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zarniwhoop

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Everything posted by zarniwhoop

  1. Maybe, maybe not. I don't often go to Waitrose, except in January when I'm looking for the first blood oranges. The supply of those at the nearest (smallish) branch can be a bit erratic but I can usually get some before Sains' and Tess'. The last time I went there they didn't have any - but some very small items were in the citrus shelves. On one side it said blood oranges from (Supplier name's) Sicily supplier. I was dubious at the small size of them, and turned the label over - pink onions from the same supplier's Brittany supplier! I'm sure much of it does come from the same suppliers or wholesalers, but other things (the fruits and vegetables which are less common in this country's supermarkets) do differ. While I would not look for pink onions, apart from that one occasion I've never noticed them anywhere.
  2. Since it said the police are taking no further action, maybe it's normal there.😀
  3. Rant for the day: In the beginning (ok, not the beginning, the recent past - how do you guys strike through the text here ?) blood sugar levels were measured by finger-pricking , test strips and meters. And as long as the system did not come from an American company the readings were sensible (been there, had to change the brand I used after a new batch of test strips had a very high failure rate). Currently really p155ed off by the diabetes sensor (coincidentally from the same American brand) I'm using. And what is really annoying me is that they keep showing happy smiley people in their adverts on Eurosport (TV) which crop up frequently during the cycling or nordic skiing programs I record. The sensor mostly keeps recording if I wear it on my left arm - I keep the phone in my left pocket and when I'm in bed I mainly sleep on the left side near the bedside table. But you should change from arm to arm between each 2-week sensor. And on the right side the sensor often fails to record until I scan it. Oh, and did I mention that their list of acceptable android phones is years old and none of those phones are now supported by the manufacturers ? Anyway, I now think they are in league with the makers of short-acting carbs (sugar, dextrose, etc). In the past few days it has often recorded a level which, if true, would mean I was losing my awareness of hypo symptoms. For the night time, it's bad enough stuffing myself with dextrose after reading it, and then waiting maybe half an hour for the level to recover. I don't want to have to get up when I'm trying to sleep. The big problem with that is that it makes me worry and keeps me awake. But for the past few days I've been finger pricking and using my meter (a different manufacturer), and the sensor severely underreads when showing below range. It also tends to overread when above range, and looking back at the logbook it often shows readings from a physical scan (those get a coloured dot on the graph) which are some way above the graph line. It is said that sensors and blood test meters have a 15% tolerance. The problem is that my diabetes centre should be caring about "time in range (target 70% for range 3.9 to 10 mmol/L) and this records a lot of below range which my fingerpricks disagree with. For my physical health and diabetes problems, the worst thing I ever had was symvastatin ("recommended" by my then consultant) but for my mental health this is the worst thing I've ever been prescribed. For those with Type 2 diabetes whose sole aim is to keep their blood sugar levels down, maybe it works. But for those of us on insulin I get the feeling it is a big con forced onto the NHS. Here endeth the rant. The epistle to the users of windows, macOS and ubuntu is deferred 😇 ĸen
  4. That would also mean that the signage could change over the years. I think there were one or two places still with green signs when almost everywhere else had gone over to black on white railfont, but if the HAPs will be in NSE livery then white on green sounds extremely rundown.
  5. The Rhätische Bahn used to be like that.
  6. Looking at the you tube timings, I make that about a minute for the actual 180 degree turn - and that is with 4 guys pushing it. Preceded by a stop for the fireman to get off first, then about 20 seconds while the loco crawls to the middle of the table.
  7. You've obviously never eaten Swiss chard!
  8. I'm told the pier is nice.
  9. Yes, it led to my parents being expelled (my Dad worked for BP, as did my Mum, as a nurse, until they married) from what was known as Persia, only to return a few years later when the Yankees were in charge. My Mum came back to Sussex to give birth to me after my elder brother had been stillborn while they were both in England, and although I lived there for a short time afterwards. I don't recall any of it, obviously, although I've still got my Dad's Standard-8 Cine films of it somewhere. Oh, and I still recall one of my Mum's comments about a nurse friend of hers who was on a plane flying out with a troublesome toddler - "Come and have a sip of Aunty's lemonade." (gin) Different times. And yes, my parents were conservative enough (with a small c) to believe the government about Mossaddeqh, although they later learned not to implicitly trust our politicians. We will certainly be living with the consequences for years to come (if we live for years to come). Recently I was watching one of the Joanna Lumley BBC4 episodes about Iran and its history - I cannot imagine such a program with a British presenter being permitted to be made there nowadays.
  10. It was (is), but Saturday was a very good day for the Slovene's - after winning Friday's "Super Team" ski flying (2 competitors, it was originally to be 3, but reduced because no training nor qualification on Thursday) they got first and second on Saturday and first in the men's Omloop cycling. Their professional cyclists have come on in leaps and bounds since Roglič stopped ski-jumping. Still time for the Austrians, Germans, Norwegians, Poles and Japanese to try to pull something out of the hat in Sunday's Ski Flying.
  11. Thanks. I used to make home brews more than 40 years ago, using yeasts from bottled Worthington White Shield and Guiness (bottled in Ireland, if my memory is correct, but maybe it was from Park Royal). But apart from when I was at Uni in the 70s (a beer festival with what was claimed to be a "proper" lager, and it was OK) until recent years I only purchased lager when in Europe - and that was all filtered. I don't recall seeing any unfiltered lager in the past.
  12. Back story: I used to be a cyclist, now I just watch cycling on Eurosport - but I like to refresh my memories of some of the places where (road) cycling happens in Europe by drinking the local brews and wines when I can. So for this weekend (the start of the Classics or Semi-Classics in Belgium) I bought some Stella (can't buy Jupiler here). But in the supermarket there was a large amount of unfiltered Stella. I went for the normal version (not wonderful, but it will do). Now, I've had the time to look up the unfiltered version - I see they claim it has more flavours, but it is stronger and seems to have more carbs in it. I've long liked Hefe Weißbier (cloudy from the yeast. I was introduced to it in the Tirol, and led to believe that the correct way to drink it is with a slice of lemon (is that shandy ?) although when I looked on Wikipedia that was said to be a 'Mercan variation), but I'm having difficulty getting my head around why anyone would want cloudy lager ?
  13. What is this FB of which you speak ? OK, of course I know what FarseBoke is, but some of us avoid it. The only worse "soshul meeja" site I can think of would be what used to be know as Twatter.
  14. Since, it seems to me,I mostly post about food, "Today I have been mostly eating frites". I'm sure that @iL Dottore will be disgusted, because these are only cooked once and in groundnut oil (sorry, I forgot the warning if anyone here has a peanut allergy). And apologies to @polybear I've I've added to the pain of his diet. The reason is that it's the start of the "real" cycling road season, De Omloop in Flanders. As a (veggie) ex-cyclist, I like to eat, and drink, in tune with the races if I can (while recording/watching them on Eurosport). Unfortunately, fans of beer will now be denigrating me because I'm drinking Stella. Get over yourselves 😄 Must remember to get myself some Mayonnaise. At least I remembered not to watch the Calcutta Cup - as a self-identified Scotsman of a mixed marriage (Anglo-Scots) born in the deep South (Eastbourne), it never works for me to watch that. Hmm, got to find time to catch up with the Ski-Flying too - this might be a very late night. L8r
  15. I have no interest in making marmalade - I'll use reduced sugar marmalade, preferably fine cut, on my wholemeal toast. I't the need for sugar in marmalade which is the problem. But some years ago I tried experimenting with unsweetened desserts using sour oranges (e.g. with crème fraîche or mascarpone or melted strong chocolate). But since seville oranges are sold by the Kilo I gave that up - one or two a year might be interesting, but from memory a kilo was 8 or 9 oranges. Meanwhile, I 've now finished the last of this year's Moro blood oranges - all were good for the amount of red, some were very good. Last weekend I could not get *any* blood oranges at Tess' or Saints', now I've got some more described as Ippolitos. The first time I came across those, they were very big, and mostly orange rather than red. Wikipedia told me they were a larger variant of Tarrocco. Now they are not big. Had a few a month ago, not very optimistic that there will be much red in these, but I've got to go with what I can get - hopefully some Sanguinelli will be available soon (depending on inspections at Dover, and Spanish tractor drivers).
  16. I don't think I hid from the Daleks, but I certainly hid from the cybermen.
  17. I went full-yeti years ago. Just have to keep remembering to buy hair bands for my ponytail.
  18. So there I was, in my lounge after finishing a late dinner and then working towards finishing my drinkypoos 🙂 Local news on ITV+1 finished, BBC had hardtalk followed by the usual foreign programs, sky news was going to have extended coverage of Thursday's byelections (I used to be interested, as a champage socialist, now somewhat disheartened but still somewhat interested) but it's a bit early for actual news in those. So I opened up my phone - a notification of a comparison between a real klon and the cheapest clone from Andertons on youtube [2] , interesting but I'll need to play it on my PC to see how it really sounds, and demos with Telecasters are not particularly relevant to me. So then I looked at gurgle news - as of 40 minutes ago, the link to BBC coverage of the by-elections implied they had closed around 2pm. Sure, but don't believe what you read [1]. Obviously that was when the beeb opened the page to cover the results. Then I found an interesting page which was actually quoting the international, or perhaps 'mercan, version of theconversation - a suggestion that stories about what we call the seven sisters, or The Pleiades, date back 100,000 years to before humans left Africa. [ Today you will see at best 6 sisters ]. https://theconversation.com/the-worlds-oldest-story-astronomers-say-global-myths-about-seven-sisters-stars-may-reach-back-100-000-years-151568 1. The Boomtown Rats 2. I was under the impression that the EXR Soul Food was the cheapest klone - the review was a Warm audio Centavo which is way outside my price range, so suddenly I'm no-longer interested.
  19. For those in this septic isle, I've always found Track Magic works well after cleaning the track. But I doubt it will be a convenient item to purchase in your country.
  20. I was talking of Portslade on what is now the West Coastway. From about 1960 (when I was 4) to about 1972, so very limited viewing of trains - mostly when walking into town, or from a bus, in both cases stopped at the level crossing. From maybe 1970 I sometimes went to the station after school for an hour or so. I can remember seeing a diesel shunter at the local goods shed in what must have been 1964 or earlier, and mineral wagons. I also sometimes saw westbound trains of tank wagons (probably Esso, like the old airfix kit) hauled by a Crompton. At Hove, of course, and at Brighton, there were mineral wagons for coal and probably other goods vehicles. But seeing a goods train was unusual. I'm not saying I didn't, but I don't remember any. I now know there was a Brighton-Horsham afternoon goods train (later, Brighton to Beeding cement works) and from reading a WTT I think there was a westbound goods train in the early years, but after 5pm when I would have been home. I've a feeling there was also an eastbound goods at about 9 a.m. but again I was never near the railway at that hour. 'Parcels' of course (actually salad vegetables) from Chichester, Angmering, Worthing but only one train late morning (AFAICS the empties returned overnight). Looking at WTTs suggests there were daytime paths for westbound parcels, but using EMUs. Obviously there were steam trains to the far west in the early years, and I've seen pictures of steam haulage in about 1965-6 for the Plymouth train when one of the hornbys had a boiler fault - but I never saw them. Similarly, it seems there were 6-PUL and later 4-PUL services Victoria to Littlehampton - but I never knowingly saw a pullman car apart from the 5-BEL at Brighton or Victoria.
  21. Looking at 'hobby' magazines in general, with the exception of UK model railway mags it seems to me that there is now much less advertising. And without the advertising, a publisher has to either cut back or raise the cover price. Several non-railway mags I used to read are no longer produced. I used to buy the main UK model railway mags, but now I rarely bother - nothing in them for me, after you've read them through a couple of years you can tell how the subjects (apart from reviews of new models) rotate through the months.
  22. When I go to an exhibition, in general I will watch things which interest me. Many European layouts fall into that category, although the shiny out of the box appearance of the stock often jars. But US or Canadian standard gauge layouts almost never interest me, they are just too far outside my experience, and often with over-amplified sound. And in general, while I like to watch trains running I'm less keen on N-scale and smaller: maybe if I took some binoculars with me ;-) Conversely, any US narrow-gauge with Shays or similar is interesting to me. They are just exotic. And for British layouts I mostly have minimal interest in what has been called 'the gasworks railway' (far too much of it in the Muddler when I was a kid) and a lot of things which concentrate on shunting have minimal interest to me (I'm a Southern man, freight movements during the daytime were not very comon on the electrified lines).
  23. Spaghetti on toast ? Yeughh! As for the 'Rossmoyne Remembered', google only found a farsebook page and a link to the Daily Fail suggesting nobody knew what it was.
  24. I recently got p155ed off with the aggravation of trying to get everything out of a marmite jar, so I thought I'd try vegemite because of its straight-sided jar. After trying it for a few days - I like celery, but I don't normally want to spread it on toast. And at least I understood the passages in Sir Pterry's 'The Last Continent'. I've now relegated the vegemite to "use when making veggie casseroles, or perhaps pommes boulangères", and gone back to low-salt marmite which spreads more easily and might be easier to get out of the jar (or might not, but at least it tastes better).
  25. I use ublock, but it didn't seem to stop the repeating adverts - I was watching a series of videos possibly related to a glucose sensor I use, and got p155ed off by the totally irrelevant (for my type of diabetes) repeating adverts every few minutes. And for my main watching (music) it was similarly frequently interrupted - some ads I could skip quickly, others I could not. I'm not afraid to pay for things online, and can afford to do so if it is worthwhile for me, so at the moment I'm in the free trial phase on youtube - currently liking it (mostly following random music links, some potentially well over an hour - but it's finding the time to play them that is now the problem).
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