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Posts posted by Minifer
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On 03/04/2019 at 11:45, Pumpmedic said:
If it is the one I think it is then you have one fine boat Minifer.
Yes pretty sure it is the same one, not sure Paul has sold another Alpha 35 recently. She is indeed one fine boat, way beyond our expectations. We were considering a Bounty as well, but having had a Bermuda 34 for a few years I really like the raised helm on the Alpha.
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12 hours ago, NorfolkNog said:
Hi Mark
Welcome to the Forum. Good boats tend to be snapped up very quickly. For example Swancraft had a beautiful Alpha 35 for sale. I don't think it was even advertised. It was snapped up in a matter of days. I'm not sure if you are local. If possible you could try doing some footwork and asking around the yards and make local enquiries. The end of season is probably the ideal time but I'm sure you'll find something. It can be a case of waiting though. Good luck and do please keep us posted!
The lovely Alpha 35 at Swancraft was advertised online as that is how we found the boat - we are the proud new owners of her. I have say keep ringing round the brokers as you do get to hear about boats that are coming up for sale before they are advertised.
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Doesn't the article say the report has been amended to show ownership? ..."The authority said the report, which was by a professor at the University of East Anglia, had been changed to show the council owns the land and has the right to charge for moorings."
Seems a bit daft to take it any further now.
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Grrr this thread is depressing. Give her a chance. My favourite doctors were Tom Baker and David Tennant. But if the writing is good then I really don't care what flavour the doctor is, it is still a great show.
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I'm exactly that (well maybe not the fat bit)! I could not have kids, but I am a Granny due to my lovely stepdaughter having children, and so as not to confuse with Nanna (who is my mother in law) or Mormor (who is the Danish granny, my stepdaughter's mum) I am Granny and I love it. The more grannies and nannas the better!
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24 minutes ago, Wussername said:
I can remember when Maidie stood on a hardstanding in the centre of Norwich for what seemed several years. In fact some thought she would never race again. I believe she was owned by a Mr Tinkler a motor cycle dealer, but I may be wrong.
Andrew
I can't remember who owned her prior to Mike, but I'm pretty sure I can remember seeing her sailing on Barton Broad when she was dark green and more banana shaped - I think that would be late seventies or early eighties? But I may have the wrong boat in my memory there.
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Particularly like the shots of Madie JM - great photos
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I like wasps. I am the official wasp remover in our house. I love hornets even more! Last night I took the rubbish out and there was a queen wasp headbutting our outside light like a moth so I watched her for a while. I looked through the window and saw my hubby staring at me like I was certifiably insane but I think they are amazing creatures.
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13 minutes ago, ranworthbreeze said:
Hello Minifer,
Are you looking for a survey before you purchase or are you looking for someone to do a BSS inspection?
Regards
Alan
Before boat purchase, and then possibly to use for future work - although we have just been given a surveyor's name
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Can anyone recommend a mobile marine engineer in Norfolk to do a survey on a boat engine? The guy we've used before has retired, so I'm looking for recommendations.
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3 hours ago, vanessan said:
Is that an African Grey? Does it talk? Sorry if that is a silly question, my knowledge of parrots is zilch!
Yes to both, she is an African Grey and talks - easily a hundred words, some in context like "do you want to go to bed?" when she wants to go to her cage to sleep, but also a lot of babble of the things she hears us say. She has just told me she has a sore butt feather as she's moulting!
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I've always wanted a Cobb stove, the reviews are excellent. I'm gutted that Looses have shut too, I'm still using Procook granite pans that I bought there last year and they are still non-stick with daily use - I think it is the same kind of technology as the copperstone pans. We can't use Teflon due to my pet parrot - the gasses being lethal to parrots at high temperatures (the PTFE, not the parrot!) so I swear by the granite pans, they are light and absolutely nothing sticks, I've now got rid of the cast iron and stainless pans I had.
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13 minutes ago, TheQ said:
Might make it easier to get the rig down if the Wind is strong though, can't see from the images, But I'm supposing there will be footpath / walkway / moorings between the river and the building or there will be a significant loss of moorings..
It did look like there would be quite a loss of mooring space on other pictures I've seen, but I hope that is something the BA would tweak. What gets built could still be substantially different seeing as they don't have the funding for it yet.
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http://www.edp24.co.uk/business/broads-visitor-centre-details-to-be-revealed-1-5624053
This was my favourite out of the options, it is just a vision at present, it will be interesting to see what goes to the planners in time.
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I used to teach waterside field trips for a living (for a not very popular charity on this forum so I won't mention it!) and the official advice we had to give was that feeding only bread to the ducks was like feeding us only chocolate. It gave a nice energy burst, but was not exactly nutritionally great. Bread has a lot of sugar and salt in it and a lot of processed wheat filler. Where we were teaching, the wildfowl were being fed by the public all day long. So we gave out chicken pellets (which was also the advice given to me from a nationally renowned wildfowl park) for the children to feed the ducks and geese with. I can see the swan rescue point of view, but in popular places bread can be pretty much what all the ducks etc are eating and that is not healthy. So I think the ban the bread campaign is no bad thing, as long as you are feeding a good alternative. They are still going to get a lot of bread because the majority of people are feeding that.
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40 minutes ago, JennyMorgan said:
Will Herbert Wood's new picnic boats not go under at Potter? They appear to be an update on the little Hampton principle of small is useful.
I've not personally seen any yet (our boat is at Hickling). I regularly see their dayboats but not these fellows. I'm pretty sure they can right now with this weather. We're 6' 8" draft and we can get under a few times a year.
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oh and underneath that I have written " look for high pressure and Easterlies to get under"
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On 29/06/2018 at 10:25, MauriceMynah said:
I have to admit that I have trouble getting my head round some aspects of how the tides work in reality (as opposed to various theories I've had).
Taking average air pressure, average tide and no wind, my questions apply to 1 tidal cycle from high to high and taken at Potter bridge itself.
Would I be correct in saying that the ebb lasts longer than the flood, and if so, by how much?
If High tide is at midday, what time will the clearance be at it's greatest, and for how long will it stay at that level?
Finally is the falling water level dropping at a constant rate, if not how would you describe the fall on a graph.?
Sorry to bombard you with these questions Expilot, but I can't think who else to ask.
MM I have this written down for when we used to go under Potter bridge a lot (don't bother so much now, we're happy to stay hidden the 'wrong' side of the bridge). "Drops 3" in the first two hours, then a further 1-2" after. Go under 1 or 1.5 hours before low water in case tide is early as it won't drop much more but will start rising as soon as the tide changes".
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I like it too, but I work from home in a south facing garden room/conservatory thing and I have to pull the blinds down so I don't cook. As long as the wind stays fresh I'm happy!
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11 minutes ago, Vaughan said:
Well sorry, but I can't!
If that has something to do with sailing, I wouldn't know if it was on starboard tack or port.
It's starboard, goose-winging on the run in my view!
Corona Virus
in The Broadscot Lounge
Posted
Sorry to say but a lot of the information in Hylander's post is not proven. Please be careful, follow the advice from NHS https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/coronavirus-covid-19/ and from the government https://www.gov.uk/coronavirus as there is an awful lot of false information circling out in the ether.
https://www.thatsnonsense.com/list-of-coronavirus-facts-from-internal-email-at-st-georges-hospital-fact-check/