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chopper
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 13 2005
Location: Essex, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 20030
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Posted: December 12 2013 at 05:08 |
As far as I know he's at home, preparing to invade Hereford.
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chopper
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 13 2005
Location: Essex, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 20030
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 05:32 |
Happy Christmas to all Shed dwellers. May Santa bring you that Michael Buble Christmas CD you secretly wanted.
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Jim Garten
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin & Razor Guru
Joined: February 02 2004
Location: South England
Status: Offline
Points: 14693
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 05:34 |
Right back atcha Alan & to all us old fogies.
it's the Olly Murs album I secretly want though...
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 05:44 |
Happy Merry Christmas Yule Solstice Saturnalia Kwanzaa Hanukkah Waes Hail to each and every one
Booze, food, friends and family and the occasional gift you never knew you wanted - what more could you ask for?
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What?
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 07:03 |
A Winters Tale, Christmas Eve 2013 - just before noon.
A fence panel came down during the windy-pops Saturday day night which meant replacing a rotten fencepost, making good a few wonky, wobbly ones and nailing the old panel back in place. A couple of hours manual work that didn't involve last minute christmas shopping and I felt quite proud of my impromptu DIY achievements on a Sunday morn. Unfortunately last night five more panels decided that horizontal fencing was a far better prospect under near gale-force conditions than vertical but thanks to my previous handiwork the fence posts had other ideas and chose to remain upright. The net result is kindling, or at least it will be if it should ever dry out enough for combustion, as the feather-board planks ripped themselves from their fixings and littered the lawn garden battlefield with their shattered remains. Luckily most of the resulting gaps do not pose a security or safety risk however unsightly a gappy fence may be, but one did need plugging for modesty and privacy but the panels were beyond repair, couldn't even McGuiver one serviceable panel from the remnants of the other four. Needless to say, the local builders merchant was closed for the holidays today but I did have 8 feet of willow screen and some scraps of timber in the shed that could be conscripted into service as a temporary makeshift barrier between neighbours driveway and our bathroom window, so set about with rechargeable drill, rechargeable electric screwdriver and a pocket full of 4" decking screws ... Sadly both labour saving electrical DIY items were replete with batteries in similar state of lacking sufficient charge to make a reassuring whirring noise when requested, let alone drive a 4" decking screw into an hardwood fencepost ... this called for the time-honoured tradition of swearing profusely while doing a convincing¹ Basil Fawlty impression in the backyard (to the possible bemusement of our neighbours, though not the cats, whose interest in what ever it was I was doing suddenly evaporated as they skedaddled off to wherever it is they skedaddle off to when the human that feeds them is throwing a paddy) as my long-suffering wife enacted the restorative ritual of "putting the kettle on for a nice cup of tea". An hour later, with myself and the screwdriver batteries suitably restored and partially recharged, (though alas not the drill's), I ventured back outside to finish the task in hand, using a corded drill on a 25m extension lead and if need be a very big hammer... to have the heavens open and dump upon me the coldest, wettest rain it's been my displeasure to experience in many a long year. Undeterred² I pressed on regardless of the onslaught of weather that the gods of GAMI³ decided to hurl my way. [Using electrical equipment in the pouring rain, what could possibly go wrong? It's double insulated, I'm wearing wellies and it's plugged into a Residual Current Breaker... I am typing this an hour latter so as you can see - I survived unscathed, though in hindsight I'd not recommend such a course of action to anyone, so don't try this at home, I'm a qualified idiot with a stubborn streak and have been irresponsible since birth - I'm pretty certain there are no copies of me surviving in any alternative parallel Universes, they have all met with extremely sticky and very gory ends and are featured on several RoSPA training videos in all those alternate realities]. Having cajoled the screen to stay in place while boards where screwed across the gap to support it, the job was finally done while I was soaked through to the nether garments and fingers had grown numb from the cold and somewhat inexplicably bloodied, though after subsequent washing and warming, not a scratch could be seen - I suspect that tomorrow a fingernail (or whole finger) will fall off or something due to infection because as I was already cold and wet, I decided to clean out the shed gutterª before returning to the relative warmth of "indoors" so what flesh-eating bacteria was growing in there is anyone's guess.
The plan for today was to do sod-all but make mince pies, sausage rolls and cheese straws and to see whether Heston's Spiced Cider was all it was cracked up to be, but daughter has just phoned to say that all trains to Alton have been cancelled so I'm having to drive to Basingstoke to collect her and the bf. (whenever Hampshire needs an enema, Basingstoke is where they put the pipe).
¹ As convincing as any short, tubby, long-haired gothic-hippie sheditte can be of the lanky king of comedy known as The Cleese.
² and by undeterred I mean "with sheer bloody-mindedness".
³ GAMI - the antithesis of DIY - Get A Man In.
ª It's only during a down-pour that I ever notice these things - the stream of water coursing over the rim of the gutter instead of flowing gracefully into the water butt is a dead give-away I suppose.
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What?
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Jared
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 06 2005
Location: Hereford, UK
Status: Online
Points: 19312
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 07:33 |
Merry Xmas to shed dwellers wherever you may be and whatever you get up to...
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Jared
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 06 2005
Location: Hereford, UK
Status: Online
Points: 19312
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 07:57 |
Dean, that's a very impressive piece of prose... I have thoroughly enjoyed reading about all these things happening to someone else during my lunch hour (yes, I don't finish until 5pm!) whilst absent-mindedly munching my way through nearly half a box of After Eight mints, thereby making myself feel sick.
I can forgive your lack of paragraphs, by the welcome inclusion of footnotes (there simply aren't enough posts created, where the author has taken the trouble create footnotes)... maybe next time, we could have an index and bibliography?
Not sure I like the idea of 'Spiced Cider', but then I've been diligently telling all my oldies that I'm partial to a drop of Real Ale, and they now stretch around the kitchen...
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Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin
Joined: January 22 2009
Location: Magic Theatre
Status: Offline
Points: 23104
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 08:55 |
Oh my goodness Dean - the fun never stops at your place
I very much enjoyed reading your most recent adventure, and can't help but feel somewhat boring in comparison. The only DIY stuff I'm doing these days has to do with food - ie rescuing Christmas dinner from the entirely incapable hands of my dad. He has no business cooking. Any man trying to infuse oregano into the wonderful and fatty world of duck a la Jesus should be tarred and feathered.
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“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams
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chopper
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 13 2005
Location: Essex, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 20030
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 09:24 |
Dean wrote:
A Winters Tale, Christmas Eve 2013 - just before noon.
A fence panel came down during the windy-pops Saturday day night which meant replacing a rotten fencepost, making good a few wonky, wobbly ones and nailing the old panel back in place. A couple of hours manual work that didn't involve last minute christmas shopping and I felt quite proud of my impromptu DIY achievements on a Sunday morn. Unfortunately last night five more panels decided that horizontal fencing was a far better prospect under near gale-force conditions than vertical but thanks to my previous handiwork the fence posts had other ideas and chose to remain upright. The net result is kindling, or at least it will be if it should ever dry out enough for combustion, as the feather-board planks ripped themselves from their fixings and littered the lawn garden battlefield with their shattered remains. Luckily most of the resulting gaps do not pose a security or safety risk however unsightly a gappy fence may be, but one did need plugging for modesty and privacy but the panels were beyond repair, couldn't even McGuiver one serviceable panel from the remnants of the other four. Needless to say, the local builders merchant was closed for the holidays today but I did have 8 feet of willow screen and some scraps of timber in the shed that could be conscripted into service as a temporary makeshift barrier between neighbours driveway and our bathroom window, so set about with rechargeable drill, rechargeable electric screwdriver and a pocket full of 4" decking screws ... Sadly both labour saving electrical DIY items were replete with batteries in similar state of lacking sufficient charge to make a reassuring whirring noise when requested, let alone drive a 4" decking screw into an hardwood fencepost ... this called for the time-honoured tradition of swearing profusely while doing a convincing¹ Basil Fawlty impression in the backyard (to the possible bemusement of our neighbours, though not the cats, whose interest in what ever it was I was doing suddenly evaporated as they skedaddled off to wherever it is they skedaddle off to when the human that feeds them is throwing a paddy) as my long-suffering wife enacted the restorative ritual of "putting the kettle on for a nice cup of tea". An hour later, with myself and the screwdriver batteries suitably restored and partially recharged, (though alas not the drill's), I ventured back outside to finish the task in hand, using a corded drill on a 25m extension lead and if need be a very big hammer... to have the heavens open and dump upon me the coldest, wettest rain it's been my displeasure to experience in many a long year. Undeterred² I pressed on regardless of the onslaught of weather that the gods of GAMI³ decided to hurl my way. [Using electrical equipment in the pouring rain, what could possibly go wrong? It's double insulated, I'm wearing wellies and it's plugged into a Residual Current Breaker... I am typing this an hour latter so as you can see - I survived unscathed, though in hindsight I'd not recommend such a course of action to anyone, so don't try this at home, I'm a qualified idiot with a stubborn streak and have been irresponsible since birth - I'm pretty certain there are no copies of me surviving in any alternative parallel Universes, they have all met with extremely sticky and very gory ends and are featured on several RoSPA training videos in all those alternate realities]. Having cajoled the screen to stay in place while boards where screwed across the gap to support it, the job was finally done while I was soaked through to the nether garments and fingers had grown numb from the cold and somewhat inexplicably bloodied, though after subsequent washing and warming, not a scratch could be seen - I suspect that tomorrow a fingernail (or whole finger) will fall off or something due to infection because as I was already cold and wet, I decided to clean out the shed gutterª before returning to the relative warmth of "indoors" so what flesh-eating bacteria was growing in there is anyone's guess.
The plan for today was to do sod-all but make mince pies, sausage rolls and cheese straws and to see whether Heston's Spiced Cider was all it was cracked up to be, but daughter has just phoned to say that all trains to Alton have been cancelled so I'm having to drive to Basingstoke to collect her and the bf. (whenever Hampshire needs an enema, Basingstoke is where they put the pipe).
¹ As convincing as any short, tubby, long-haired gothic-hippie sheditte can be of the lanky king of comedy known as The Cleese.
² and by undeterred I mean "with sheer bloody-mindedness".
³ GAMI - the antithesis of DIY - Get A Man In.
ª It's only during a down-pour that I ever notice these things - the stream of water coursing over the rim of the gutter instead of flowing gracefully into the water butt is a dead give-away I suppose. |
One of our fence panels came down last night as well. It can bloody well stay there until Friday.
I can't believe you said that about Basingstoke. No wait, I've been there. You're right.
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chopper
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 13 2005
Location: Essex, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 20030
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 09:27 |
Jared wrote:
Not sure I like the idea of 'Spiced Cider' |
Looking at the origins of the word "Spam", this should surely be called "Spider".
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Padraic
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: February 16 2006
Location: Pennsylvania
Status: Offline
Points: 31169
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 09:33 |
Happy Christmas gents.
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Padraic
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: February 16 2006
Location: Pennsylvania
Status: Offline
Points: 31169
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 09:38 |
Hell of a tale Dean.
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Jared
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 06 2005
Location: Hereford, UK
Status: Online
Points: 19312
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 11:54 |
can't help feeling that this jumper taps into the zeitgeist of our times...
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: December 24 2013 at 12:27 |
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What?
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Jim Garten
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin & Razor Guru
Joined: February 02 2004
Location: South England
Status: Offline
Points: 14693
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Posted: December 27 2013 at 10:24 |
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Jared
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 06 2005
Location: Hereford, UK
Status: Online
Points: 19312
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Posted: December 27 2013 at 10:53 |
^^ that really is an excellent T-shirt...
have you ever had that experience where you have a nagging little voice in the back of your mind that something probably should be replaced.. but you put it off. Then, when you do finally get a new one, it's just SO superior to the old one that you wondered why the you didn't get around to it sooner?
well, that's just happened to me, as I've finally gotten round to ditching my cheap, entry-level, 9 year old (that's right, I had it before joining PA back in '05), 15 inch PC monitor in favour of something where I actually see what I'm writing without the aid of a magnifying glass....
... it's like a whole new world has opened up to me..
(I might throw caution to the wind and buy myself a decent mouse mat, next.. )
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chopper
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 13 2005
Location: Essex, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 20030
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Posted: December 28 2013 at 04:25 |
Yay Good old Santa.
He bought me a nice selection of prog CDs - Steven Wilson - Drive Home Steve Hackett - Genesis Revisited Live (3 CDs and 2 DVDs!) Big Big Train - Full Power (featuring a certain Simon Godfrey on bvs) Yes - Close To The Edge Steven Wilson remaster thingy.
Lots of listening to do this weekend.
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chopper
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 13 2005
Location: Essex, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 20030
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Posted: December 28 2013 at 13:13 |
chopper wrote:
Yay Good old Santa.
He bought me a nice selection of prog CDs - Steven Wilson - Drive Home Steve Hackett - Genesis Revisited Live (3 CDs and 2 DVDs!) Big Big Train - Full Power (featuring a certain Simon Godfrey on bvs) Yes - Close To The Edge Steven Wilson remaster thingy.
Lots of listening to do this weekend. |
Just had a quick watch of the Hackett DVD - all I can say is Supper's Ready - 'kin 'ell Firth of Fifth - 'kin 'ell Musical Box - 'kin 'ell.
Guys, if you like Genesis then you really need to get this!
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
|
Posted: December 28 2013 at 13:34 |
chopper wrote:
chopper wrote:
Yay Good old Santa.
He bought me a nice selection of prog CDs - Steven Wilson - Drive Home Steve Hackett - Genesis Revisited Live (3 CDs and 2 DVDs!) Big Big Train - Full Power (featuring a certain Simon Godfrey on bvs) Yes - Close To The Edge Steven Wilson remaster thingy.
Lots of listening to do this weekend. |
Just had a quick watch of the Hackett DVD - all I can say is Supper's Ready - 'kin 'ell Firth of Fifth - 'kin 'ell Musical Box - 'kin 'ell.
Guys, if you like Genesis then you really need to get this! |
It's good, but it's not Genesis Revisited 1.
On 1 he re-imagined the songs, put a spin on them and made them his own, and more importantly allowed the singers (Wetton, Blunstone, etc.) to sing them afresh, hence avoiding any comparison with Gabriel or Collins; 2 is more like verbatim re-recordings with a different singers and while they do a an excellent job of it, it somehow just doesn't click with me.
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What?
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chopper
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 13 2005
Location: Essex, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 20030
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Posted: December 29 2013 at 13:56 |
Dean wrote:
chopper wrote:
chopper wrote:
Yay Good old Santa.
He bought me a nice selection of prog CDs - Steven Wilson - Drive Home Steve Hackett - Genesis Revisited Live (3 CDs and 2 DVDs!) Big Big Train - Full Power (featuring a certain Simon Godfrey on bvs) Yes - Close To The Edge Steven Wilson remaster thingy.
Lots of listening to do this weekend. |
Just had a quick watch of the Hackett DVD - all I can say is Supper's Ready - 'kin 'ell Firth of Fifth - 'kin 'ell Musical Box - 'kin 'ell.
Guys, if you like Genesis then you really need to get this! |
It's good, but it's not Genesis Revisited 1.
On 1 he re-imagined the songs, put a spin on them and made them his own, and more importantly allowed the singers (Wetton, Blunstone, etc.) to sing them afresh, hence avoiding any comparison with Gabriel or Collins; 2 is more like verbatim re-recordings with a different singers and while they do a an excellent job of it, it somehow just doesn't click with me. |
Horses for courses I guess, I didn't think that much of a lot of Genesis Revisited 1.
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