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Poppy

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Everything posted by Poppy

  1. Poppy

    Boat Insurance

    I did a trawl for quotes this year. Found nothing to beat my renewal figure from Yachtmasters. They were £20 less than the next nearest, AND when I asked about an allowance because the boat is still laid up ashore they gave a further £15 off !
  2. You could always set up your fishing gear and stand behind it running on the spot (daily exercise)
  3. Just watched a piece on Look East this evening about the Broads - and there wasn't a single mention of 'National Park '
  4. As some will know, this is situated to the west of the A11 , just north of Thetford. This, I am reliably informed was to be seen on the wall of the Sergeant's mess. It may even still be there.... A Young Officer’s Guide to Fighting in Built Up Areas (FIBUA) I promised that I would do a bit on Fighting In Built-Up Areas (FIBUA) because I thought that I would be able to add one or two bits of my experience to the pool. Because of laziness I thought that I would just provide the following extract from an Aide Memoire I acquired whilst in the OCF. Chapter 11 – Fighting in Built Up Areas (FIBUA) Following lessons learnt in the latter part of WWII where many young officers were killed, maimed, or lost the confidence of their men in house to house fighting it was decided that all officers had to be trained in the techniques of surviving FIBUA with their reputations intact. The following points should always be borne firmly in the front of your mind every time you and your men enter a Built Up Area (BUA). Entering Buildings 1. Don’t run at a plywood door and then try to open it by giving it a good kick right in the middle. It is highly probable that your foot will go straight through the door. Not only is this uncomfortable it will not inspire confidence in your men. Let your platoon fool do this instead, it will be very good for morale. 2. When someone suggests that you stand atop a ladder while four of your men hold it and run at a first floor window remind them that you cannot adequately control the battle from atop a ladder and that your platoon sergeant would be a better candidate. 3. Don’t go in first, or second, third, fourth or fifth, in fact if possible wait until the building has been declared clear before going anywhere near it. Best of all is to sit a couple of hundred metres back and ask to have the village shelled flat for an hour or so before going in. 4. If you must go into a building avoid using holes anyone else has made – this includes doors and windows, especially doors. Always do it quickly with full auto selected, along with a nervous paranoiac disposition if you can manage it. (It must be stated that this cannot ever be real paranoia because the people in the building will be out to get you.) 5. Avoid windows with wire across them – wire tangles – the less said about this the better. In the Building 1. Remember to give whoever is in the room you are about to enter the respect they deserve – at least one grenade and the contents of your magazine. This is where plenty of practice at the game “I bet I can empty my magazine faster than you” really pays off. 2. When you’re in a fortified house always remember that your helmet makes your head bigger (or your beret if you’re a Para) and avoid all those beams and ammo-box sangars inside the building. Especially worth remembering if your command post is set up under a table. 3. Whatever you do remember not to brew up with your hexy stove on wooden floorboards! If you need smoke then it’s much more effective to pop a signal grenade. 4. Keep all your smoke grenades inside your jacket, or at least securely taped up with the pins bent. Smoke indoors is an absolute bitch and the little buggers tend to catch on doorways, wire, etc and go off. If they do you need to wear a respirator or get out fast, neither is to be recommended. 5. When the building is safe stay in it, any excuse will do – local defence, protecting a flank, establishing an OP, setting up a Command Post, organising resupply, guarding prisoners, treating the wounded. All good officers should be able to think up something original and appropriate in order to let their men carry on without them. Besides, everyone knows what soldiers think of their officers and they would far rather they weren’t there. If all else fails a simple “Well done Sergeant – Carry on” will do the trick. It’s worked for generations, there is no reason why it should fail now for you. (Possible exception here being lack of intelligence on the part of Paras requiring their officers to actually lead them and thus risk their lives. Not a recommended course of action – but then anyone foolish enough to leave a perfectly serviceable aeroplane when it isn’t on the ground must be rather suspect.) Leaving the Building 1. Avoid if possible, if not use the back door. This is the only circumstance in which you should lead from the front. Make sure that you have identified some good cover within five metres or so of the door or window you intend to leave from. Once you have get up and run as fast as you can and dive for the cover rolling into it to present the smallest possible target. This will undoubtably have alerted the enemy and any poor sod that follows you will almost certainly get shot at, the more that follow you the higher their chance of being hit. Hence the advisability of leaving first. 2. When making your mad, frantic dash for cover remember that bushes can conceal barbed wire. Also watch out for loose cartridge cases, they tend to be very destabilising on concrete/roads. Going **** over tit will not do your reputation much good. 3. Remember to take all your kit with you, and tie it down so that you don’t lose it on the way out either. It can be rather frustrating to find that you have left your hip-flask behind, and one does not want to have to risk one’s life more than is necessary. If you leave something behind send a soldier back for it – they are expendable, you are not. Being Outside 1. Don’t do it – unless you’re a few hundred metres back and have access to artillery. If you do then you can have some good fun – especially if you mix White Phosphorous (WP) with delay High Explosive (HE). The WP sets the buildings on fire and the delay either explodes inside them or weakens/collapses drains and cellars. It should be borne in mind that using WP for anti-personnel or incendiary purposes is against the Geneva Convention, so don't tell any body. 2. If you must be outside get in cover. Nowhere is truly open and if you can’t find cover you’re not scared enough. Puddles always lie in low ground. Gutters provide decent cover if you are being mortared or shelled, but bugger-all if it’s a sniper. Cars are okay, but most high-velocity rounds will go straight through them – although they’ll stop 9mm quite happily (at least on the way out). As high-velocity rounds go there is not much you can hide behind – an old fashioned stone built wall or building is your best bet. If it’s a fifty calibre machine-gun don’t bother hiding, just pray that he’s a lousy shot and none of the rounds come anywhere near you.
  5. Yes , It was the Wiveton Bell . http://forum.etypeuk.com/viewtopic.php?t=3558
  6. I find this all very worrying. I find myself more and more in agreement with Marshy every time he posts something of late
  7. Got mine. Had it a while.
  8. And a gentle stroll isn't either. Meanwhile two or three hours with one of these certainly is ! https://www.amazon.co.uk/Silverline-264569-1200W-Sander-Polisher/dp/B002QS1LZ2
  9. Intrtesting report. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-52403772 "It is noticeable UK chief medical adviser Prof Chris Witty has talked often recently about "indirect deaths". These are deaths not from coronavirus but related to the lockdown: people who cannot access care for other conditions, such as cancer, strokes or heart attacks, and those who take their own lives or suffer ill-health because of emotional struggles and the economic downturn. Steps will be needed to safeguard against these, and, therefore, it is perhaps unsurprising that Sir Patrick says it is difficult to speculate how many will eventually die."
  10. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-suffolk-52412655
  11. I've observed over a range of social networking sites just how many people who have emerged who would have fitted in very well indeed in the old DDR ot somewhere like Albania in the past.
  12. I asked about remote monitoring when I had the ablation carried out an the N&N, and was told that they do use them, but only for a particular patient group , those being the ones with ICDs, a type of device that incorporates a defibrilator. I am lucky in that I don't need INR checks as I'm on apixaban, one of the new anticoagulants. No neet for me to worry about what I eat, drink or anything unlike warfarin patients.
  13. I've heard that BoJo will soon be declaring the pubs able to re open - subject to advice from his great mate Donny .
  14. Driving 'where far more time is spent walking than driving' . I doubt that an 800 mile round trip would fit into that description !
  15. Poppy

    My Day

    It has come to my attention that there are only 35 'claps' until Christmas....
  16. EIPA - I was simply pointing out the gaping hole in your argument that allowing cycling on the grounds of benefit to the NHS ,and how it appears (to me anyhow ) an attempt to justify a preferred form of leisure activity for some, whilst there are far more worrying health issues which are not being addressed. I had a cardiac pacemaker fitted last December, and an atrial node ablation in February. This means that I am depenent on the pacemaker. It was very heavily stressed to me at follow up that I MUST attend for regular pacemaker checks as these were vital. My appointment for the next one was in September. That has been cancelled. My new one isn't until NEXT MARCH !. There are many like me with non virus conditions who need treatment, attention or monitoring who aren't getting it !
  17. It's not just cancer, either ! https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8249241/Nearly-40-000-hospital-beds-lie-operations-treatments-cancelled.html
  18. I agree with others. All - or nothing ! Of far more concern is the news reported today that a third of surgeons in a survey of the Royal College of surgeons of Edinburgh who carry out cancer operations had stopped performing them . If this finding is reflected across England and Wales it will have far more impact on the NHS than stopping a few who wish to don their lycra and get out on the roads !
  19. And if you don't have - or the budget to buy - a bicycle ?
  20. I like Giftaid. I've given the money to the Government (Giftaid is only for taxpayers) and therefore I am glad to dictate how a small part of it is spent !
  21. And why not ? When such as these are available https://www.ebay.co.uk/b/Bicycle-Turbo-Trainers/36141/bn_1676807
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