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Early Risers.


Mr.S.corn78

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Mooring Awl Inner Temple Hare, 860 /538.

4.5 hours plus 1 hour plus 2 hours sleep, not a bad total for me,

John Kettley fingers inform me it's going to rain, as evidenced by light drizzle in the form of big very occasional spots, Ben the I'm Not sure about this Collie, was reluctant to go on patrol, I think he knows what's coming, as the forecast says Thor intends to do some work.

 

Body aches after the weekend's efforts but nowhere near as bad as last week. 

 

Welcome to Norfolk Day, always held on 27th of July, which can be awkward during the week. Many events and celebrations of all things Norfolk  would be held in a normal Year .

 

I would suggest they have Beaten Coombe Barton to it and presented him with a Christmas Wreath..

 

£155 spare cash, that's near £700 a month if only, for most of my life there was rarely spare cash in any quantity and the first couple of years after getting a mortgage our, accounts were of the getting deeper into the red. Only after going to Saudi for 6 years and paying off the Mortgage,  did we reach the level of having real spare cash..  That £700 is probably about right for us now..

Two years or so to go and the economics change again as pension time beckons..

 

Humm, having just booted up the computer, it now says I have two hours before it reboots, I wonder what they are going to change this time..

 

This weeks work 1 major system and a few minor units, can't have too much on because if it runs over I'm not here next week..

 

Time to Head for the lab.. (and leave this computer rebooting again..)

 

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8 hours ago, PhilJ W said:

Evening all from Estuary-Land. Done a bit more tidying up ready for the arrival of the new shed on Wednesday. It will be sited alongside the California lilac so I've tidied that plant up underneath the canopy were it will not be accessible once the shed is up. There is a hole underneath the shrub where there used to be a cherry tree. I've been filling it with broken tiles to discourage the foxes from making a den. Thats it for now, be back later.

I have been putting whole bricks in the holes that the foxes keep digging under the fir trees but they still dig them out again.  Recently they have started digging small holes in the lawn to get at worms when it rains. I have bought some fox deterrant pellets but they have to be applied every few days and werent cheap.

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8 minutes ago, TheQ said:

£155 spare cash, that's near £700 a month if only, for most of my life there was rarely spare cash in any quantity and the first couple of years after getting a mortgage our, accounts were of the getting deeper into the red.

 

 

Good point.  The UK basic state pension is £134-25 a week - there are many that have to survive on that, bills included.

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Ey up!

Chuckinitdarn here..pah!

Mugatea has been made and drunk.

I have some wood to buy, some foam gap filler to buy, some wasp nest foam to buy  some spray paint to buy.. i guess today could involve time in some hardware stores and shops.

 

Make the most of your day everyone!

Baz

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28 minutes ago, chrisf said:

Greetings ...The packet containing the sauce mix says that it serves four but we'll see.   The dessert has already been made and comprises a can of fruit salad set in strawberry jelly.  Will I anoint each portion with evaporated milk or serve it on a bed of custard?  I shall say no more for now of primitive but effective cooking to spare Flavio from apoplexy...

Too late. I had to take a benzodiazepine and go and lie down in a dark and quiet room....:jester:

Seriously, I would avoid packet sauces etc. if at all possible.  I have just finished reading a book about the adulteration of food, from the Georgian period all the way up to the present day. And whilst producers are no longer making their green vegetables green by adding copper salts or arsenic (and so on) the list of what is permitted to be added to food  Is both lengthy and frightening. Often, if you read the packet instructions carefully, you end up saving no time over preparing from fresh ingredients. And, furthermore, you know exactly what went in to your meal if you make from scratch.

A good example is home made bread.  Some years ago I bought myself a Panasonic bread machine and ever since have been making my own bread, usually it’s a pretty straightforward white loaf (flour, water, salt, yeast and a fat-either butter or olive oil), but sometimes I get adventurous and make things like onion bread and herb breads. The difference between commercially made bread and home-made bread was driven home one week when I had forgotten that I had a little bit of leftover bread in the bread basket: one piece was home-made bread, the other piece was commercially made bread. The home-made bread was hard as a rock, but otherwise edible (either as croutons or in a bread pudding), whereas the commercially made bread - whilst still soft - was covered in mould. Need I say more?

3 minutes ago, polybear said:

 

Good point.  The UK basic state pension is £134-25 a week - there are many that have to survive on that, bills included.

That is appalling, especially when you consider – as you pointed out – that for some (many?) it is the sole income.
In Switzerland, we have the three pillar approach: the first pillar is the state pension, the second pillar is the company pension and the third pillar is one’s own private pension fund. Taking these three together, it does mean that for most people the daily needs are more than adequately covered. I suspect a significant difference between the UK and Switzerland is that in the UK for a lot of people there is the belief that “the state will provide“ and nothing else is required, whereas in Switzerland there is a lot more emphasis on self reliance with the state stepping in only when necessary.
I think there are other things to consider when evaluating your financial needs in old age:

Firstly is whether or not you own your own property; if you have paid off your mortgage then this is one less expense to worry about.

Secondly, us “old folk“ don’t need to buy as many new things as we used to (toys and self indulgences excepted). Additionally, if in the past one bought things designed to last, not only do they not need to be replaced but they are likely to outlive the owners (A good example would be my Tizio reading lamps from Artemide, the Italian lighting manufacturer. They are a classic design, and apart from having to replace the occasional low voltage halogen bulb, have been performing flawlessly for the last 20+ years).

Finally, I think the last consideration is what sort of retirement does one want. For some, staying at home and building an O Gauge replica of St Pancras station from matchsticks, would be a desirable retirement. Others will want to see the world, others to indulge in their grandchildren (as for me, I plan to continue to consult as long as I feel up to the job. Apart from keeping me mentally stimulated, it will also allow me to put some caviar on my blinis! :D)


Enjoy the start of your week!

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16 minutes ago, Happy Hippo said:

....Because the building was designed by an architect who was more interested in light airy rooms, and wanted a Design council award....

My dear Hippo, your post has certainly pushed one of my “DefCom 4“ buttons. I find that very little of modern architecture is really effectively usable, frequently for the reasons that you have stated. Unfortunately, “exciting,, daring and innovative“ architecture has become the new orthodoxy. Gods forbid that the architect actually designs are building that is both usable and enjoyable to live in or work in. And as for being “exciting, daring and innovative“, most modern architecture is predictably full of clichés such as open plan living room-dining room-kitchens, flat roofs and huge glass windows.

And if you dare challenge this current architectural orthodoxy, like Prince Charles has, you will be - at best - ridiculed, if not pilloried.
Quite frankly, if I was in the position of commissioning a new public building, such as a school or a hospital, I would go through the list of those architects applying for the job and immediately strikeout anyone who is “award winning“. In that way, we might just get a building that is usable.

One final thought, has anyone noticed how these “award-winning architects“ all live in either beautiful Grade 2 listed buildings or  High end “modern“ buildings that only the extremely wealthy can afford to buy and maintain.

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26 minutes ago, iL Dottore said:

 I have just finished reading a book about the adulteration of food, from the Georgian period all the way up to the present day.

 

So when can we see you on Mastermind?

 

Chris

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30 minutes ago, Happy Hippo said:

It's not just the sensible use of funding, but employing people who think before they act.  There are hospitals and schools where changing a light bulb can cost hundreds of pounds!  But let's not automatically blame the 'idiot who spent so much on the lightbulb' let's look at the actual cost.  Obviously there is the cost of the bulb, then you have to pay someone to fit it, and that is where the true cost is: Why?  Because the building was designed by an architect who was more interested in light airy rooms, and wanted a Design council award.

 

The design of the building means high ceilings, so a light bulb change requires a scaffolding tower to be hired in, so that the bulb can be replaced.

 

We had a local primary school that was completely rebuilt: Award winning, incorporating parts of the old building and and new design.  Loved by all, apart from the teachers who had to work there.

 

Who puts full height glass windows into classrooms that face south?

 

 Who removes short corridors which allow quick access and creates a long one that runs around the perimeter of the building so that going from one side of the school to the other takes five times as long?

 

The answer is people who don't have to work in the place

 

So true.

 

Primary schools have much the same requirements wherever they are in the country. So it ought to be possible to design a standard primary school, in modular form, which could be built pretty much anywhere. Makes for a duller world but what huge potential savings could be achieved. Lessons to be learned here from the major housebuilding companies who manage to make homes with a variety of "looks" despite using a lot of standard components.

 

The lighting issue that you raise is an obvious one. Why have lights suspended from the ceiling when that makes bulbs hard to change?

 

Large windows on the south face of a building is a good thing - so long as there are adjustable shades to use in hot sunny weather.

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18 minutes ago, iL Dottore said:

My dear Hippo, your post has certainly pushed one of my “DefCom 4“ buttons. I find that very little of modern architecture is really effectively usable, frequently for the reasons that you have stated. Unfortunately, “exciting,, daring and innovative“ architecture has become the new orthodoxy. Gods forbid that the architect actually designs are building that is both usable and enjoyable to live in or work in. And as for being “exciting, daring and innovative“, most modern architecture is predictably full of clichés such as open plan living room-dining room-kitchens, flat roofs and huge glass windows.

And if you dare challenge this current architectural orthodoxy, like Prince Charles has, you will be - at best - ridiculed, if not pilloried.
Quite frankly, if I was in the position of commissioning a new public building, such as a school or a hospital, I would go through the list of those architects applying for the job and immediately strikeout anyone who is “award winning“. In that way, we might just get a building that is usable.

One final thought, has anyone noticed how these “award-winning architects“ all live in either beautiful Grade 2 listed buildings or  High end “modern“ buildings that only the extremely wealthy can afford to buy and maintain.

Not all modern designs are bad.  I think this bridge over the River Severn at Jackfield is a little known gem of modern design:

image.png.35474e47afc22812600d6ad81b7e45ea.png

 

Probably designed by a target makerCivil Engineer.

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A very good example of the light bulb problem was Leeeds City Station. Thisxwas renuilt in the early 60's and the train shed (correct term) was what I would describe as a large Atcost Shed, lit by rows of flourescent tubes that are very long lasting. However  the only way to change them was to put a scaffolding tower on a railway wagon and do it at night under a possession. Oobviously over the years the cost escalated to well over £10,000 per session, even though the costvif new tubes was negligible.  It took 3 possessions to do the whole shed.  The sration was again rebuilt in 2000, Mike Storey of this parish was heavily involved.  Someone got the design right and all the lights can now be changed from walkways built into the roof structure.  Good design.  So it can be done if the right input is given to the designers.

 

Jamie

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10 hours ago, Erichill16 said:

 though it knocked her confidence and she hasn’t been out of the house since.

 

 

This seems to be a commonplace consequence of having a fall. Especially true for anyone living on their own and, quite properly, wondering how long they might be lying there unaided.

 

I very much recommend the wearing of a safety alarm necklace. Puts he mind at rest about falls, both for the wearer and for their carers.

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1 hour ago, Happy Hippo said:

It's not just the sensible use of funding, but employing people who think before they act.  There are hospitals and schools where changing a light bulb can cost hundreds of pounds!  But let's not automatically blame the 'idiot who spent so much on the lightbulb' let's look at the actual cost.  Obviously there is the cost of the bulb, then you have to pay someone to fit it, and that is where the true cost is: Why?  Because the building was designed by an architect who was more interested in light airy rooms, and wanted a Design council award.

 

The design of the building means high ceilings, so a light bulb change requires a scaffolding tower to be hired in, so that the bulb can be replaced.

 

 

Not forgetting the risk assessment, doing the job on the night shift so as not to create too much disturbance, training the staff to work at heights (yes, I had to go on a course to train me how to use a stepladder.....), bean counters putting the job out to tender, bean counters assessing the tenders, "free" lunches for the bean counters so the contractors can justify their bids......

 

Where I worked they put a small rubber speed hump across the road on site; the speed hump was from kerb to kerb, so when it rained the water on one side of the 'ump wouldn't get to the drain.  When it rained...you've guessed it....

So a new tender to get someone in to cut 6" off each end of the 'ump.  Cost?  Well, there were three zeros on the end, all to the left of the decimal point.  My mate & I had the tools and know-how to do the job in an hour. 

 

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1 minute ago, polybear said:

 

 

 

Where I worked they put a small rubber speed hump across the road on site; the speed hump was from kerb to kerb, so when it rained the water on one side of the 'ump wouldn't get to the drain.  When it rained...you've guessed it....

 

 

The irony, slowing down the one thing you want to disperse quickly!

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Morning, we have a very wet and dark morning, hoping to go fishing tomorrow, so the rain is welcome to give the river a lift, up till now though the parched ground has soaked it all up and the river level hasn't moved.

On the subject of Foxes I recall Hugh Fearlessly Eats-it-all saving up bottles of human pee and collecting hair trimmings from the barbers to keep Foxes away from his chickens, items were liberally spread around the area to leave a scent trail, the Foxes then leave............leaving you to enjoy a urine smelling, hairy garden in peace..........................or not as the case may be ......................

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Good morning everyone 

 

It’s chuckinitdarn, so any thought of gardening activities has been put on hold for the foreseeable! So a bit of tidying up and moving stuff around in the cellar is on the cards I think. Oh, and I might give the control panel it’s first coat of primer. 

 

Stay safe, stay sane, enjoy whatever you have planned for the day, back later. 

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15 hours ago, Erichill16 said:

...knocked her confidence and she hasn’t been out of the house since.

Robert

I am sorry to hear that. It’s easy to forget how frail the very old (>85yo) can be, their bones are not as robust as ours (and, for various reasons including changes in hormones, women are particularly vulnerable) as Joseph Pestell noted (below) there are various alarm systems that can be worn and activated in the event of a fall (or other medical incident). Knowing that help is just a button push away should help restore confidence

5 hours ago, chrisf said:

 

So when can we see you on Mastermind?

 

Chris

Probably not any time soon, given that contestants have to be UK based.

But if I did, then I’d do extremely well, given the correct answer will always be “Baghdad”*

* reference requires some knowledge of classic British comedy...

5 hours ago, Happy Hippo said:

Not all modern designs are bad.  I think this bridge over the River Severn at Jackfield is a little known gem of modern design:....

....Probably designed by a target makerCivil Engineer.

I suspect you are right. I would imagine there is very little “cutting edge, innovative and daring” work that can be done on a bridge and still have it stand up

5 hours ago, Joseph_Pestell said:

....I very much recommend the wearing of a safety alarm necklace. Puts he mind at rest about falls, both for the wearer and for their carers.

I would also like to add that there are also wristwatch like alarms available. I understand that there are advantages and disadvantages to both types.

4 hours ago, polybear said:

....So a new tender to get someone in to cut 6" off each end of the 'ump.  Cost?  Well, there were three zeros on the end, all to the left of the decimal point.  My mate & I had the tools and know-how to do the job in an hour. 

I am shocked, Mr Bear, shocked. How dare you snatch the very food from the mouths of the wives and babes of these honest jobbing contractors...
Whatever next? Insisting that these poor, honest, men-of-toil’s labours come in on time and on budget....
The next thing you’ll be suggesting is that those morally upright and totally impartial individuals awarding contracts should never help their friends out to the tune of a useful little contract here and there...

Disgusted in Tunbridge Wells

Edited by iL Dottore
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Morning all from Estuary-Land. I have no idea of how much 'extra' I have every month to spend except that it is enough for me not to worry about. Every financial year (April-March) I check my bank balance compared to the previous year and every year the balance has increased by a small amount, (low hundreds), Micawber principle rules. This year the balance is noticeably rising due to the lockdown, I'm not spending money going to shows and swap meets and therefor it stays in the bank. I am fortunate that I was with the same employer for almost 38 years and paid into the pension scheme all that time but the present employees will not enjoy the benefits that I had such as final pay settlement. Being in the public sector my pension was as safe as houses but IMHO the pensions in the private sector should be tightened up. Sir Philip Greedn should have paid for his second yacht out of his own pocket instead of dipping into his employees pension pot. I thought that something was done about this after the Robert Maxwell/Mirror newspapers scandal but apparently not. Most pension schemes in the private sector however are well run, I know many pensioners of the Ford Motor Company and their pension scheme is very well run and not that dissimilar to my own local government scheme.

3 hours ago, Happy Hippo said:

Not all modern designs are bad.  I think this bridge over the River Severn at Jackfield is a little known gem of modern design:

image.png.35474e47afc22812600d6ad81b7e45ea.png

 

Probably designed by a target makerCivil Engineer.

Designed by a Star Wars set designer perhaps? I run a local history group and an early Edwardian photograph was shown of a junior school near to me (Vange). The building dates from the mid 1890's and is still in use for its original purpose. Apart from the usual updates the building is much as it was when it was built. The only noticeable difference is that the toilets have been roofed over and a covered way placed between them and the main building. When I was at junior school the toilets were open to the sky and in winter toilet pans frozen over was quite common.

Edited by PhilJ W
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Morning all,

Awful weather here today with wind and rain - yet again!  We have more than paid for the good spell we had in April and May.  July has been a windy washout to all intents and purposes.

 

I have ventured out in the rain today, all the way to see Sister Drac for a blood test.  It seemed to me that all the procedures which had been carefully outlined to me on the phone Just weren’t followed.  Nothing was likely to spread the virus, but why have systems if you aren’t going to follow them?  It doesn’t help when the public are sometimes terminally stupid.  While I was sat in the waiting room, which had 4 chairs out of every 5 covered with a DO NOT SIT HERE label, the staff met a guy at the door and told him to sit in a uncovered seat, so where did the bozo actually sit?  On a labelled seat of course.  He was socially distanced at least.

 

It would have been nice to have a wander round while I was out, but it was so wet, I didn’t bother!

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Morning all,

 

S*ddimng editor had to be cleared yet again, why can't he/she take a day off occasionally?  It's been raining, again - I'm told the garden needs it.

 

Ian (RH) I found a very simple and highly effective answer to foxes digging holes - put some broken pieces of flint into the hole.  Foxy returns and either sticks nose into hole or gets the paws in to start digging and an instant ouch! is guaranteed.  Foxes learn quickly and one ouch! is quite enough it would seem.  I do have the advantage of a good stock of broken pieces of flint acquired free of charge from digging of the garden over many years.

 

The £155 of spare cash struck me as a remarkable bounty and something we very rarely saw for most years of our married life as what we had was always consumed by something needed for the house, the car, or the offspring (and occasionally for ourselves) .  For many of us I think sums like that only start to appear once we have said goodbye to a mortgage and/or reached pensionable age with the benefit of more than the state pension coming in to support us.  Equally of course a good salary in pre-marriage days could also result in generation of spare cash depending on one's domestic and living circumstances.  Similarly employment when you are already drawing a pension can generate considerable surplus cash even after the tax man has grabbed his share - depending very much on the type of employment and what it pays.

 

The question of 'what it costs' is an interesting area and very often, even with lots of extras, what a job actually costs is much less than the assessed cost of that job because things like overheads have not been added.  This is probably something coming to the fore now in the post Covid world as employers get a much clearer idea of what can be saved if employees work from home and overheads will be massively reduced once you factor in office space costs and things like season ticket loans or car parking provision of company vehicle mileage - and that is before you assess productivity improves in staff who are not suffering the stress & tiredness of travelling to/from home.  It is already having an upward impact on the prices of certain types of property in this area as people have found they can do their job from home so therefore have a greater choice of where they can live provided they get somewhere with suitable home office space and access to decent broadband speeds but no need to spend money on travel to/from work.  For example the lad is saving £40 plus per week through not having to drive to/from work and can just as easily talk to people around Europe and the USA as he could from his office base (all he's using to do it is my bandwidth and our dining room table although the latter does interfere with various other household matters).  And I was of course for some years cheerfully working from home on consultancy jobs although they invariably also required site visits as we don't have things such as a standard gauge railway network, signal box,  or 1 million ton stockpile of power station coal, in the back garden - thankfully).

 

Have a good day one and all and stay safe.

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We have this bridge for pedestrians between Wroxham and Effin Clown Town (google clip from Effin clown town end I'm surprised there isn't a clown wandering in the road..

Capture.JPG

Beneath it hang the chains giving warning of the low medieval  stone road bridge... a couple of weeks ago this man was seen painting a red square on the stone bridge as a target to take motorboats through.. Because the new pedestrian bridge and chains have been built off line!!!

 

Problem...  That's a listed ancient monument he is painting on without permission..

FibGmRCjcFB_IMG_1595407589365.jpg

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