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Dave Hunt

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Posts posted by Dave Hunt

  1. My visit to see the practice nurse for an assessment of my spine opsite wound this morning went well and I can now have a shower. After two weeks without one it will be bliss, not to mention that Jill will probably be willing to sleep in the same room as me again. 

     

    Dave

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  2. 4 minutes ago, J. S. Bach said:

    Polecats (skunks) can make decent pets and will have the scent glands removed along with neutering.

     

    One night many years ago a friend and I were driving over the Peak District when we saw an animal of some sort lying in the road. We stopped and discovered what appeared to be a ferret and upon finding it was still alive but injured, wrapped it in a dog blanket and took it with us, not knowing what we were going to do with it except some vague idea of trying to find how to contact the RSPCA. We found a policeman on foot patrol in Matlock (This was a long time ago) who was very helpful and contacted a colleague who kept ferrets and came to see our patient. He identified it as a polecat and took it away to be looked after. The downside to the story is that even though the animal had been wrapped in a blanket, the car and both of us stank to high heaven. After taking showers and changing clothes we weren't too bad but it took ages before the car stopped being niffy.

     

    Dave  

    • Friendly/supportive 15
  3. 3 hours ago, Compound2632 said:

    But as I said, I'm a cat person. In fact, I am our cat's emotional support human.

     

    Except that I'm out of favour just now because I've stripped all the beds. The look I got...

     

    Isn't there a saying along the lines of, "Dogs have owners, cats have staff" ? A truism in my experience.

     

    Dave

    • Agree 11
  4. 4 hours ago, Happy Hippo said:

    There might be a rose bush in the vicinity but I am reliably informed that the arch will support a Clematis plant.  It was one of a pair bought early last year.  Unfortunately one was damaged, so the supplier sent us another one as a replacement.

     

    Of course with the typical low cunning emanating from all corners of the Hippodrome, the damaged Clematis was taken into the horticultural hospital, and after a period of intensive care, has emerged into the garden as a viable climber.

     

    A few years ago Jill got some sort of shrub by mail order and when it arrived it looked like a dead stick that had been put through a mangle. She duly complained to the vendors, enclosing a photograph of said stick, and without demur they replaced it. The 'dead' one was then placed in a bucket of other garden waste, soil etc. where it remained over winter and the following spring started showing signs of life. It is now a large healthy shrub by the front door and is much loved by the birds, bees and spiders. Don't ask me what it is called, all I know is that it is green and bushy, or should that be shrubby?

     

    Dave

    • Like 11
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  5. 5 minutes ago, pH said:

    We once put a broken glass vase in the glass bin and had it returned with a note saying whole bottles and jars only - no broken glass. So how do they ‘process’ the items in the glass bin? - tip the bin into the back of a pickup truck, already containing the glass collected from previous houses on the route. 

     

    Exactly what I wonder. Our glass, metal and plastic recycling bins are put onto a hoist at the back of the lorry that lifts them up then tips the contents into the hopper with much crashing and banging. Ergo a lot of the glass must get broken but we are warned not to put broken glass in the bin. Why?

     

    Dave

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  6. 9 minutes ago, Northmoor said:

    This is why I walk all our broken glass to the bottle bank at the end of the road. 

    Lucky you to have a bottle bank nearby. All the bottle banks near us disappeared after the multi-bin collections started years ago and the nearest ones now are twelve miles away at a recycling facility - and it has just been announced that will soon close due to council budget cutbacks, leaving the nearest one being twenty miles.

     

    Dave

    • Friendly/supportive 14
  7. 1 hour ago, SM42 said:

    I've just spent 15 minutes ferreting through my stock cupboard of shame. 

     

    For reasons lost in the mists of time I seem to have several Lima 117 centre cars but not enough driving ends to go with them. 

     

    What was I thinking ?. 

     

    I recently went through my cupboard of shame and although I did remember acquiring most of the stuff in there I had absolutely no recollection of where a complete etched brass locomotive kit, an etched brass parcels van kit and two plastic wagon kits in a polythene bag came from. It would seem that Polish Andy and I share some sort of defective gene.

     

    Dave   

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  8. 2 hours ago, SM42 said:

    Wheelie bins are currently a hazard to navigation. 

     

    The wheeliebins hereabouts are collected tomorrow and since the lorry is here about 0700 most folk will be putting them out tonight. if the wind keeps up it should be carnage by morning.

     

    Dave

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  9. 4 hours ago, polybear said:

     

    I'm guessing the Neighbour didn't go for the shared drive option because they are a potential PITA and cause of arguments - this can put buyers off.

     

     

    I bet he was wishing that it was a shared drive when the front of his shiny new Lexus was remodelled by a Transit van coming round the corner.

     

    Dave

    • Funny 10
  10. 26 minutes ago, Happy Hippo said:

    This is what happens when you allow planners and designers to work from home with no requirement to attend site meetings!


    The chap across the road from Hunt Towers applied for planning permission to have a house built in his garden and to have an access driveway alongside. I had no problem with the house but the drive opened onto the road at the inside of the apex of a bend and I considered it dangerous, suggesting that a shared driveway would be safer. I went and stood where the proposed driveway would exit onto the road and timed how long it took from first seeing a car coming down the road to it being at the proposed exit point. The answer was two seconds compared with five seconds for the existing drive. I wrote to the planners with my findings and received a reply stating that the plan had been examined by the highways department and declared safe . Guess what happened within a few months of the house and drive being built?

     

    Dave

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  11. Not far from here there used to be a cycle track through a town that has now been officially repurposed as a car park. There is also another one out in the country that suddenly stops without warning at an extremely busy roundabout then reappears on the other side. Since it is a two way track, negotiating the roundabout is somewhat tense. The other problem is that the hedge alongside has been allowed to encroach on the track to the extent that it is virtually impassable in places.

     

    Dave

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  12. There’s a children’s medicine called Calpol. I don’t know what’s in it but No. 1 son and DiL seemed to dose their two ankle snappers with the stuff at the slightest suggestion of a cough or sniffle and I’m sure it sedated them. Maybe it’s a left over from good queen Vicky’s days.

     

    Dave

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  13. 3 hours ago, ian@stenochs said:

    It's only paint!  Doesn't improve, or reduce, eficiency or make locomotives faster or more powerful. Unfortunately it is what we see and it diverts us from the the real engineering beauty underneath.

     

    I quite agree Ian; when I was writing the Midland Engines and LMS Locomotive Profile books I used to find doing the livery sections a bit tedious but judging by the correspondence I got concerning them it would seem that there are a lot of people out there who find the minutiae of colour schemes and decoration very important indeed. Hence it paid to get it right if only to avoid the wrath of the minutiae spotters.

     

    Dave

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  14. The subject of locomotive colours is notoriously subjective and whilst my preference in overall locomotive types predisposes me towards crimson lake, I do think that there are definite colours that suit  those from other establishments. For instance, middle chrome green is really the only colour for Swindon’s products (best of all when combined with red framing), which is brought home when one looks at the awful ‘Hogwarts’ scheme that just looks all wrong. It is also undoubtable to my mind that Perth blue and crimson on a Caledonian engine and the green of a Highland locomotive were far more suitable than LMS Crimson Lake for those particular machines and the same would apply to a lined black Crewe engine. Bronze green for the NBR also comes to mind. There are, of course many other examples from other companies and the colours of carriages come into the picture but overall I think that we should celebrate our railways’ colourful past and admire their individuality.

     

    Dave

    • Like 11
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    • Interesting/Thought-provoking 1
  15. 2 minutes ago, iL Dottore said:

    IAnyone who is properly qualified to pronounce on such matters will be able to tell you that GWR Green (aka Brunswick Green) is one of the colours prescribed by The Buddha for aligning the chakras........

     

    I'll have you know, Sir, that I haven't needed my chakras aligning since the slightly eye-watering experience when glancing a fast delivery to the onside onto the underside of my protector.

     

    Dave

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