simontaylor484 Posted September 5, 2020 Share Posted September 5, 2020 Brilliant guitarist stewart Truckstops i can recommend include Lincoln farm at Solihull which is handy for the Nec The Stockyard at Hellaby Rotherhsm And Shepshed they do monster breakfasts Colsterworth Penrith These have all been recommended to me in the past by drivers and i have used all myself at some point . Some of them may not open at the weekend though. 16 3 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium TheQ Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Premium Share Posted September 5, 2020 Afternoon awl, Tiles tiled, except for those needing cutting, that's for another day, Wood work painted blue, which called barleywood blue , but looks remarkably like Scottish region wood work blue. That lot took 6.5 hours... Left to do, made to measure tiles, the infill cupboard, a wooden surface then tiled infill between two of the aluminum shelves. Slab the floor. I've been in hospital 4 times each about a week, I presume the first time mum fed me... As for the others all 1981 to 86 I can't remember the meals, which means they were neither remarkably good nor remarkably bad.. Time for an eyelid inspection.. 18 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium New Haven Neil Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Premium Share Posted September 5, 2020 Morn...oh. Dragged out first thing to undertake some womanly support as 'we had things to do', sounds a bit GDB-ish! A rather cool and breezy day, 13c 'feels like...... nowt' the air must be damp as it really feels quite cold in the wind. Several hospital visits over the last 7 years have had varying grub scores, Wrightington (centre of excellence for hip surgery) scored well, (despite that discharge disaster I mentioned the other day) Noble's here was OK ish the first time, and rather poor the second, a year later when taking the Meccano out of my foot. Mrs NHN now washing the cars, so perhaps it would be better for my health if I go and help! F1 qualy later, like Any I like to avoid the news etc and enjoy the build up and patter, Mrs NHN hates the patter, and wants to get to the action of Q3 immediately. Other than looking out for George Russell, who appears to be a 'person of interest'. Ahem. 17 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold Popular Post Tony_S Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Gold Popular Post Share Posted September 5, 2020 Back home. My trip home was slightly delayed as the medics wanted another blood test. My Hb levels were low but the nurses and I both suggested most of it was on the previous days bedding. Low but ok to go home. This did of course mean I did actually get lunch which as chosen by me was cottage pie, carrots and for dessert , rice pudding which I must have ordered as I couldn’t think of anything else I wanted. Aditi has prepared a cottage pie for this evening but even though I said I was happy to have it twice she has produced an alternative, some sort of Basque chicken dish. It is far easier at home to adopt the required preferred position for my leg incision point. The hospital beds were about 50mm too short and I am not that tall at 181 cm. The bed is fine in bed position but once they start raising bits it doesn’t quite provide leg space for anyone of my height. My Mum once bought a hospital type bed but when ever she elevated the head end it dumped her in the floor as they was no board at the foot end. Mum denied it but she was 6ft tall. The bit of the hospital I was in seemed to be coping well with Covid procedures. I had a mask provided for the pre prep and during the procedure but wasn’t required to wear a mask on the recovery ward. The staff were all masked. Thanks for all the messages of support over the last few days, it was nice to read something of the world going on outside the hospital. Tony 5 26 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post simontaylor484 Posted September 5, 2020 Popular Post Share Posted September 5, 2020 Glad you are home tony 3 17 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium Popular Post Gwiwer Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Premium Popular Post Share Posted September 5, 2020 Afternoon all. A slow painful start to the day as the back would not behave. Gentle activity since lunchtime has eased things for now. It’s still warm enough to be out on the lawn in just a T-shirt and jeans with a Doom Bar. We have been reviewing property for sale in Cornwall with eyes on our medium to longer term futures. There’s a nice one in the delightfully named location of Bojewyan Stennack which - if still available in a few weeks time, will be on our to-view list. And speaking of Cornwall and truck-stop eating this place is legendary ..... https://smokeyjoesofcornwall.co.uk 20 3 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Coombe Barton Posted September 5, 2020 Share Posted September 5, 2020 (edited) 30 minutes ago, Gwiwer said: Bojewyan Stennack Is that the one between Pendeen and Morvah? [EDIT] Or the new builds in Pendeen? [ANOTHER EDIT] Which are in close proximity to the North Inn and the Radjel. Edited September 5, 2020 by Coombe Barton 7 4 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium New Haven Neil Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Premium Share Posted September 5, 2020 Tony, I should have wished you well in my first message, sorry. I'm glad you're home and OK and are getting more comfortable. The Hb all over the place must have been disturbing but perhaps not unexpected as you must be on anti-clotting medications. Just had to dash out to the Pharmacy, as for the second time they had mis-dispensed a drug.....official complaint going in this time. I should have checked the box yesterday but.....#sigh# Not going there again. 1 18 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold Joseph_Pestell Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Gold Share Posted September 5, 2020 28 minutes ago, Gwiwer said: It’s still warm enough to be out on the lawn in just a T-shirt and jeans with a Doom Bar. At least when you move to Cornwall you will be able to drink some proper Cornish beer. 10 5 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold The Stationmaster Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Gold Share Posted September 5, 2020 Afternoon all, Good to hear that tony has been released and will no doubt now be receiving excellent area nd attention at home. No G word today as it has turned a bit cold and herself had a good go at various stuff put there this morning. So let off until tomorrow. We have been t'mill - Dunelm Mill to be precise But I stayed in the car park and ended up comparing the sight of some of the shoppers with the sort of thing you might see in Walmart, maybe one or two of them had ambitions? Then up to Tilehurst Village for some cheap diesel and home via brief Tesco visit. Fish & chips (from the fridges) for dinner tonight and it was too late for mushroom cooking so i had a slice of cold quiche and had a Tesco doughnut (correction, two Tesco doughnuts) for lunch. As to hosp[ital food I have to say that on my most recent incarceration - 20 years ago in the RBH at Reading the food was very good although limited in quantity (no that it was a bad idea to do that and I also managed to scrounge an ice cream tub in the middle of one night when the ward was in pandemonium (all patient related) because a nurse was happy to give me one from their secret stash in the ward fridge. So top marks for food,. high/top marks for the nursing staff on the wards, middling marks for the penny pinching pharmacist I threatened to report to my MP when she wanted to put me on a drip for heperin instead of my twice daily injections (giving her the phone number for 10 Downing St quickly changed her mind so she then back-tracked saying that I ought really to be on injected heperin anyway in my condition - a PE). Fairly low marks for cleaning and and a minus 10 for infection control which seemed to be more a matter of PC behaviour than putting proper controls on such as the junkie with hepaptitis sharing all the ward's washing and toilet facilities with other ambulant patients and dripping blood here, there, and everywhere. I have no memory - beyond a scar and the receipted hospital bill - of my first hospital stay in mid 1948 but apparently I returned home demanding to be fed 'peachers'. They turned out to translate as peaches but I seemingly threw back the tinned variety in disgust. Interesting to know in retrospect that in the days when you paid to go to hospital the diet for very young children included fresh peaches if they were in season. Enjoy the rest of your day folks and stay safe. Someone said on an 'Any Answers' today that perhaps we should have enough information to write our own risk assessments in respect of Covid. Easy peasy there is, and I can, albeit not set down in writing. However the problem is that loads of other people haven't so they ignore the very simple rules which in turn makes it very difficult to then produce a quantitative RA. So no option but to do a qualitative RA which is inevitably more self restrictive. 18 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium New Haven Neil Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Premium Share Posted September 5, 2020 Ah, Swiss model shops. When on holiday there for my 50th, I was determined to get something as an aide-memoir of the (rail borne) holiday. I saw a model shop in, I think, Thun, so determined to get a 'red electric' of some kind, HO or HOe. I got as far as the window, and Mrs NHN had to support me through the faint after seeing the prices! Hells bells.... so I bought a second hand LGB Ge4/4II when I got home for less! It had a run out last week, now radio control battery powered, so it can run on the garden railway. I also got 2 LGB RhB coaches to go with it, all for less than the stuff I saw in that shop. 6 11 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium Gwiwer Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Premium Share Posted September 5, 2020 33 minutes ago, Coombe Barton said: Is that the one between Pendeen and Morvah? [EDIT] Or the new builds in Pendeen? [ANOTHER EDIT] Which are in close proximity to the North Inn and the Radjel. Just the St. Ives side of Portheras Cross as you drop down the hill. And within a few minutes' walk of our friend Ann's farm though her husband Bill has been gone for a couple of years now. He was a true local and never lived anywhere else; he was also something of an expert on the local mining industry and its people though never wrote anything down that we know of. We are not looking at new-builds nor the recent-builds such as the estate at Trewellard; they are nothing but trouble not being built for Pendeen weather. If we moved down there the nearest pub would be The Radjel though I prefer the ales in The Star at St. Just. They don't serve solids there so an evening out has usually been next door in the Wellington though the food quality there has varied a lot over the years through successive landlords / ladies. The quantity, however, has always been generous. 13 minutes ago, Joseph_Pestell said: At least when you move to Cornwall you will be able to drink some proper Cornish beer. Draught Doom Bar served in Cornwall is still brewed at Rock. It's all the rest which comes from Burton-on-Trent. As a session beer it's still hard to beat in that area though for one or two I'll usually for for a St. Austell product; Hicks when I can get it (not everywhere sells it) or Tribute. Things Cornish reminds me. Today saw Gorsedh Kernow taking place in very different circumstances to normal. We have never been though we could be invited as we know several Bards; it is their gift to invite a select few visitors is they wish. Instead we watched a very curious socially-distanced event streamed online and with few of the bards present, those who were being spaced safely and mostly sporting face-coverings. The Grand Bard, who has a lot of speaking to do, was not so attired. Most of the ceremony is only in Cornish though the welcome and explanation is in both Cornish and English. Some of the ceremony could not be heard because not all participants were within "earshot" of the microphones. We watched enough to hear our late friend, the recently-departed Craig Weatherhill, included in the list of those bards who have passed away since the last Gorsedh. And to hear "Hail to the Homeland" sung in Cornish which was new to me. I know it in English though it is a Cornish song. Here the first verse is sung in Cornish then repeated in what we call "Sawsenek". Saxonage, literally, but Cornish for English. 19 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Coombe Barton Posted September 5, 2020 Share Posted September 5, 2020 27 minutes ago, Gwiwer said: recently-departed Craig Weatherhill Sad news - he was an excellent writer 4 6 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium Gwiwer Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Premium Share Posted September 5, 2020 4 minutes ago, Coombe Barton said: Sad news - he was an excellent writer And extremely knowledgeable about many things Cornish. A great loss indeed. 3 4 3 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Coombe Barton Posted September 5, 2020 Share Posted September 5, 2020 (edited) 26 minutes ago, Gwiwer said: And extremely knowledgeable about many things Cornish. A great loss indeed. Just checked his bibliography - we have most of them, I've been using Belerion and Cornoivia for years. And then thought - he was my age Edited September 5, 2020 by Coombe Barton 14 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium PhilJ W Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Premium Share Posted September 5, 2020 Afternoon all from Estuary-Land. No gardening done today, its just too cold. Glad to hear Tony's back home. Speaking of food my dinners ready so I'll be back later. 17 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold TheSignalEngineer Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Gold Share Posted September 5, 2020 31 minutes ago, Coombe Barton said: And then thought - he was my age I was scanning old slides recently and came across some of my 21st birthday party. Besides all but two of the older generation having gone there were two cousins and at least two of my schooldays friends no longer with us. Then I realised that the youngest person on there was 53 last month. 2 16 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold Popular Post The Stationmaster Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Gold Popular Post Share Posted September 5, 2020 1 hour ago, TheSignalEngineer said: I was scanning old slides recently and came across some of my 21st birthday party. Besides all but two of the older generation having gone there were two cousins and at least two of my schooldays friends no longer with us. Then I realised that the youngest person on there was 53 last month. A regular former work group I meet (when Covid allows) for a rotating venue lunch is rather like that,. I've known many of them for a good few years and worked with one of the them 55 years ago (kindly note I was still in my teens then ). I'm one of the youngest in the group - at 72 - the oldest two are both over 90. The other group I occasionally lunch with are far more diverse but I knew quite a number of them back in the early 1970s - which is also now getting frighteningly close to 50 years ago, seems like only last week sometimes. 19 1 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
simontaylor484 Posted September 5, 2020 Share Posted September 5, 2020 (edited) 5 hours ago, TheQ said: Afternoon awl, Tiles tiled, except for those needing cutting, that's for another day, Wood work painted blue, which called barleywood blue , but looks remarkably like Scottish region wood work blue. That lot took 6.5 hours... Left to do, made to measure tiles, the infill cupboard, a wooden surface then tiled infill between two of the aluminum shelves. Slab the floor. I've been in hospital 4 times each about a week, I presume the first time mum fed me... As for the others all 1981 to 86 I can't remember the meals, which means they were neither remarkably good nor remarkably bad.. Time for an eyelid inspection.. My youngests playhouses is painted that same colour,it has lasted well,it was a cuprinol colour iirc Edited September 5, 2020 by simontaylor484 10 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold TheSignalEngineer Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Gold Share Posted September 5, 2020 6 minutes ago, The Stationmaster said: The other group I occasionally lunch with are far more diverse but I knew quite a number of them back in the early 1970s - which is also now getting frighteningly close to 50 years ago, seems like only last week sometimes. I still regularly have online updates from two people who were in my primary school class in 1955. 14 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium Popular Post Dave Hunt Posted September 5, 2020 RMweb Premium Popular Post Share Posted September 5, 2020 I'm still in contact with two guys who were in my first primary school class in 1952 and saw them regularly until the WuFlu kicked off. Have a good night, day or whatever it is in your part of the globe. Dave 19 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Coombe Barton Posted September 5, 2020 Share Posted September 5, 2020 ... and photographs discovered ... https://johncolby.wordpress.com/2020/09/05/kitchen-clearance/ 16 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
laurenceb Posted September 5, 2020 Share Posted September 5, 2020 Night awl 9 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Erichill16 Posted September 5, 2020 Popular Post Share Posted September 5, 2020 Evening All, Fisrt, glad Tony is back home and on the mend. Managed to get the risk assessment and the business continuity plan finished. I’m sure there are better ones about but they’ll do for now. I’ve got a quote for rebuilding a wall that I’ve knocked over and someone else has come to give me a quote for repairs to my flat roof. Didn’t get much else done as nephews and Syd have come for a sleepover. Football team won first match of season and played well. Hopefully this season won’t be a relegation battle. Hospital food, can’t say. Was booked in for a routine operation last year that included an overnight stay. Weeks before, I filled in a questionnaire stating I was gluten intolerant. Didn’t have anything to eat the morning of the operation and so by tea time I was ready for something. Only problem nothing on the menu was gluten free so no tea. Good job SWMBO brought me a sarnie when she came for evening visiting. Next morning break fast came, again no gluten free choice so just had a banana after a 20minute search for something. And that’s aSheffield teaching hospital. Swiss model shops. When I first went to Interlaken there were three shops that had good model railway departments. Two were toy shops and the other was a very strange shop near the East Station. The main shop sold assorts of tourist ‘junk’, tea towels, music boxes, cuckoo clocks etc, all in a very dusty state but in the ‘back room’ was a great selection of model railways. Now the railway department in one of the toy shops has relocated to an upstairs flats above the original shop and the other two shops have closed. There was a very good one in the centre of Bern but that too has closed. The proprietor of that one smoked like a chimney in the shop and this seemed wierd as by that time smoking in shops had been banned in the EU. Enough! Goodnight, Robert 16 2 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
tigerburnie Posted September 5, 2020 Share Posted September 5, 2020 Evening all, super day with the family, first time we have been inside the house since March, usually sat in the garden, we had a curry delivered and ate in the kitchen, almost normal, which was nice. My daughter only told me off a couple of times for leading the grandkids astray............................. Hospital grub has been ok in my experiences, for most of my life I avoided the places, but had Meningitis, then Kidney Stones twice and finally Gall Stones, all involved a few nights stay, half were in private hospitals and half in NHS, I found them all much the same, last time in Ninewells in Dundee was acceptable and I echo the comment about the staff having enough to deal with, the pond life they have to suffer. G'night all 17 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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