RE: 685 and 686. Could they have gone to junk folders? I have had that happen, as did a friend recently, even though in both cases emails had been to and fro previously. I've also found ones that previously were OK diverted as spam as the system claimed there was a suspicious term contained in the message or it was similar to something which had been identified as suspicious.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Post
I'm afraid I'm a vegetarian.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostRE: 685 and 686. Could they have gone to junk folders? I have had that happen, as did a friend recently, even though in both cases emails had been to and fro previously. I've also found ones that previously were OK diverted as spam as the system claimed there was a suspicious term contained in the message or it was similar to something which had been identified as suspicious.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI have been noticing, of late, the profusion of green bottle flies - they are very persistent in insisting themselves on ones ears, mouth and other exposed areas, particularly when strolling through woodland, (me that is, not them!) and one is aware of their prevalence around faeces and dead animal matter, which makes them potential disease carriers, much though one respects them as part of life's natural disposal systems. Detritivores - I love that word.
I suspect that the exceedingly dry conditions make flies more inclined to go after moist human parts - so to speak. Remember the ladybirds of '76? It can also alter the behaviour of other animals - there was a mole rootling above ground at work the other day - again memories of '76.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostAn essential, if sometimes troublesome, part of compost heaps. The likes of fruit flies can lead to folk spraying flykiller, not understanding that that will have an effect on more than just the flies they can see.
I suspect that the exceedingly dry conditions make flies more inclined to go after moist human parts - so to speak. Remember the ladybirds of '76? It can also alter the behaviour of other animals - there was a mole rootling above ground at work the other day - again memories of '76.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostFeeling somewhat disappointed that an email I sent to the formidable guitarist Rosie Bennet, following my first and hopefully not only lesson with her, has gone unanswered for a week now. I guess it's possible she's on holiday and I'm simply being impatient.
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I can’t bloomin’ stand Franck’s D minor symphony
Caught 3 minutes of the last movement at the prom earlier by mistake - can’t get the damn thing out of my head now"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View PostI can’t bloomin’ stand Franck’s D minor symphony
Caught 3 minutes of the last movement at the prom earlier by mistake - can’t get the damn thing out of my head now
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostThe minutes with the couple of bars of "Rhapsody in Blue", repeated from earlier in the movement? That's what I've now got clattering lopsidedly round my head.
Hadn’t spotted a RiB similarity but probably, yes!"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Mrs C and I headed for a day out yesterday. She had a bit of work to do in Dundee and after that we headed to an 'Exhibition Closing' in Pittenweem, a lovely East Neuk village. Very nice with free cake and coffee and I met an old acquaintance I hadn't seen in ages to add to the fun. Then we headed east along the coast to Kingsbarns, which has a fine beach and is decent for going for a dip and was not too bad yesterday, bar the jellyfish. Fish and chips seemed the order of the day so we headed to St Andrews and started to queue with the other tourists until we saw the carry-out menu and Fish Supper - £12.10. That was ten minutes queuing we'll never get back - no way we were paying that. We headed back to the motor and drove to Dundee and got a fine wee fish and chips for £8 and went up the Dundee Law, admired the spectacular view and fought off the gulls. It was a lovely day out but £12.10...that's just an outrage. We were imagining the days gone by when the kids were still around just how much it would have cost us. Rip-off Britain, I say.
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostMrs C and I headed for a day out yesterday. She had a bit of work to do in Dundee and after that we headed to an 'Exhibition Closing' in Pittenweem, a lovely East Neuk village. Very nice with free cake and coffee and I met an old acquaintance I hadn't seen in ages to add to the fun. Then we headed east along the coast to Kingsbarns, which has a fine beach and is decent for going for a dip and was not too bad yesterday, bar the jellyfish. Fish and chips seemed the order of the day so we headed to St Andrews and started to queue with the other tourists until we saw the carry-out menu and Fish Supper - £12.10. That was ten minutes queuing we'll never get back - no way we were paying that. We headed back to the motor and drove to Dundee and got a fine wee fish and chips for £8 and went up the Dundee Law, admired the spectacular view and fought off the gulls. It was a lovely day out but £12.10...that's just an outrage. We were imagining the days gone by when the kids were still around just how much it would have cost us. Rip-off Britain, I say.
“The National Federation of Fish Friers (HFFF) warned that that customers must eventually pay more for their chippy tea or up to a third of our chippies could go bust. The price of cod - the nation's favourite battered fish - has leapt by 75% since October, and even the price of mushy peas has more than doubled, making a price increase inevitable., according to the HFFF.”
“In just a year, prices for Britain's favourite fish - cod and haddock - are up 75%, sunflower oil is up 60%, and flour is up 40%, Company Debt said”
"I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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