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vanessan

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Everything posted by vanessan

  1. I have no doubt that at least one syndicate member will be along to explain it all to you and you will be able to ask any questions that crop up. Watch this space! šŸ˜
  2. Sounds like the voice of experience there! Welcome to the forum SteveP, you have obviously been bitten by the bug - any thoughts of investing in your own boat?
  3. Happened to me this morning too. I got the error page but noticed I was logged in so fiddled around until I got back to the home page. Must be a gremlin in the works somewhere! šŸ‘æ
  4. Now that could replace the ubiquitous captainā€™s hat!
  5. The lovely hot weather must have cooled down very quickly!
  6. Think I have got two episodes confused - ā€˜What to wear yachtingā€™ and one about a country picnic with riparian entertainment. The former involves a form of boating!
  7. I have got into the habit of donning my LJ regularly now when I go to moor up. I work on the basis that if I donā€™t s***ā€™s law says I will have a mishap!
  8. Is that the one where Hyacinth goes on her riparian retreat, or something similar?
  9. I havenā€™t seen the poppy shop before! I give to the British Legion on a monthly basis and have had a poppy pin for donkeys years so never had cause to look at much else. What a lovely wide selection of products, I can see a few things there that are going to make some nice presents and a bit of a hole in my wallet so thank you Ian for mentioning it. One of the most worthwhile causes to support imo.
  10. And in this country too. I live in a very small village but our church has about half a dozen true war graves. I have seen the CWGC here. A while ago I visited one particular cemetery in France, on the Somme. I took a friend who wanted to find her grandfatherā€™s grave, he lost his life on the last day of the battle of the Somme and is buried in the Regina Trench cemetery. We had quite a time finding the cemetery as it is one of those literally in the middle of a cabbage field - as so many of them are. As Grendel said, they are all so well tended. I believe they have since refurbished the Regina Trench headstones as they were becoming illegible. I am so pleased to hear that, long may it be so.
  11. A number of times I have been at the Menin Gate in Ypres for the last post. It has never failed to bring tears to my eyes. The sheer numbers of names around those walls is mind-blowing bearing in mind they are the names of those whose bodies were never found. Around 20 years I stood with my father (who fought in the Commandos in Burma in WW2) looking over the graves at Tyne Cot. He said he was imagining a soldier rising up from beneath each headstone and falling into line to create a huge army. That memory has always stayed with me. My Dad returned to Burma several times to pay his respects to the pals he lost. On his last trip he eventually managed to get to the Arakan where many of them died. My dad passed away in 2015 aged 95, he had managed to join Remembrance Day parades until only a couple of years before he died. Something else that I remember. On a visit to one of the WW1 museums in France, they had a screen showing soldiers climbing over a fence rifles at the ready. They walked forward into a mist and then disappeared. This was shown as a constant replay and it was quite mesmerising. I hope our schools continue to take youngsters to the Somme and to Flanders and all those other places, they need to learn about the devastation of war. And we must remember.
  12. I wish I could ā€˜likeā€™ that more than once! I wonder how many couples can relate to it??!!
  13. To be honest I donā€™t think HM has much of a say in who the honours go to these days. Seems to be the PM and associated hierarchy that make the decisions. Probably like most things, all agreed elsewhere and sent to HM for rubber stamping.
  14. I somehow knew there would be such a comment sooner or later!! Glad you didnā€™t let me down Capā€™n. šŸ˜
  15. I reckon there are loads of people who have Christmas early for one reason or another. Maybe visitors from abroad or family who have to get together in advance or miss out. At least they can enjoy Christmas food and thatā€™s the reason for the early sell-by dates. Simples! Whilst I can never get right in the Christmas spirit too early myself, I canā€™t say the commercialism bothers me too much, I just ignore it all until I feel the time is right. (I do like M&S luxury hot cross buns all year round and mince pies too though.) Itā€™s a tricky world out there now in the business world, dog eat dog and all that (horrible expression!) so itā€™s a free for all. I can understand why Christmas comes early in the shops now but nobody is forced to participate after all. One thing that does annoy me is that birthday and other greetings cards all seem to take a back seat when Christmas cards appear. If you need a birthday card for November or December, better buy it in September or thereā€™s hardly any choice available. I get caught out every year!
  16. Likewise, lovely background warmth. For the last 10 years we have had the radiator on very low all winter. Keeps any soft furnishings free from nasties. Doesnā€™t cost very much either.
  17. Thatā€™s the way we go too, well my better half flicks the switch and makes the tea! šŸ˜
  18. That last oneā€™s a cracking picture Mouldy, worth enlarging and putting into a frame on to a wall. As for duvets in colder weather, if you can stretch to it Helen, goose down is the answer. I canā€™t abide heavy bedclothes but I do like to be warm. We have 9 tog goose down on the boat for those cold months and I find I get too warm even then. Down tends to nestle round you much better than synthetic filling and, if you still need extra, a lightweight fleece blanket can provide that.
  19. A nice thought but I reckon he will probably still be jetting round the world berating all and sundry for doing nothing about climate change! All the same, well done Lewis. Still young enough to smash Schumacherā€™s record.
  20. Makes it all the more interesting! Thank you for your write-ups and the photos, enjoyed them. Hiring the day boat at PH was definitely the right idea, the seals at Horsey are well worth the visit.
  21. Maybe I picked the right ones! šŸ˜
  22. I have been thinking about this and I have to take issue with this statement Vaughan. I travel the Ant very regularly and I cannot recall seeing a liveaboard and/or associated paraphernalia in that particular spot in quite a few years. It is seldom unoccupied because it is so popular. (I think people sometimes stop and moor there very often just so they can say they have done so!) Was the ā€˜staitheā€™ occupied when you walked there?
  23. vanessan

    Bb Webcam

    Itā€™s not the best of webcams these days imo, the way it pans from the left view right back to the bridge is diabolical. Not a patch on the old system and certainly nowhere near as good as the Herbert Woods ā€˜guided tourā€™ webcam which is a pleasure to watch.
  24. Welcome back! Who needs plans anyway? šŸ˜†
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