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pilgrim

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Posts posted by pilgrim

  1. sweet potatoes, yams, aubergines and yeast??? and how much 'wind' could that combination produce?? enough to power a turbine and electricity for 200 homes !!! but I know what you mean. we are very rural and its never easy to get certain things. might seem a bit radical - but I consider it ethic cleansing of the rural communities by withdrawal of services and access to facilities -- post offices - libraries - medical care (cottage hospitals) etc. etc.  try harry laidlaws at double row at new Hartley -- excellent produce at damn good prices - but another example of having to travel e.g. a penalty on local communities by imposing expense of travel. ( to renew my driving licence I would have to do a 80 mile round trip to use the 'streamlined service! - and to buy a lottery ticket is 16 mile return) look at the incident at Berwick last Friday when a young man dies and was 35 mins for an ambulance to arrive and afore that Christmas at Norham -- 31/2 hours for an ambulance and it had to come from Scotland.

    The main concern is the insidious erosion of local services at all levels  - but you made a  very valid point about what might seem luxury items - its the gradual ingress of 'centralisation'  and 'profit margins' which have driven the local retailer out of business. perhaps a revue of business rates would help local economies for the 'small' trader.

  2. I am a total luddite and am aghast at what I see as lazy, sloppy coding!! feel free to shoot me down -- but XP was stable and worked and afore that you could get a whole word processer on a floppy disk !! - now you need multi gb just to rub a browser!!

    they seem to have taken moores law (every 18 month speeds double and price halves) and subverted it to promote sales of something that really isn't realistically necessary - but of course increases at a huge rate by building in redundancy.

    And touch screens ??  (ok bad grammar ) but do you really think that sticky paws on screens prolong the life of said article ? and of course there's nothing better than a screen covered in the remains of kebab or jam sandwich!

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  3. Woodhorn has been promoted over and above many other things for so long - lottery funding etc and the archives being put there. fair enough to make something out of a derelict site and the archives are an incredibly useful asset - but I suspect it was partly because they needed to justify the use of the buildings etc. although I am perplexed as to why they ploughed money into yet another industrial park aside the spine road before the hospital 'to create employment and retrain skilled workers' - (why did they need retraining if they were skilled ??) when most of the units nearby are empty!!

    The Bedlington picnic was the big event - I seem to think (and most likely wrong) that it was one of the big national events (and I don't mean politically) as the showmen used to turn up as one of their main stops in the north,  and then was it the Durham event and then the town moor or the other way round??

    Bedlington was always the best location due it being unique in having such massively wide high street.

    (I have a particular problem at the moment with the council as my mother is - shall we say possibly terminal - at 86 after a heart op and a stroke and the council seem to have not only sold one of her grave plots and buried someone else there -- (she bought 3 when my gran died) but the council have failed to respond to any of my correspondence since I raised the issue in June last year. I think the national press is the next step - particularly on the back of the debacle at the Berwick cemetery (sorry if that was a rant)

    There are huge amounts of land available in Bedlington for development without impacting on the environment and the population has changed vastly over the decades - there is a skilled young base of people with ability that have to commute to work - working locally is the way the council should look to - and it is very 'green' - less strain on the transport infrastructure (moor farm isn't gridlocked?? nor is the A1 after Gosforth in the mornings?) 

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  4. always amused me over many many visits to the city hall - the acoustics were just as you would expect -- like a city baths!!! although many happy nights there -used to start at the carriage then the city tavern  - city hall then the biker pub in the haymarket (pulled down now and I cant recall the name!!! - not the percy) and if you had too much snakebite you could always go for a fight in the farmers!! the trent house used to have some decent stuff on - but who can forget the mayfair??????????  Cream, the Who ect etc - although I did see the Stones at St James Park, the support was the J Geils Band who were actually better

  5. I am thinking that it was owned by Jimmy Milne at one time -- his book -- ;No shining Armour' makes fascinating reading.

    I recall my first 'illicit' film at Bedlington station -- was 'tarzans greatest adventure' and nom it wasn't that exciting

  6. Symptoms..

    you are spot on re the info -- during the 'cold war' there were many area depots where emergency 'civil defence' equipment was kept and that was one of them. the basic idea was that the mobile column would bugger off to the hills if it looked like a nuke was going to be dropped and come back when it was safe and try to restore what was left of civilisation. the scenario of a bomb drop was worked out very carefully and the zones of radiation for different megatonnage was plotted if it should happen. the general populace would be left at home as all petrol stations would be closed and held by armed guards. roads would also be closed. strange thing was about the mobile columns was that they selected young fit folk for them and trained them -- i.e. breeding stock. 

  7. I recall Mr Hall and his house. (the site is the 'new' house that is there which was built by a builder who also had the club buildings at Red Row). Mr Hall had a harmonium in the loft. I believe he was responsible for redesigning the market place at some time. He had a huge Pyrenean mountain dog.  When his wife died he caused a bit of a stir as he wanted to have her buried in the garden - in the air raid shelter as a mausoleum!!!! He was educated at Morpeth as far as I recall. A bit further up the bank past the masonic lodge was a house owned by Joicey - he was an engineer and designed and sold the 'Joystripper' which was a clever bit of kit for stripping the copper sheath from fireproof cabling. He moved up to Widdrington and turned the pit head buildings into a workshop and house. his son, Phil, lives down south now and is a solicitor. 

  8. just looking back over the thread re the chapel at Choppington Station - there is a jpg attachment on the 7th post on here - halfway down the bank on the right side you can see the chapel with the wall and elder tree growing over it (no the pic isn't that good to id the tree - I remember it - same as the lilac tree across the road from the Railway tavern. hope that helps

  9. To me Scotland gate was always starting from the post office opposite what was the club (Scotland gate club in fact) to Tates shop and down to the prefabs. peas bush seems vaguely familiar but I just cant place it.

    I recall that that on the roadway to the pit which was just after the Travellers was the miners welfare club and institute and opposite it was a showmans guild site. Rices chip shop was opposite Tates shop where the greenlay shop is (I think it is greenlay - or was - it sold mowers etc )

  10. had to laugh at that Wilma re the buying your own gear etc. as a very young child and having a father as a 'shotfirer' there were always 'strange - do not touch' things about the house and I do recall being allowed to play with my great uncles service revolver - not loaded of course and only in the house. The high point of my very early days - I don't think I had even started school!! was being allowed to push the plunger on the det box to blow up some old tree stumps on our land. Im sure special branch, anti terrorist squad and the social services would have had a major operation on that these days. (mind you - I also recall him signing the poison register at the chemists for cyanide to use for disposing of some wasps nests we had -- can you imagine that these days ??? 

  11. fascinating post Pete - the reference to Whinney Hill made me recall my great aunt lived there in the first house on the right - she was called Isabel - a formidable type in tweeds and like a galleon in full sail - her husband had lost an arm and was a draughtsman for the colliery. they moved to a house at Sheepwash on the bank on the left side opposite the anglers but roughly opposite the chapel (I think the Million family had the shop there on the other side)

  12. sorry to keep posting but have just recalled something else about Station Terrace - at no 3 lived Mrs Syrett as I have said before and she had a lodger that had one of those 3 wheeled blue invalid carriages and worked at remploy - I remember he was called John Latimer - if that helps anyone

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