imagined.
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Did none of you read Kipling growing up? Rikki Tikki Tavi was one of those stories I loved from the Second Jungle Book (Mowgli is in the First one).
quote:I like Lidl, I love browsing the 'specials' - and their cottage cheese is the best in England, and veg is cheap and super fresh.
Originally posted by Firenze:
*Their Special Lines were a particular treat today: canvasses, power drills, bed linen, nesting boxes and padded bras in adjacent bins on one aisle, strong showing in clothes-horses and thing-that-fits-over-the-sink, work boots and self-assembly furniture, but desultory frying pans and blenders.
quote:I knew the Isle of Wight was south - I didn't realise it was as far south as that.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
... on the Isle of Wight ... we didn't see any penguins ...
quote:Should I have punched him more than once?
I am going to give you two words which, if used correctly, will open many doors for you in this life...
.
.
.
.
PUSH & PULL
quote:It's a hazard of public transport. Buses are notorious, and you don't have to be on one for six hours, either.
Originally posted by piglet:
I know this is going to sound daft, but D's theory is that because they no longer permit smoking on planes, they don't have to use such good air-conditioning so you breathe second-hand air for six hours and consequently get Other People's Bugs™.
quote:And just think of the germ count on those old copies of "Hello" magazine, "Gardening" and "Proceedings of the Royal Society of Haemotologists" that every onethumbs through.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Possibly one of the worst places for it is probably a doctor's surgery, with a higher than average concentration of unwell people sitting in the waiting room.
quote:I remember my first year out teaching secondary school, I caught every bug going. Next year was much better.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Best place to pick up bugs (and gain immunity)? A primary school!
No end of snotty, uncontrolled coughs and sneezes!
quote:My last doctor had those, though he wasn't private. They were ancient copies, as well, a few years out of date.
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
Of course, if you go private it's "Country Life" and "The Field", and they're probably sanitised daily.
quote:School buses are much worse, especially in the weeks just after the start of school. The children exchange all the new germs they have acquired during the vacation.
Originally posted by Ariel:
It's a hazard of public transport. Buses are notorious, and you don't have to be on one for six hours, either.
quote:Ditto - I take zinc all year round.
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
Since I've been taking zinc at strategic moments (like before getting on a transatlantic flight and the like) I've drastically reduced the number of colds I catch.
quote:Light - in darkest Wales?? We've had our bit for this year I think. Thanks Moo I'll have a go.
Originally posted by Moo:
Peroxide removes bloodstains, but I don't know what it would do to the color or fabric of the carpet. If you do use peroxide, shield the area from light until the peroxide is dry. Otherwise you will get a yellow stain.
Moo
quote:I learnt that when I was a schoolboy! And it reinforced in my travels when I started spending time in South Asia and following local customs.
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
I take zinc everyday but despite the current cold the best one I have heard is when travelling be thorough over washing your hands before eating or drinking. My cold numbers dropped drastically when I implemented that last year.
Jengie
quote:...and apparently it's one of the measures Dave Brailsford implemented within British cycling as a way of reducing time lost from training due to illness (and we all know where that led, don't we? )
Originally posted by PeteC:
quote:I learnt that when I was a schoolboy! And it reinforced in my travels when I started spending time in South Asia and following local customs.
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
I take zinc everyday but despite the current cold the best one I have heard is when travelling be thorough over washing your hands before eating or drinking. My cold numbers dropped drastically when I implemented that last year.
Jengie
quote:Then again, you don't live near Manchester ...
Originally posted by ElaineC:
I thought having three umbrellas was excessive ...
quote:Quite frankly, I hope he got squashed. Slowly.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Is the Horrid Wee Bug okay?
quote:I don't even understand cricket when it's in English ...
Originally posted by PeteC:
Who gives a hoot what language the cricket is in?
quote:
It's better to be vetted than doctored!
quote:Yes, I was always told "it's more afraid of you than you are of it". To be honest, I doubt it.
Originally posted by moonlitdoor:
Think how big we must look to the spiders, doesn't seem to worry them though.
quote:haha!
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
And having sat through a rather tedious committee meeting yesterday, I have decided there is a lot to be said for Dictatorship.
quote:May I recommend a chairman who dines later and that you arrange meetings before his dinner. At least the duration is limited. Retired officers of the right level (c Lt-Col) usually fit the bill. They detest attempts to butter-them-up, aren't afraid of anyone while troublemakers are usually afraid of them.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
And having sat through a rather tedious committee meeting yesterday, I have decided there is a lot to be said for Dictatorship.
quote:I can one-up you . Try sitting through a meeting with a load of French people... (like I did last night - the management of our orchestra has let us down HUGE time so we are setting up our own charitable association to make the orchestra belong to the musicians).
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:haha!
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
And having sat through a rather tedious committee meeting yesterday, I have decided there is a lot to be said for Dictatorship.
I gave up meetings a couple of years ago. Stuff gets done or it doesn't, we don't need meetings to talk about stuff getting done.
quote:Yeah, we had one of those, but he left. But he spoke English. Emphatically.
La Vie en rose said:
En France, ça discute...*
*hard to translate but means that French people like to talk a lot and disagree with what everyone said pretty much for the fun of it
quote:Mint over garlic attempts to conceal the garlic, rather that counter it. There are two ways to deal with garlic
Originally posted by piglet:
I'd send Wodders a virtual Polo mint, but I doubt it would be effective against the quantities he's talking about. Oddly enough, this afternoon I happened upon the recipe for chicken with 40 cloves of garlic and thought I'd like to do it again, although not until (a) chez Piglet is restored to non-bomb-site status and (b) the weather gets a bit cooler. I did baked lamb for a dinner party once on what turned out to be the hottest day of the year - not a good idea.
quote:According to a currency chart I've found Rs 1800 is about £20 (at almost 90Rs to one GBP)!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Tee hee!
Just realised that I didn't say their charge was Rs 450, we had already paid Rs 1800 for the parts.
quote:I did it in a chicken brick. You separate the cloves of garlic but leave the skin on; put a few in the chicken cavity and scatter the rest round it, then bake it. Put a few of the cloves on each plate, and the diners squeeze out the baked garlic (which will have become almost sweet) on slices of toasted French bread.
Originally posted by balaam:
Is the chicken with 40 garlic cloves recipe roast?
quote:There are times when I can measure my w*rk stress levels by the amount of chocolate I need.... or G&Ts
Originally posted by Japes:
......
Not being allergic to chocolate is a pretty good compensation. Yesterday, which goes down on record as the most hideous day I have ever spent at work, was much improved by the large bar of chocolate waiting for me when I got home!
quote:Am about to post a recipe in heaven recipe thread for a seriously ginger ginger cake. I've made this once and it was fantastic. Took it for morning tea to a Saturday gathering of friend. Nothing left to bring home.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Hmmmmmmm - GINGER!
We like Ginger - that cake sounds fab!
quote:I resemble that remark.
Originally posted by balaam:
... donate their waste malt products to the local pig farmer. Pigs will eat anything ...
quote:The fruit and veg waste from the Basics Bank Mr. S volunteers at goes to the local community farm for the pigs and goats, but they can't eat citrus fruits apparently (I didn't know that).
Originally posted by balaam:
You can keep your Marmite, I prefer the stuff the brewer doesn't throw away. Though a decent brewer will donate their waste malt products to the local pig farmer. Pigs will eat anything. I'm more fussy.
quote:I didn't realise you were that far south.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... may blame A Certain Penguin ...
quote:So, my thanks as well!
Made it back safe from England last night. Thought I would pass on that the comments you sent were dead on. It was a good help.
It took us about 5 minutes in a taxi from the airport the first night to realize that we were NOT driving at any time. That opposite side of the road thing was much more challenging than I anticipated. So was just crossing the road!
We hardly had any time to site see during the trip. We were so busy with work, and work was way out away from the cities, that we never saw any sites until the last day when we were leaving. We got to the airport about 5 hours early (came directly from Birmingham that morning) so we hopped on the Heathrow Express and ran into town. Travel is really pretty easy once you know what you are doing (first time on a subway!!) but it is really expensive. We had enough time to walk to Buckingham Palace and take a few pictures and then hop back on the subway to catch a train back to the airport.
Hopefully next time we can build in a day or two to see the sites. Anyway, just thought I would let you know the comments were helpful.
quote:At our church we bless the animals in the parking lot. In addition to the usual pets, we also get a few small farm animals.
Originally posted by piglet:
It was another of those lovely bright, warm-but-not-too-warm autumn days; just as well, as a cathedral full of wet dogs would not have been fun.
quote:I take chewable Vit C and zinc (separately) and I do NOT smell funny (I hope)
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
A month or so ago I went to the pharmacy to buy some more chewable Vitamin C tablets and the guy showed me one that has added zinc so I thought I'd give them a whirl. They taste a bit different from the plain Vitamin C and I find now, after a few weeks, that they make me smell funny!
quote:
we also get a few small farm animals.
Moo
quote:Not enough for the smell to carry over the hill anyway.
Originally posted by Boogie:
I take chewable Vit C and zinc (separately) and I do NOT smell funny
quote:Balaam, dear, you beat me to it!
Originally posted by balaam:
quote:
we also get a few small farm animals.
Moo
You shouldn't make fun of someone's name, but this is too good.
Sorry Moo.
quote:WW signs up for basic spelling and word recognition course.
Originally posted by Boogie:
...... googles snowbirf .....
quote:We've got one like that at Château Piglet. Quite a lot of it is of the "low-level" type, i.e. all over the floor ...
Originally posted by PeteC:
It's called All available unused space ...
quote:Not quite as exciting as the golf*, then?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... having slept through several overs of the cricket ...
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... four separate customs officer did the other ...
quote:Why not?
... the first customs man was a ManUre fan but I didn't hold that against him ...
quote:That's no excuse.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Well, he was a bit of a hunk...
quote:You are welcome, such a lot of thanks for so little effort
Originally posted by Kelly Alves:
I just got back from Joe Jackson's concert. If I were inclined to smoke, I'd be having one right now.
No kidding. Imagine a two hour music- gasm. I just wanted to come on this thread and personally thank you guys for producing him, because I will coast on this for the next week. Who needs heroin?
quote:I came straight home last night and posted a gushy "thank you for the show" glurge on the band's Facebook page. I added a further gushy comment two minutes later. I then noticed a horrible typo in the first post and added a gushy apology for the typo. By now I'm sure my photo has been dug up from the Internet and is being passed around by his Security team.
Originally posted by balaam:
Kelly. Are you really going out with him?
quote:Mmmmm.... Rasam sounds lovely. After two days more or less horizontal with severe cold/mild flu, sounds like just what I need.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Himself definitely makes better Rasam than his mother.
quote:It hasn't gone away: "Waiter, have we eaten yet?"
Originally posted by Ariel:
Reminds me of the days of "nouvelle cuisine" which could be very minimalist. I really hope that's not making a comeback.
Sounds delicious, otherwise.
quote:It wasn't Szechuan Chinese by any chance? Chillies and lots of pepper are a way of life in their cooking: there's a Szechuan Chinese restaurant locally that I once tried and had a similar experience at with a dish I had had elsewhere and had ordered expecting it to be much the same. If you're prepared for it, it's an interesting twist but if you aren't, it can be a bit of a jolt.
Originally posted by piglet:
On the subject of spicy food, D. and I went to a scruffy wee Chinese restaurant up the road from Château Piglet for lunch today, and we'll be putting that one down to experience. He ordered butterfly chicken, which he'd had before and liked, but they gave him something quite different and scarily spicy. I had cumin beef, which I thought would be more "earthy" than "hot". I was wrong.
quote:Probably until he had to attend the clergy conference that was being held at the Church Centre out in the country today ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... How long did the Dean's smile linger after he had left the building?
quote:Sorry - I meant those little "chilli-pepper" symbols that some eateries (Chinese, Indian and Mexican) put on their menus - one for cowards up to four for Wodders ...
Originally posted by balaam:
... You can have hot and spicy without chillies ...
quote:You might find that the rest of the menu is similar. I'm just wondering if it's one of those places that isn't labelled as a Szechuan Chinese restaurant but in principle pretty much is?
Originally posted by piglet:
I don't think the menu specified if the dish was Szechuan (I'd probably have been more wary if it had), and there was no "chilli-pepper" warning. As I said, it's a funny, scruffy wee place that looks more take-away than eaterie, but when we were there yesterday the other diners were talking animatedly in Chinese, which is always a good sign. I don't think it'll put us off ever going there again; we just won't have those things again.
Mind you, we were both suffering from slight colds, and it didn't half clear out the tubes ...
quote:Those of you who were at the last Wightmeet will remember a modified version of that.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Himself does a fearsome condiment with smashed shallots and chilli powder with a little salt and a little coconut oil - that is all there is and it is POWERFUL!!!
quote:Never tried it; we must have been about the only couple who got married in the late 1980s and didn't get a Pastamatic as a wedding present. At the time it didn't matter, as D. wasn't particularly partial to it, but since I've been doing the pancetta thing, it's grown on him.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Do you make your own pasta, piglet?
quote:Here in Australia we can purchase a cordial called Ginger Refresher, made by the Buderim Ginger Factory. It is the clarified and bottled syrup from the preserving process, so reducing waste products and providing us with the base for some very refreshing drinks. A little goes a loooong way.
When I lived in UK I occasionally got hold of a bottle of ginger cordial - try your local health food or wholefood type shop. That is nice with soda but is a bit sweet for my taste these days.
quote:I bought some one year. It tasted off, is what it tasted like - and I quite like ginger.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We can actually buy Ginger Coffee here, it seems to be quite popular - no idea what it tastes like.
quote:Humidity?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
What I don't get about bread is why, when I lived in UK I could make good bread even though in the winter I had to create warm places for it to rise but here where it is warm all the time so should be perfect I just can't get it right!
quote:Sorry about the lousy bank transfer but on the subject of the other kind of bread, is it sufficiently less hot and humid at night to bake then? Maybe that is why bakers work in the small hours.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Boogie, you're a genius! I think you've hit the nail on the head.
...and there's nowt I can do about it except make soda bread instead - now there's a hardship for you
I have now been promised that my bank transfer from UK will be credited tomorrow afternoon so it will have taken a week instead of the usual 24-30 hours - NOT happy!
quote:Why would D. do that?
Originally posted by piglet:
D. made some v. good raisin bread today
quote:Very posh! Mine are similar but shorter.
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
I've ordered a pair of wellies like this.
Wellies are surprising popular with chic Parisiennes - it tips it down here, and they (a) keep your feet dry and (b) stop you ruining your good shoes.
quote:b) is especially necessary with all those leetle doggies. Filthiest pavements anywhere!
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
I've ordered a pair of wellies like this.
Wellies are surprising popular with chic Parisiennes - it tips it down here, and they (a) keep your feet dry and (b) stop you ruining your good shoes.
quote:Wow! Now that's what I CALL a wellie!
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
These are my "best" wellies -
quote:Ah well, it takes all sorts
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:Wow! Now that's what I CALL a wellie!
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
These are my "best" wellies -
quote:Whilst that may be true today, growing up in a village close to a large town there was always dog mess, in various states of decay.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
b) is especially necessary with all those leetle doggies. Filthiest pavements anywhere!
quote:I think I must be getting tired, I read the last few posts, and balaam's immediately before this, and assumed for a couple of seconds you were referring to poo rather than wellies.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Mine are black, the only colour available here.
quote:I remember those days - and the green ones had buckles like my "best" ones do but at a fraction of the price. My posh green ones (i wore them all day for weeks on end, and the ladies fitting meant they were more comfortable than the cheaper ones, so I felt it was a good buy) got nicked when my car was joy-ridden, and I think that I mourned the loss of those more than the car. Nowadays the only place around here you can get black wellies is a builders merchant - they have steel toe caps which aren't too practical for allotmenteering. Most people around here get theirs from a farm supplies shop where you could only get green the last time I needed some for "every day".
Originally posted by balaam:
What's wrong with black? I can remember when even green wellies were seen as an innovation (and priced to make them elitist.)
quote:Yes, I have green wellies, so do most people here. The choices available for women were a) green or b) horrendous patterns like red and beige zebra print, fake leopardskin, twee floral. It really wasn't a difficult decision and I don't regret it.
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
Nowadays the only place around here you can get black wellies is a builders merchant - they have steel toe caps which aren't too practical for allotmenteering. Most people around here get theirs from a farm supplies shop where you could only get green the last time I needed some for "every day".
quote:Awwwww - what a lovely Mum!
Originally posted by Eigon:
When I was a child, back in the Dark Ages, you could only get black wellies for children. Mum had some narrow white tape, and she cut out daisy petals from it and stuck them on the wellies to pretty them up a bit.
I loved my daisy wellies.
quote:Well, they're all much the same really, once you're up to your knees in good honest country muck/one of those agricultural shows that's just been deluged with rain and turned into a quagmire...
Originally posted by Boogie:
And, exqueeze me Ariel, but there is nothing wrong with twee floral!
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... piglet, I made the Marmite™ comment because I know you sometimes rail at me about the lovely stuff ...
quote:Nom nom, it's years since I had Marmite .... must put it on the shopping list this week.
Originally posted by piglet:
I'll have you know that last time I was home I brought back a huge jar of Special Extra Strength Marmite for an English friend.
quote:Wow - a lot of New Zealanders would be very jealous. No Marmite has been made here since the February 2011 quake destroyed the factory that makes it. The taste is different from English Marmite otherwise I can envisage care packages being sent across the world - but not to me, I prefer Vegemite - one of the best products to come out of Australia.
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:Nom nom, it's years since I had Marmite .... must put it on the shopping list this week.
Originally posted by piglet:
I'll have you know that last time I was home I brought back a huge jar of Special Extra Strength Marmite for an English friend.
quote:I was beginning to worry about you* when you used the words "salad cream" and "wonderful" in the same sentence ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Salad Cream, abomination though it generally is - but it is wonderful on beetroot!
quote:Oh yes, it looks pretty awful but [if memory serves me right] it does taste good, the over the top acidity of the Salad Cream really balancing and enhancing the sweetness of the beetroot - and worry not, I have no intention of buying a jar for that purpose and anyway I haven't looked at the ingredients for it for at least half a lifetime and am sure I wouldn't be impressed.
Originally posted by piglet:
...Doesn't the beetroot impart the most alarming of pinkness?...
quote:I've had a quick search and can't find a Rollmop Day, which is a bit sad. Perhaps you should start a campaign for one.
Originally posted by Ariel:
...When is National Rollmop Day?
quote:I will look into it - there are things (like baked beans) which my son can't get in Germany. We take ooodles of them out when we go.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
These people will ship British foods just about anywhere - but I presume it costs an arm and a leg.
quote:I was with you until you mentioned balsamic
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Raw beetroot is amazing and delicious and I miss getting it in boxes or growing it. I eat the leaves too.
The equivalent recipe to salad cream is roasting beetroot with olive oil and onions, adding feta or a salty creamy cheese, balsamic vinegar and walnuts, serving hot with green salad.
quote:For the pigeon it's more of a finisher.
posted by Balaam
Put a fried pigeon on a piece of black pudding. cubes of beetroot around the black pudding and serve with rocket leaves and balsamic.
Great as a starter.
quote:There is at least one very perceptive bit in that post!
Originally posted by Smudgie:
Sometimes it just takes a bit of looking/travelling Boogie. When I lived in a little town in Austria I found a shop that sold baked beans. It was a tiny supermarket-style shop hidden away and it sold other luxuries such as instant coffee, too - an abomination to the Austrians who thought me quite insane for drinking it. Either that, or they simply thought me quite insane full stop! I think the shop I bought those things at was Spar.
quote:Same here - they're edible, but Not Quite The Same. Unless we have a brain-fart and buy the molasses ones, in which case they're not even edible ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... We can actually get tins of baked beans here but frankly they are not very good ...
quote:Whereas here, it's getting to the stage where you need to take out a mortgage to buy nuts in any quantity. My mother used to make a version with cornflakes and peanuts, which we called 'nutty slack' - incredibly sweet - a wonderful memory, but not a taste to try to re-capture, as I discovered when I attempted it.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
...but we have some pumpkin seeds and I can also recommend the addition of some crushed cashews - not expensive here.
quote:Have either of you tried making your own?
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:Same here - they're edible, but Not Quite The Same. Unless we have a brain-fart and buy the molasses ones, in which case they're not even edible ...
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... We can actually get tins of baked beans here but frankly they are not very good ...
quote:It's the sugar that makes the difference, sadly.
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Do you have a recipe for homemade baked beans that tastes like Heinz? I've made variations on baked beans without anything like as much sugar as that and they are not the same.
quote:I've had a reply and they say I'd be welcome to have a few days there so I think I'll ring in the morning and see if I can go and see the place tomorrow as I'm heading that way anyway to see the Registration man at the airport. Hopefully I can make a date then, possibly for December.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
...I also spoke to the priest and got a name of a place from him where I might be able to do a private silent retreat for a few days - I have Googled and written to them and now just have to wait for a reply.
quote:Not tasting the same as the ones in the tins, no. You can sort of get near there if you use a pressure-cooker, and start with the right sort of beans. It wants ones that are slightly smaller than most red or black kidney beans we see in shops, with white or pale green shells. Even if you are using a pressure cooker you want to soak or preboil the beans, and then drain them and change the water.
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Do you have a recipe for homemade baked beans that tastes like Heinz?
quote:The first and last of those make an acceptable BBQ bean sort of fake-up.
Originally posted by St Everild:
Baked beans (even Heinz ones) are hugely improved with the addition of a dash of Worcester sauce, or a dash of Tabasco, or even (sorry, Pete!) a dash of balsamic vinegar!
quote:Or curry powder.
Originally posted by St Everild:
Baked beans (even Heinz ones) are hugely improved with the addition of a dash of Worcester sauce, or a dash of Tabasco, or even (sorry, Pete!) a dash of balsamic vinegar!
quote:Oh!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Well, that was not exactly what I'd call a good morning - I went to find out the new procedure for applying for my annual extension on my visa to find that I won't be granted one this time because of various changes in regulations so I have 39 days until my current extension expires, in other words to leave the country then I can apply for a tourist visa to return then do various other stuff if I then want to remain.
quote:After the fiasco of Himself applying for a tourist visa for Britain I beg to differ!
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Hope things work out for you, WW. Indian red tape sounds a bit more horrendous that British red tape!...
quote:Didn't Himself apply in India for a British visa?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:After the fiasco of Himself applying for a tourist visa for Britain I beg to differ!
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Hope things work out for you, WW. Indian red tape sounds a bit more horrendous that British red tape!...
After lunch I took up my machete and have cut down a few noxious plants in the hedgerow that inhibit the growth of the hibiscus so that made me feel a bit better.
quote:Good for you, Wodders - don't let them grind you down. Having ploughed through seven years of Canadian red tape and endured much moving of goalposts before getting Permanent Residence (and done more than enough panicking) I can sympathise completely.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... I point-blank refuse to be panicked by it all ...
quote:Keep it in case war breaks out and you can't get any of the fresh stuff?
Originally posted by piglet:
Any ideas as to what I can do with an unwanted box of skimmed-milk powder?
quote:Just one of those things. As you say, you were shaken. And I'm guessing you and your daughter are very close - that she's one of the first people you instinctively think of. In a moment of shock when conscious, rational thought is stilled the unconscious comes to the fore, and the mind can work in odd ways sometimes. You needed to reach out to her and at the same time reassure her and this is how that manifested itself.
Originally posted by North East Quine:
I'm still shaken from the fall, and now I'm shaken by the idea that I was talking to thin air.
Rational explanation? Please??
quote:Hope you feel better today. Falls are nasty. Lots of shaking and often stiffness the next day too.
Originally posted by North East Quine:
Me, or my daughter? Or the flip-flops of slippy-soled doom?
Feeling better now I've had a hot shower and washed the mud off.
quote:
Originally posted by North East Quine:
My son has reassured me that I can't be losing my marbles, if only because he doesn't think I have any marbles to lose.
I'm a bit bruised, but I'm fine, thanks.
It's snowing here! First snow of the winter!
quote:The stiffness should disappear after the bruises have faded to yellow.
Originally posted by North East Quine:
I'm a bit bruised, but I'm fine, thanks.
It's snowing here! First snow of the winter!
quote:Only sort of. The two sales (spring and autumn) between them bring in about $20,000; unfortunately that's nowhere near enough to cover the upkeep of the Cathedral hall, which is a great big money-drain.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
... Presumably your fete raises money for something or other ...
quote:Double-dang Blast with a side order of Grrr.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We fell at the last hurdle today - we were short one required certificate and no chance of getting hold of it in time for me to avoid a trip to at least Sri Lanka at the end of next month so I came home and booked my tickets and got my visa thingy - and only later discovered that the offices will be closed the day after I arrive [Poya Day, a public holiday there] so I can't apply for my next visa for here until a couple of days later!
Oh well, hopefully it will all be through in time for me to fly home on the day I am booked in for.
quote:Thank you for the reminder - I'd forgotten
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Just a reminder that the clocks fall back tonight. An hour extra in bed - yay! Unfortunately, it means that it gets dark an hour earlier - not so yay.
quote:Let me see if I can work it out: does that mean some will arrive for morning services an hour late or an hour early? ISTR somebody arriving a whole two hours late, but I'm not sure that was spring or autumn: they must have moved the clock the wrong way!
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Just a reminder that the clocks fall back tonight. An hour extra in bed - yay! Unfortunately, it means that it gets dark an hour earlier - not so yay.
quote:Good Lord, is he still doing concerts? Used to really enjoy his TV show back in the 70s.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
... tickets for a Max Boyce concert ...
quote:Max Boyce has revivals whenever the Wales has a really good year in the Six Nations! A friend of mine, born in Pontardulais, has been dreading this latest one since the middle of March.
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:Good Lord, is he still doing concerts? Used to really enjoy his TV show back in the 70s.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
... tickets for a Max Boyce concert ...
quote:You're turning vegetarian?
Originally posted by piglet:
I suppose we'll have to eat them* ourselves ...
* the sweeties, not the trick-or-treatists.
quote:Good grief, they were trick-or-treating on an industrial scale round our way, despite howling winds and rain coming down like stair-rods. An executive-style housing development of detached homes is perfect, you see - big enough to have money, but the houses are still fairly close together so you don't have to walk half a mile up a drive to find out there's no-one home. Mr. S and I snuck out for a curry with half a dozen friends - we could have bought a sweetshop for what it cost us, but it's the Principle of the Thing!
Originally posted by QLib:
quote:You're turning vegetarian?
Originally posted by piglet:
I suppose we'll have to eat them* ourselves ...
* the sweeties, not the trick-or-treatists.
quote:You don't say!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... a whole big jar of ghee [clarified better, 1 kg] and about 3 kgs of cracked wheat and 4 litres of milk and raisins and 3 kgs sugar and cardamom and then some more sugar ... lovely but very rich
quote:Me? Vegetarian? Wash out your mouth with soap!
Originally posted by Qlib:
You're turning vegetarian?
quote:Blimey. It must have felt like sitting in a cinema! Sound quality to match I expect?
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
T won a 54" flat screen TV.
So yesterday's day off featured sitting on T's sofa all day watching DVDs on the Biggest TV in the World™
quote:Goferit. And get one that is HD. Your life will then drain away unregarded as you sit enraptured by the hyper-reality before you.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Sounds fantastic - I have a 15" tv and have been wondering about getting a (slightly) larger one when this one bites the dust. I've had it for 20 years or so, but it still works pretty well.
quote:I get the same effect from my computer.
Originally posted by Firenze:
Goferit. And get one that is HD. Your life will then drain away unregarded as you sit enraptured by the hyper-reality before you.
quote:54"? That's nearly five feet! I haven't got a house big enough to accommodate that.
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
... a 54" flat screen TV ...
quote:These days that's positively ancient for a television. My parents' first TV lasted about 20 years (although it was really superseded by colour rather than completely going phut), but they never had another one that lasted nearly that long. We're on our second one since coming here, and that was less than 10 years ago (although again, it was rather brought on by having a wee bit of spare money and going for a flat-screen one).
Originally posted by Ariel:
I've had [a 15" TV] for 20 years or so
quote:Yes, I quite like the idea of a flat-screen one. My TV was an expensive-ish one at the time, but I wanted a good make that would last for a while, something light and easy to carry if I had to move flats, and the picture quality (reception apart) is very clear with good colours. It was also one of the first to have a Scart socket so can still be used now we've all gone digital.
Originally posted by piglet:
These days that's positively ancient for a television. My parents' first TV lasted about 20 years (although it was really superseded by colour rather than completely going phut), but they never had another one that lasted nearly that long. We're on our second one since coming here, and that was less than 10 years ago (although again, it was rather brought on by having a wee bit of spare money and going for a flat-screen one).
quote:Ooh, are you an OU tutor? I am too! (also in HSC faculty). I tutor on K203 and K218, and used to tutor on K101 as well. I just sent a load of essays back - always a nice feeling, although the next lot arrive on Friday so there's not much respite
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
Just got in from my monthly OU tutorial, today we looked at health as a social construction, how body image influences health and the effect of housing/environment on health (we explored a news article on hurricane Sandy to apply the practical implications of this). Nice chatty group of students too.
quote:Last April, at Vishu we laid a string of one thousand firecrackers out on the road and let her rip.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Churh fireworks party tonight - I know it's just burning money in effect, but I love fireworks. We've bought a huge "cake" with about 100 shots - Darllenwr has his reputation as the church pyromaniac to uphold! (Mind, for any one who knows Lord P in rl, his facebook pictures make him seem a pyromaniac)
quote:Christ CHurch Cathedral in Ottawa and the diocese have just demolished the cathedral hall in preparation for a massive (well, as massive as the local bylaws will allow in a heritage area) commercial development that will, when complete, include condominiums, offices, a floor (or more) for the cathedral, a floor (or more) for the diocesan offices and archives, and a regular source of revenue for both the cathedral and the diocese. It has taken many years to get this far, given the need to demolish or move several buildings, negotiate with the city how high and where the tower can be built on the site, etc., etc.
Originally posted by piglet:
...the Cathedral hall, which is a great big money-drain.
The sales are the only events that really use the entire space (which is vast), and apart from them, a couple of post-ordination bun-fights, the Patronal Festival barbecue and the odd congregational meeting it's hardly used at all. The ground floor is rented out to a dancing school, but the whole complex is in a pretty bad shape and we're currently trying to work out what's the best thing to do with it. We really don't need a hall that size, and the site (prime downtown area) could be put to much more profitable use.
Any flashes of inspiration would be welcome ...
quote:The new building to house the offices of the Diocese of NS and PEI and the Cathedral Church of All Saints is about to open. It is also a shared project with the Diocese providing the land and a private company building and occupying an eight storey building. Seniors' houseing will be provided on six floors and has two floors will be for nursing care. If you ever feel the need for a field trip, come on over!
Originally posted by John Holding:
quote:Christ CHurch Cathedral in Ottawa and the diocese have just demolished the cathedral hall in preparation for a massive (well, as massive as the local bylaws will allow in a heritage area) commercial development that will, when complete, include condominiums, offices, a floor (or more) for the cathedral, a floor (or more) for the diocesan offices and archives, and a regular source of revenue for both the cathedral and the diocese. It has taken many years to get this far, given the need to demolish or move several buildings, negotiate with the city how high and where the tower can be built on the site, etc., etc.
Originally posted by piglet:
...the Cathedral hall, which is a great big money-drain.
The sales are the only events that really use the entire space (which is vast), and apart from them, a couple of post-ordination bun-fights, the Patronal Festival barbecue and the odd congregational meeting it's hardly used at all. The ground floor is rented out to a dancing school, but the whole complex is in a pretty bad shape and we're currently trying to work out what's the best thing to do with it. We really don't need a hall that size, and the site (prime downtown area) could be put to much more profitable use.
Any flashes of inspiration would be welcome ...
I'd suggest you guys talk to the people here -- first point of contact at the cathedral would be the Dean, who could put you on to the key people in the diocese and the cathedral.
Best wishes.
John
quote:But why would you want a penguin-free experience? Penguins enhance absolutely anything they appear on. If I'd known you didn't want me at the wedding, I wouldn't have come!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We have received the DVD of the wedding and it is all very tastefully done - except for the shots of penguins walking across an ice floe! It is part of the generally artistic editing that goes into these things here.
But PENGUINS!?!?!?
Presumably on their return today, they have stayed overnight at Herself's mum's, they will bring the other DVD so we can see the whole thing again from the Bride's perspective. Can I hope for a penguin free experience?
quote:Someone's cat had died?
Originally posted by piglet:
we did the Furry Requiem.
code:Good day today, the sun is up, the sky is blue, but it is c c c c cold.(")> As for penguins, there are glaciers in the far north of Wodderland, they could live there.
Just for you Wodders I have given this paragraph penguin bookends. <(")
quote:Ruskin certainly thought so, so it must be true: "I find penguins at present the only comfort in life. One feels everything in the world so sympathetically ridiculous; one can’t be angry when one looks at a penguin."
Originally posted by Smudgie:
quote:But why would you want a penguin-free experience? Penguins enhance absolutely anything they appear on.
But PENGUINS!?!?!?
quote:Well I might think the same myself if we were talking about this sort of penguin
Originally posted by ArachnidinElmet:
quote:Ruskin certainly thought so, so it must be true: "I find penguins at present the only comfort in life. One feels everything in the world so sympathetically ridiculous; one can’t be angry when one looks at a penguin."
Originally posted by Smudgie:
quote:But why would you want a penguin-free experience? Penguins enhance absolutely anything they appear on.
But PENGUINS!?!?!?
quote:Have you ever considered a rather handy device called a Shopping List? Doesn't even need batteries!
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... halfway home I remembered what I had forgotten ...
quote:Yes, but then there is the "I've only go a few things to get, I don't need a list, I can't forget so short a list" syndrome!
Originally posted by piglet:
...Have you ever considered a rather handy device called a Shopping List?...
quote:My problem is that after I have gone back downstairs, I frequently still can't remember.
Originally posted by piglet:
I sometimes have to go back downstairs in order to remember what I came upstairs for ...
quote:I had to google this (sorry, it was too good to be true). Apparently his face turns green when he bites into the sandwich. Brilliant.
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
[*]Father Christmas trying and enjoying / spitting out a Marmite sandwich
quote:Will you be waking up for a Shipmeet at some point?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
....I reckon I might sleep my entire three weeks in UK!!
quote:I don't think he'll have enough time for that many meets - one would probably be enough
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Boogie or I could possibly organise 365 meets too!
quote:Any response I could make to that would be too Hell-like for the Hosts here to permit it
Originally posted by moonlitdoor:
Did Sri Lanka not want you or was England in late November just too good to pass up ?
quote:I don't think I've ever seen the words "penguin" and "terrifying" in the same sentence before.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... I know the wrath of the penguin to be terrifying ...
quote:Ah! Well, we've had it and ages ages ...
Originally posted by PeteC:
The thingy that heats the water is dying. Bite the bullet and buy a new one... unless you want to wait months while the shop repairs it.
quote:Well, if you should chance to meander over in an easterly direction, us Oxford and Cotswolds residents would be pleased to see you. (Though I appreciate it might be a bit out of your way.)
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
St G - I think I'll be in The Forest towards the end of next week but probably moving on to Cheltenham [or thereabouts] for the weekend.
quote:It was indeed very foggy here in inner London this morning. Though has lifted now.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I think it is getting it all out of its system before I arrive to blizzards and freezing fog on Friday evening!
quote:May you have an uneventful journey today.... and pleeeeaaaase bring some of that lovely sunshine with you.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I think it is getting it all out of its system before I arrive to blizzards and freezing fog on Friday evening!
quote:Take a photo of some grey card out of focus and tell people it was a pea-souper.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Cloudy, but no fog to be seen. I was hoping for some misty, photogenic scenes, but nothing so far.
quote:Would they believe it, though? The younger generation haven't seen a proper pea-souper. The sort of fog we got when I was at school was the sort where cars would loom up suddenly a yard away, and the air was acrid and difficult to breathe, like a clammy hand squeezing your lungs. Haven't seen one of those for years, probably because people don't use coal as much now.
Originally posted by balaam:
Take a photo of some grey card out of focus and tell people it was a pea-souper.
quote:1957 or thereabouts: opening the front door in inner Belfast on a wall of grey - visibility in inches, if that.
Originally posted by Ariel:
The younger generation haven't seen a proper pea-souper. The sort of fog we got when I was at school was the sort where cars would loom up suddenly a yard away
quote:Another bright day after yesterday's bright day. Though the night was wet. Got up this morning to make two cups of tea to take back to bed (I love Saturday mornings) and let the cat in. Dressed in a dressing gown, I was trying to pour water on to the tea bags while the soggy moggy was trying to dry herself on my bare legs.
Originally posted by St Everild:
Grey overcast day here too, after yesterdays grey overcast day, which ended in the sort of rain that gets you thoroughly wet...
quote:Cat Flap?
I hate wet cats first thing in the morning.
quote:That's all very well, but as my dad says, "as the days get longer the cold gets stronger". He's never been to Newfoundland, but that saying could certainly apply here. The longer I have to wait for weather you have to shovel*, the happier I'll be.
Originally posted by St Everild:
... it's only a few weeks to the shortest day ...
quote:Thanks Nicodemia! I bake a cake to take to work every Thursday and I've set myself the challenge of doing a different one every week this year, no buns, no cookies, no brownies ... just cut-able cakes. I will add yours to the list.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
I have posted my sisters recipe for her best ever spicy Apple Cake on the Recipe thread in Heaven.
quote:How much do you pay them?
Originally posted by piglet:
They don't call me Piglet the Versatile for nothing* ...
quote:As we were getting into the car after singing Evensong at the old people's home the other day there was a car stereo blaring out an awful, wailing version of Silent Night. If I never heard that carol again, it would be too soon.
Originally posted by balaam:
... At least they're not playing anything that mentions Chr*stm*s.
quote:I was in London in early January, 1956. The fog was thick and yellow with a metallic taste.
Originally posted by Ariel:
The younger generation haven't seen a proper pea-souper. The sort of fog we got when I was at school was the sort where cars would loom up suddenly a yard away, and the air was acrid and difficult to breathe, like a clammy hand squeezing your lungs. Haven't seen one of those for years, probably because people don't use coal as much now.
quote:The old London fogs were smog, not natural fog. Doesn;t happen any more. The Clean Air Acts have helped a lot.
Originally posted by Moo:
I was in London in early January, 1956. The fog was thick and yellow with a metallic taste.
quote:I will! And now I'll pop off to the 'snap' thread for advice! (First must plug in the camera batteries to charge)
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Good moment to do some street photography, Boogie - find a nice spot to sit and take pictures and just get on with it
quote:Sit?
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Good moment to do some street photography, Boogie - find a nice spot to sit and take pictures and just get on with it
quote:I've spoken with him*. He says the weather's delightful and he can't imagine why he chooses to live in India.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Anyone heard from WW lately? I can't imagine he's enjoying our November.
quote:Sad to see a fellow Host descend into insanity, but there you go.
Originally posted by Yangtze:
quote:I've spoken with him*. He says the weather's delightful and he can't imagine why he chooses to live in India.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Anyone heard from WW lately? I can't imagine he's enjoying our November.
quote:Boy, you guys up there clearly know how to have a good time.
Originally posted by Firenze:
Lunch was a sandwich and a drink from Tesco's chill cabinet, consumed in an unheated basement.
quote:Indoors is luxury enough y'ken.
Originally posted by QLib:
quote:Boy, you guys up there clearly know how to have a good time.
Originally posted by Firenze:
Lunch was a sandwich and a drink from Tesco's chill cabinet, consumed in an unheated basement.
quote:"Smog" was British,
Originally posted by ken:
quote:The old London fogs were smog, not natural fog. Doesn;t happen any more. The Clean Air Acts have helped a lot.
Originally posted by Moo:
I was in London in early January, 1956. The fog was thick and yellow with a metallic taste.
"Smog" is one of those words that sounds so American and 20th century its almost disappointing to find out that it was originally British and Victorian. Like "christingle" and "brunch".
quote:To quote Lady Whiteadder: "Two spikes would be an extravagance".
Originally posted by Firenze:
... Indoors is luxury enough y'ken.
quote:That sounds orgasmic (and we have easy access to quinces and venison) - could you post it on the recipe thread, please?
Originally posted by Ariel:
there's a venison and quince casserole I've made in the past which works beautifully,
quote:Done! You'll probably want to double the quantities and adjust seasonings as you go along.
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
quote:That sounds orgasmic (and we have easy access to quinces and venison) - could you post it on the recipe thread, please?
Originally posted by Ariel:
there's a venison and quince casserole I've made in the past which works beautifully,
A drooling AG
quote:Currently above water... There's been a heap of sandbags on the corner of the road since we went onto full Flood Warning on Monday night. Not much use to most here, seeing as what tends to happen is that the groundwater comes up through the floorboards! The meadow still had green bits on it this morning, so hopefully it won't get too much higher.
Originally posted by Ariel:
How are you doing btw - webbed feet yet? A section of one of the railway lines had a flowing stream running down it tonight and lapping towards the rest of the railway lines. Lots of submerged scenes generally in the local news. I don't think it was this bad in 2007.
quote:On current form, from a boat.
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
Ooh, where are you going to busk?
quote:He's on a plane back home as we speak.
Originally posted by St Everild:
Has anyone seen Wodders recently? He's been gone a long time....
quote:Well, the thing is, I had eaten two-thirds of the bacon and half the black pudding before the cholesterol test (though I must admit the bad choleterol was just a smidgin above desirable levels). I daren't even ask for your recipe for caramel nut jobs.
Originally posted by piglet:
While I utterly sympathise with the desire for bacon and black pudding, are you quite sure it's the right thing with which to celebrate your Good Cholesterol?
quote:Thanks WW. I'll check it out some time. If you were there recently why didn't you organise a shipmeet?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
For anyone Liverpool way I can recommend the Akshaya South Indian/Sri Lankan restaurant on Kensington between Holt Road and Shiel Road - good food, some of which is very authentically south Indian, combined with reasonable prices and cheerful service.
quote:Well, you do live near Manchester ... The sun was out here today, but it didn't stop it being -6° and feeling like -13° with the wind-chill. Even I was feeling cold.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
... Sometimes the sun comes out here. Mostly it doesn't ...
quote:Sorry, friend and I only decided to eat there about 10 minutes before we headed in that direction - but it may well be on my list for next time!
Originally posted by Angloid:
...Thanks WW. I'll check it out some time. If you were there recently why didn't you organise a shipmeet?...
quote:Thanks - it was fine.
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
Have safe journey.
quote:Thanks for asking. Cold, cold, cold and icy - but the roads are very well gritted.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Boogie should be OK, I think? Or have you got the Lake District ice??
quote:Oh Good I should be over your way tomorrow, hope it stays around!
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Beautiful day here - bright, sunny, but cold. No ice. Which was a good thing as driving head on into a low sun was Very Difficult.
quote:On the contrary! We have nasty weather from May to November, but winters are milder than the rest of the country on average. Though having said that it will probably snow tomorrow.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Sorry if you've got snow and ice, but its so rare for us in the NW not to have nasty weather when you've got it!
quote:Rain comes mostly on Atlantic winds from the South West. Snow is mostly on winds from the North East. The row of hills between us means that you in the the North West have the worst of the rain and we in Yorkshire and the North East have the worst of the snow.
Originally posted by Angloid:
quote:On the contrary! We have nasty weather from May to November, but winters are milder than the rest of the country on average. Though having said that it will probably snow tomorrow.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Sorry if you've got snow and ice, but its so rare for us in the NW not to have nasty weather when you've got it!
quote:Which is probably why East Anglia, despite being the driest region due to flatness, gets a good amount of snow. I love the weather here
Originally posted by balaam:
quote:Rain comes mostly on Atlantic winds from the South West. Snow is mostly on winds from the North East. The row of hills between us means that you in the the North West have the worst of the rain and we in Yorkshire and the North East have the worst of the snow.
Originally posted by Angloid:
quote:On the contrary! We have nasty weather from May to November, but winters are milder than the rest of the country on average. Though having said that it will probably snow tomorrow.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Sorry if you've got snow and ice, but its so rare for us in the NW not to have nasty weather when you've got it!
If you like both wet and snowy weather, try moving to Scotland for more of both.
quote:Someone once phoned a television meteorologist and said, "I thought you would be interested to learn that I have just finished shoveling seven inches of 'partly cloudy' out of my driveway."
Originally posted by piglet:
We've got what a friend calls "fat rain" when she's in Sn*w Denial™; it's getting a wee bit treacherous underfoot, but not really expected to amount to very much.
quote:Same here, and I work in IT.
Originally posted by balaam:
I have no idea how a computer works, never mind how Skype works. I don't really care, I just use them.
quote:Keep the pie in the fridge but take it out at least twenty minutes before you eat it. The jelly melts into the crust, which does wonders for the flavour.
As for pies. Hard crust is usually a sign that the pie has been made a while ago, such as supermarket pies. Melton Mowbray pies are grey, the pink meat is cured pork. As for the jelly, it is gelatine from the pig trotters, it often has more flavour than the meat.
Get your pies from a butcher not a supermarket.
quote:Tha must 'ave been posh. Port pies indeed! Mebbe in Harrogate...
Originally posted by leo:
when I was in Yorkshire, it was a common delicacy to eat port pies hot with mushy peas.
quote:It's been really pretty, although, as with last night, my fingers went numb within seconds while trying to take pictures early this morning (see Flickr for the best). The frost was amazing: it transformed normally peaceful plants and leaves into the sort of vicious-looking spiky vegetation that you wouldn't want to mess with. The spiders' webs were pretty powerful, too: you don't realize how many spiders there are normally until something like this happens, and they're all outlined in vivid white.
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Dunno what Ariel will spot, but it's been beautiful here in the cattle crossing today.
quote:I assume you saw it twice because you're going cross-eyed? You sure you haven't cracked some of it open already?
Originally posted by Boogie:
71 (71)
quote:Calvados does that! Years ago we bought some 20 year old and that was absolutely magnificent. 5 years ago we got six bottles of ten year old on a good offer. They were OK then, but given time Calvados improves more than any other spirit. There are two half bottles left
Originally posted by Ariel:
I think I have 7 bottles of wine left. That doesn't include the Campari or Calvados, and I need to get some more of the latter. The one I bought has matured into a deliciously mellow version over the few years I've had it.
quote:Oh dear - that reminds me, I still have a bottle of champagne I was given in 1990-something. I've been keeping it for a future occasion when there'd be something wonderful to celebrate. This too has gone through several house moves; I don't know if it's even drinkable any more.
Originally posted by North East Quine:
I should be posting this on the "decluttering" thread, shouldn't I? The half-empty Malibu has gone through 6 house moves.
quote:So did we - probably the same Well Known Wine Merchant. It wasn't needed, but Mr Boog was taken in with the offer!
Originally posted by St Everild:
Fortunately we had a delivery from a Well Known Wine Merchant on Saturday, so we are all set with wine for The Day.
quote:I had a bottle like that, a decent champagne which was given to me as a leaving present in the mid-90s. I too was keeping it for an occasion, and it followed me round a few house moves. Then in my last London house the last time I got burgled it was the one thing that was nicked (it was near the kitchen window so he obviously just grabbed it on the way out, and left huge muddy footprints on the work surface while he was at it)
Originally posted by Ariel:
Oh dear - that reminds me, I still have a bottle of champagne I was given in 1990-something. I've been keeping it for a future occasion when there'd be something wonderful to celebrate. This too has gone through several house moves; I don't know if it's even drinkable any more.
quote:I have this problem. I've had several bottles of Malibu given by a much-mistaken aunt. The blessed Nigella suggests using it as coconut essence in baking. Coconut sponge with pina colada icing: yum.
Originally posted by North East Quine:
I should be posting this on the "decluttering" thread, shouldn't I? The half-empty Malibu has gone through 6 house moves.
quote:With knives? If wine needs cutting it is probably not quite at its best.
Originally posted by Boogie:
So did we - probably the same Well Known Wine Merchant. It wasn't needed, but Mr Boog was taken in with the offer!
(And it came with free knives )
quote:that ought to tell you something!
Originally posted by North East Quine:
I should be posting this on the "decluttering" thread, shouldn't I? The half-empty Malibu has gone through 6 house moves.
quote:That stopper would need a lock and throwaway key for champagne to keep at daisydaisy Towers. It seems to evaporate quickly once the cork is out.
Originally posted by Firenze:
Champagne doesn't keep in our house once it's opened either... You can get one of these dinky little stoppers. They do work.
quote:I had to look this up. That's a bottle. What did you get, red or white?
Originally posted by PeteC:
My, oh, my! What a lot of souses (scousesÉ) you all are. As for me, for the first time in years, I will have alcohol in the house. I won 750ml of wine in a raffle.
quote:Most, in both cases, though.
Originally posted by kingsfold:
Though some Scousers may be souses, not all souses are Scousers. Or something.
quote:Red wine. And I apologise for missing out the key word "bottle". I will use a part of it to make "Burgundy Beans*" a staple in my household since the 60s.
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:I had to look this up. That's a bottle. What did you get, red or white?
Originally posted by PeteC:
My, oh, my! What a lot of souses (scousesÉ) you all are. As for me, for the first time in years, I will have alcohol in the house. I won 750ml of wine in a raffle.
quote:Even if I only drink it (a) on Christmas Day and (b) on aeroplanes? The amount they charge for air-fares, if they're going to throw in free GIN, I'm taking it.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... The evil GIN does would be hard to assess!
quote:Don't do as friends of ours did years ago. They too were well ahead, so to make sure their children didn't find the presents they wrapped them* and put them in black plastic bags. You know, the kind the rubbish goes out in .....
Originally posted by Firenze:
I am eerily ahead of the game. Possibly because my Christmas preparations are fairly minimal in any case. Pressies are sorted: cards sent: tree up: cupboards stocked.
I have an uneasy feeling I've missed something. Surely I should be more stressed than this?
quote:Did any of it makes its way into the food?
Originally posted by PeteC:
I will use a lot of it for cooking, and maybe share out the rest, before taking one snort for myself.
quote:Good gracious, in our place people wonder how they can manage NOT to get asked, and run a mile when they are!
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
'He always gets to read and I don't know what he does to deserve it ...'
quote:I've never lived there - just go for holidays; my Better Half comes from there and my in-laws live there. You're right though - it doesn't take much sn*w to bring the south of England to a standstill - a fact that makes our Canadian friends chortle rather a lot.
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
Had you still been living in Essex, of course, the merest thought of 0.00008 inches of snow would have been enough to keep at least half the congregation at home ...
quote:One truly hysterical year, Mr. S got asked to read at a local church which was using premises we had a connection with. He wasn't at that time familiar with the whole reading in church lark, and went to great pains to practise, mark up his lesson in the correct Bible, etc etc. His was a bit just after the birth.
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
quote:Good gracious, in our place people wonder how they can manage NOT to get asked, and run a mile when they are!
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
'He always gets to read and I don't know what he does to deserve it ...'
quote:But are you sure you have them in the correct order? That might make a difference to your priorities.
Originally posted by balaam:
I have a dental appointment, mother-in-law is coming for Christmas and, if the Mayans are right, it's the end of the world.
quote:Best of luck!
Originally posted by balaam:
... Before that, tomorrow is a job interview ...
quote:The short list is now a lot shorter. and I'm still on it.
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:Best of luck!
Originally posted by balaam:
... Before that, tomorrow is a job interview ...
quote:You've never been to Newfoundland in December, have you?
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
... Piglet's sandals, were she wearing them in this season ...
quote:Nicodemia, it went well - no idea how much we made, but the supermarket staff were very welcoming (and put money in the buckets too!). There were around a dozen of us, including an accordion and bass guitar, two tambourines ( ) one soprano to do the descants, and the obligatory Small Cute Child with Bucket. I think live carol singers may be quite rare now - and the closest we came to a secular song was 'We wish you a Merry Christmas' which I think means the activity can be termed 'outreach'.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
I hope you did really well for 'your' food bank, Mrs. S. I think you are very brave. If I sang outside a Supermarket, I think I might get moved on!
quote:twitches
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Great news balaam!
On my night bus trip from Mysore the other night we came down the Ghat road [scary enough coming down in the light!]
quote:11:11 GMT is the time I heard. Meanwhile Twitter is posting like there's no tomorrow.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Well - they did say the world would end today,
quote:Well, we managed £89.16 in an hour - a bit down on last year but still well worth having.
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Hope you made a lot of well-earned cash for your charity.
quote:Oh Boogie - how deeply un-Christmassy!
Originally posted by Boogie:
Chicken Licken was right - the builder called this afternoon and we need a new roof. Erk! He's going to do it at the end of January, meanwhile buckets r us
quote:I'm about to go out to the shops. Definitely. Any minute now. I'm going to huddle on the waterproof jacket, trudge to the bus stop, go the length of the fishmonger, work my way back via Sainsbury's and the Polish deli. Really. Imminently.
Originally posted by Ariel:
Up early and off to the 24-hour supermarket this morning at the ungodly hour of 7.30 am. When I got there, the car park was almost full: the Saturday Before Christmas is here.
quote:A German friend spent several years living the UK but eventually decided to move back home after she went home for Christmas and discovered she didn't remember the German word for cupboard.
Originally posted by Boogie:
The boys are both home and it's really great to catch up with them - especially the eldest who hasn't been home from Heidelberg since last Christmas. he's losing his English! He couldn't think of the English for 'jug' yesterday - erk!
quote:What a good idea! I will keep that in mind for next year - my husband is a woodworker so I can feel some fabulous cheese boards coming on too.
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
I've bought decent cheese and chutneys for friends for several years now -
quote:Praying everything will be okay.
Originally posted by QLib:
Just had an automated flood warning.
I'm relying on the fact that they admit their information about height above sea (river) level is a bit lacking in detail for my area.
quote:Anyone feel a Ship cheese swap coming on?
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
I used to mod on a parenting site where we had regular organised swaps; tea and homemade biscuits, crafts, postcards, that sort of thing. The cheese swap we had last year was one of our most popular.
quote:Yes - i think it will be, thanks. Due to peak at 7pm, and nowhere near us at the moment. Locals say this road has never flooded. Mind you, it is due to start raining again tonight.
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
quote:Praying everything will be okay.
Originally posted by QLib:
Just had an automated flood warning.
I'm relying on the fact that they admit their information about height above sea (river) level is a bit lacking in detail for my area.
quote:It was very successful we bought cheeses for our swappee up to a cost limit and then posted them out well wrapped first class. We did it in the autumn so it wasn't too hot and nobody got listeria.
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:Anyone feel a Ship cheese swap coming on?
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
I used to mod on a parenting site where we had regular organised swaps; tea and homemade biscuits, crafts, postcards, that sort of thing. The cheese swap we had last year was one of our most popular.
quote:... then again it might. It absolutely p*ssed down and blew a gale today; I got drenched going no more than a car's length between the Cathedral and the car.
Originally posted by piglet:
... by the time it reaches us it mightn't be so bad ...
quote:Tell me, when you marinade the goat, do you include the horns?
Originally posted by piglet:
Originally posted by piglet:
I've now done up the marinated goat's cheese jars, and they look very pretty.
quote:Ooh, congratulations - great start to the new year!
Originally posted by balaam:
Oh and I've got the job. Well as soon as someone receives the return email on Thursday. I start on Monday 7th January.
quote:Us too - we had sherry, mince pies and sausage rolls after the morning service, so didn't feel the need for the SE/SS brunch that we'd planned.
Originally posted by balaam:
...The salmon is going down, but there's so much of it. Scrambled eggs and smoked salmon for breakfast in the morning, yum ....
quote:Congratulations!
Originally posted by balaam:
Oh and I've got the job ...
quote:Well done - marvellous news!
Originally posted by balaam:
Oh and I've got the job. Well as soon as someone receives the return email on Thursday. I start on Monday 7th January.
quote:Not exactly secret now, is it?
Originally posted by Smudgie:
... I have a box of [Stollen] in the cupboard - my secret store!
quote:Oh for goodness' sake!
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
... baby salad and ... organic orange and lemon juice ...
quote:I'm making up for it now with bacon, eggs, sausages and bubble and squeak
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:Oh for goodness' sake!
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
... baby salad and ... organic orange and lemon juice ...
quote:Here, have some whisky. Add it to a large cup of Lem-sip or similar made up according to the instructions, with a couple of teaspoons each of lemon juice and Manuka honey. Then go to bed.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Duvet day for me today - stinking cough - grrrr!
quote:Add to that the wonder-ingredient - a good pinch (or small teaspoon) of turmeric. It really helps.
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:Here, have some whisky. Add it to a large cup of Lem-sip or similar made up according to the instructions, with a couple of teaspoons each of lemon juice and Manuka honey.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Duvet day for me today - stinking cough - grrrr!
....
quote:Thank you. It did help
Originally posted by piglet:
Here, have some whisky. Add it to a large cup of Lem-sip or similar made up according to the instructions, with a couple of teaspoons each of lemon juice and Manuka honey. Then go to bed.
quote:Another government u-turn, they declare a drought and then it rains for most of the year.
Originally posted by Boogie:
Remember me whinging in Hell about the hosepipe ban and that it falls out of the sky and (in the UK) if it isn't doing so now it will soon? I was right.
quote:I wish I'd known that for my second (PhD) graduation! I had a terrible sore throat and when it came to singing the National Anthem (do they still do that?) I stood up, opened my mouth and no sound came out! Not wishing to be taken for a republican, not because that's a terrible thing but just because I'm not one, I ended up miming like a Top of the Pops star. After that the day just went downhill.
Originally posted by PeteC:
Sorry.
Once I had a chest cold and I needed not to have a cold. It was the evening before my first university graduation (way back in the dark ages).
I had about 6 ounces of white rum the night before. I slept like a baby. On wakening, I coughed once, and appeared to bring up one whole lung. But I didn't have a cold.
The only reason I went to graduation was because my mother wanted to see me graduate. I never told her that she had come close to seeing an empty seat.
quote:should be baby leaf salad, you know, spinach, radish leaf etc. But I was typing whilst pretending to join in the family conversation at dinner
Originally posted by PeteC:
What the heck is a "baby salad" and aren't the neighbours suspicious, yet?
quote:We have an American friend who adores Underberg, and Mr. S always used to have to take some when he travelled there. Jagermeister is another thing that tastes like cough medicine would, if it had been compounded by Severus Snape!*
Originally posted by Boogie:
My son is home for Christmas and brought a few bottles of Underberg - well, it certainly tastes like cough medicine!
quote:You'd probably take a taxi which would be a lot easier to get into!
Originally posted by PeteC:
What would I do without Doris to transport me and my luggage from the aeroport?...
quote:The hills are not tall enough, unfortunately, to stop the rain coming over from where it belongs — L*nc*sh*re — if it's this bad here Boogie must be snorkelling over on the wet side of the hills.
Originally posted by piglet:
No, but Wodders, Boogie and Balaam could probably do with one.
quote:Grapefruit juice. Don't shake the carton. The thick stuff in the last glassfull is great for coating the tonsils.
I don't understand the principle of chocolate for a cough. Don't get me wrong - I love chocolate - but it's the last thing I want if I have to sing: it dries my throat up something horrid.
quote:I prefer the oaky stuff. LRP (who reads this thread, so no talking behind her back) likes unoaked. Vive la diference.
When I got home I decided I fancied another drink, and opened a bottle of home-made "Chardonnay" that was left in the song-room for D. (without any indication who it was from) and I have to say it's really rather nice - not oaky or oily the way "real" Chardonnay sometimes is.
quote:Chugging up to the house with my wheelchair and my bags tied to the top of a three wheeler?
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:You'd probably take a taxi which would be a lot easier to get into!
Originally posted by PeteC:
What would I do without Doris to transport me and my luggage from the aeroport?...