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Symptoms

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Posts posted by Symptoms

  1. I wonder what it's like underground now;  would everything be collapsed with no access?  The reason I'm asking is that I watched a programme on the BBC iPlayer a couple of week ago about 'Underground Britain' where these blokes scuba dived a deep mine (it might have been a silica mine) which had been abandoned in the 1960s.  It was full of water but there were no collapses and the whole place looked in tip-top condidtion with all the tackle in place ... it was if the last shift had just left! 

     

    Another technical question ... when the pits shut and those cables were cut would the shafts have been filled in to its whole depth, or would they have just been capped?

  2. GGG wrote: "There's a rule that says that no one who owns ANY part of a 43 year-old aeroplane can EVER have any excess income Maggie!"

     

    but what about Sym's Spitfire ... the one used to strafe* the Stadium of Shite?

     

    *our regular viewers will understand this ... others will have to enlist the help of the 'search' button.

    • Like 1
  3. Oh dear, elements of the Stasi are alive and well in the Membership Vetting Directorate.  They're inviting classmates to inform on each other to weed out 'undesirables' ... it's turning into the 1930s Soviet Union or Nazi Germany: 

     

    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/26/my-son-labour-witchfinder-general-politics-appeal-young-people

     

    For those like me who think Frankie Boyle is 'The Daddy' have a butchers at his regular column in the Guardian today:

     

    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/27/how-will-labour-top-losing-the-election-by-losing-its-own-leadership-contest

     

    It appears to me that Jeremy Corbyn is the only candidate proposing anything positive/new/different and thus drives the agenda - the rest only seem the react/slag off/infight.

  4. If anything has a value, sentimental or monetary, keep the ankle biters well clear ... you know they just trash it.  Let them look and touch under your supervision whilst regaling them with the family/items history.  They'll thank you (when you're gone) when they tell the tales to their nippers.  I'm now thankful I listened when all the wrinklies in my family told their tales;  there's always a need for a  repository of oral history in a family, so start them young.

  5. "Sumps,  Sumps", as in, "Sumps you do talk rubbish ...",  ... what's going on here?  Those of us on the left should stick together but maybe all the vituperous abuse currently loose in the Labour Party is rubbing off on those here who should know better.

     

    Fact:  All Allied land forces in France (and later in Belgium) during the early stages of both those bunfights with Fritz where under the Supreme Command of Frenchies.  All history scholars agree that the blame for what happened rests, to a massive degree, on their uncertainty, doubt and timidness.  What finally happened (Dunkirk) was a well-planned tactical retreat organised by the Brits and due in large measure to some incredible bravery shown by a number of 'rearguard' actions by mainly British troops.

     

    Fact: Recent research has shown the numbers of Frenchies involved in La Résistance française had been massively overblown;  most Frogs kept their heads down whilst Fritz was on the prowl - I don't blame them.  But the really brave Frenchies involved in the struggle against the Bosch were pretty thin on the ground even if, after the war, every other Frog claimed membership.

     

    Fact: Why is it that there's hundreds of jokes about the cowardly French unless there's some truth in the crude caricature.

  6. You really couldn't make it up!  The Frog cabin staff ran away and locked themselves in a secure compartment and left it to the Yankees and a Brit to tackle the gunman.  Remember the last two big bunfights with Fritz when the Frogs scarpered and left it to the Brits and the Yankees to save their bacon.  That yellow-bellied cowardice gene must run through the Frenchie DNA.

  7. Paul ... I went to school with a lad called George (Geordie) Nesbitt, he'd be 64 now, he also has an older brother (I've forgotten his name but he posted on this Forum years ago so'll be in the member's list somewhere).  Dorothy, who you mention above might be connected to the Nesbitts ... often the Census records had mis-spelt names due to the Census Enumerators mistakes on the doorstep.

  8. Like Foxy I  accepted the 'leap of faith' and went for W10 on my W7 laptop ... I'm pleased with the result.  Mind, the laptop isn't connected to any peripherals like printers/scanners so I've got no issues with them not having the correct drivers to work under W10;  I only use the laptop to trawl the thobnet when sitting in my kitchen.  All the heavy IT stuff I do on my desktop in my study ... this beast is the one connected to all my peripherals so I don't want to cripple them by upgrading to W10 on it ... I ran the W10 'compatibility' test on my study PC and found 'driver' issues that would prevent my digitising tablet and flatbed scanner from working so I'll not upgrade.  If your tackle is connected to anything DO run W10's 'compatibility' test first, then make a decision to 'stick or twist'

  9. A Grandad of mine worked on the railways (he also at a different time was a miner) and had a black leather belt (17/8" wide ... about 47mm) onto which slipped a leather 'pad' about 6" x 7".  This 'pad' was a backing piece, or protector, that went behind a carbide lamp which hung from the belt and prevented the heat from the lamp from burning his belly.  I still have this belt but alas not the 'pad' ... actually I'm sitting writing this post with the said belt holding-up my 'skinny' jeans.  What a belt it is!!!  Thick, well worn leather, with loads and loads of buckle-pin holes (to fit different belly sizes over the decades - Grandad, Dad and then me).  The belt is/was know in the family as 'the night-shift belt' 'cos my Grandad usually worked nights on the railways.  The belt was also used by my Dad for whacking purposes on my arse when I'd been naughty ... I can still recall my Mum saying "Just wait 'till your Dad gets in gets the nightshift belt out".  Happy days!

  10. HPW's note about crocked carcasses of old miners reminds me that you used to see loads of old fellas squatting on their haunches (usually with a snout cupped in the hand) maybe whilst waiting at a bus stop or hanging around waiting for the pubs to open.  It was suggested to me that these old blokes had worked a lifetime underground generally in a squatting position (low headroom perhaps) and their bodies were used to the position so, what might  have looked uncomfortable/unnatural to me was a preferred position for them.

  11. I was around (and politically aware) back then and do remember quite a lot of discussion within the Labour Party about EU membership and Ted's methods but I seriously can't recall very much at all in the wider media ... so maybe GGG's references to 'blind eye' are true.

     

    One night, during the 74 election (it had to be the Feb one not the Oct one 'cos it was a cold, dark night) I was with a bunch of mates drinking in a boozer in London when a convoy of Range Rovers pulled up outside.  Ted piled out with a large entourage of blokes following him into the boozer ... what struck me at the time was there were no women in the party and many of the blokes were much younger than Grocer.  What still sticks in my memory, even after all these years, is how beautifully tanned Ted was - he really did 'glow' and he did have a real presence in the room.  He 'worked' the bar (electioneering) going around greeting all the punters (including me) ... however, however, however, he had a really limp handshake.  The stories about mucky behaviour by top politicos was common knowledge in political circles even back then.   

    • Like 1
  12. Canny wrote: "Coal mining chould be a science in it's own right!"

     

    It was (is). In the 60s Newcastle University had a Mining Engineering Faculty (I don't know if they still do) ... I had considered sticking it on my UCAS form back then but decided to go the London instead.

  13. Just re-read this thread and Magg's photo in post 25 above of the farmer reminded me of the nickname he had ... Pugwash.  Obviously, he was given it by us lads from the Captain Pugwash cartoon on the telly ... the Captain also had an eyepatch.  He used to chase us off his land.

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