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LizG

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Posts posted by LizG

  1. If you remove the box over the steering quadrant you or a crew member will get there ankles clipped very painfully or be sent in the river.   The current model which was more streamlined was fitted around 10/12 years ago replacing quite a large contraption that Herbert Woods carpenters fitted back in the late 1960s!B77DelightVII2009BartonRegattaGeraldThomas.jpg.8db6e22a1c1d84cdeb74954e6c5431c8.jpg

    B77-1967aWestSomerton.jpg

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  2. We had a very early start this morning so went to bed early. Needless to say couldn't get to sleep, woke up every hour and to top it all we had two mini power cuts which set the bedside clock flashing twice and the phone bleeped because it lost power! It's going to be a long day. Currently waiting to board le Shuttle 

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  3. 1 hour ago, YnysMon said:

    I’ve seen a post somewhere or other that said the staff have been told. So although not all the t’s have been crossed it sounds like it will happen. Hope so! 

    That's what I read and the presumed new owner commented to that effect on said post

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  4. I think a lot of the older residents of Horning rely on the PO - with all the banks going in Hoveton it is the only place to withdrawn cash locally (apart from Wroxham PO that is).

    I also have found it very useful in Horning when staying there but here is a point - when the Sailing Club would only accept cash, I would run out of cash during Horning Week - now they have a card reader and the need for cash is eliminated.

    However, I do still use my local post offices (note plural) to post parcels (selling stuff on eBay) but it is cheaper to buy on line and drop it off.  There is a need for Post Offices but their roles are changing.

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  5. No doubt I have told this tale before but back in the later 1960's father decided to have nav lights installed on WR and had this jolly idea of crossing Breydon Water in the dark or at least dusk!  This we did with no problems that I recall............we then went through Yarmouth and as we proceeded up the Bure hit a blanket of fog!  We couldn't see anything and of course there were no safe moorings.  We just had to somehow keep going!

    I know we knocked a boat around 5 or 6 mile house and finally we got to Stracey Arms where we just threw the mud weights into the reeds on the other side of the moorings, creeping over to the other side at dawn.

    Mother never let father try that one on again!

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  6. The race would have been in the morning usually starting from just past the Ferry depending on the wind strength.  There were quite a few boats according to HSCs social media outlets

    Got married in Horning church and both my parents' ashes are there (on the other side of the church overlooking Ranworth).  Good place to see Swallowtail butterflies - they come up from the marshes

    Liz

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  7. It was a strange time - working as a receptionist in an opticians we became aware of something not being right quite early and were taking precautions long before any lock down rules came into force. I used to hate it when patients leaned over the counter and I note the perspex screen is still in place!  I was trying to finish off some NHS submissions on the Monday and my colleague was searching on the internet about loss of taste as he had had no taste over the weekend - he went home immediately! He had just come back from Cheltenham!  Other colleagues were off sick - ill with coughs and some had been ill several weeks before.  In the August a lot of them had blood tests to see whether they had antibodies - a 1/3rd of the workforce did, some didn't know they had had Covid, others almost certainly did have it but no antibodies.  I was furloughed and quite liked not having to work, I spent most days walking my local paths recording butterflies - thankfully it was so sunny and dry unlike this spring!

    A friend's mother died just before lock down but by the time of the funeral there were she and her husband attending.  A good friend died in April and there were just 10 of us at the funeral.  A neighbour (we live in a cul-de-sac of 14 houses) who's husband was in a care home died of Covid.  Our immediate neighbours ignored the rules and then they went abroad (for work) whilst leaving the house to have major very noisy building works completed!

    Then just before her birthday, my middle daughter (who lived nearby) was diagnosed as having leukemia and was rushed into hospital in London! She started chemo within 36 hours of the blood test. On her birthday, we drove up to London to take a birthday cake and a load of things for her.  We left them with a nurse at the hospital doors and then looked up to the 13th floor - we could see her through binoculars and waved.  That was so painful.  Thankfully she made a full recovery, she was one of the lucky ones.

    Sarah would come to live with us between treatments, so we had to isolate for 2 weeks before she was due home, we couldn't catch anything!  So although the majority of my colleagues were back at work, I didn't go back to mid October.  I lasted until May when I retired - it was so hard, with all the restrictions and rules and cleaning, it was never the same!  They say that a lot of people lost their sight during lock down because they wouldn't call an optician - we provided an emergency service throughout, the practice was open (doors physically locked)  even during the highest restrictions!

    What else - it was a contributory factor in both my other daughters' marriage break ups, contributory not cause!

  8. Allowing dogs into a pub is probably a financially good thing but in a way allowing dogs in a pub is like allowing children in a pub!  Some love them some don't!

    An example of a pub being dog friendly occurred some weeks back in a pub just outside Norwich where we took my 95 year old and relatively frail mother in law.  We were just finishing and about to leave when a couple arrived in the adjacent area of tables and then some friends arrived with a VERY large dog.  I overhead the other friends saying something like I see they have brought the beast along!  The tables were quite close and one of the first things the dog did was look around and sniff out people including mother in law - who it licked.  If she had been standing up, it would have almost certainly knocked her over.  This was not a good example of allowing a dog into a pub!

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  9. 1 hour ago, dom said:

    Just discovered this one from the 50s which I'd not seen before. Surprisingly good quality for its age.

    Long before my time, but gives me a strange feeling in the pit of my stomach watching bits of it with unspoilt sections of the Broads which I remember from my youth. At 19:00, you can see the bit just above Wroxham bridge which I always go on about which was green and picturesque before they allowed houses to be built there in the 90s. Just a shame they didn't capture more of the boatyards, or those along Lower Street in Horning.

    And check out the height of the outer arches at Potter around 8:20!

    That one is one of the best with Water Rail featuring as B77 in the still!

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  10. 1 hour ago, CambridgeCabby said:

    We had a very good lunch in the Swan , but no real ale due to a failed delivery 😢, had to make do with Guinness , since moved on and now moored up at Neateshead staithe , guess I will have to sample The White Horse later to make up for lunchtimes deprivation 

    IMG_4006.jpeg

    My husband found that out last night. They told him they had been busy so he went to the New Inn where they had one!!!! 

  11. 4 hours ago, bucket said:

    That must be really difficult for you, I wish you all the best in your quest to retrieve them.

    They are in Horning - not lost thankfully, but I found I did have a scan of me on my first holiday - Admiral III (not positive about the number but will never forget the boat!)

    My father was introduced to the Broads in around the 1930s when his father took him on holiday - there are photos of them on a Sabrina, but later photos with my mother on something a bit smaller!  After the war they then started to hire motor cruisers and the Admirals were my first two holidays.

    Holidayphoto2.jpg

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  12.  

    4 minutes ago, SwanR said:

    Wow! What a trip! The strange thing for me was reading about your time in Sydney and looking at your photos knowing exactly where you were even though it's halfway around the world. And recognising so many other place names too, that we either visited, saw on train routes, or have heard about from our son.

    Likewise with your trip and CeePee's - I was thinking I've been there. 

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  13. 1 hour ago, bucket said:

    1956 LizG was my first trip anywhere.......it is when I was born.

    Like you I have no photos of my first broads trip, or my first hire boat, I didn't own a camera.

    There are photos but I don't have them...

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  14. 7 minutes ago, bucket said:

    And mine as well Simon! The 3rd and 4th week of August 1981..........fabulous time!

    I need to find a photo from my first trip in 1956 - look at my avatar that's another later trip? 

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