Y'know? I'm still giving all this some thought. I don't suppose the lib-dems have a chance of getting in here, but it might be worth a bash.
Not because I think they'll be anything other than a bunch of right wing fucks when in power, or something like power- although they are probably the most left wing mainstream party on many issues - but because I'd like to see an end to the current electoral system.
Saturday, 1 May 2010
Monday, 26 April 2010
Straightening may be a problem but...
I'm 42 years old, and I can still bite my toenails.
Would you like a video?
Would you like a video?
Exercise!
Bikeride Friday.
Digging allotment Saturday.
Digging allotment Sunday.
I can only stand in increments.
That's almost a haiku!
Digging allotment Saturday.
Digging allotment Sunday.
I can only stand in increments.
That's almost a haiku!
Saturday, 24 April 2010
Bike!
I got a bicycle for christmas from my stepson, Alex. I wanted one, and he had quite a good one that was surplus to requirements.
It has gathered dust in the hall ever since, but I had a day off yesterday, and since my mate Pete was still in Neston (his flight back to Thailand having been delayed by events in Iceland) I thought I'd go see him one more time before he left.
So I've been good. I cycled to Bidston station, and got a train to Neston, then off we went on our bikes. We went along the marshes to Deeside, just as I went on foot a few weeks ago, but this time we went a lot further, crossing the new bridge before turning round and heading back.
For me, it was a mixture of pleasure and pain. Pleasure because I had time to stop and really enjoy my surroundings. Pain because I didn't have a gel saddle, and because it's been ages since I got any exercise. My legs, wrists, and especially, my bum were either aching, bruised, sore, or swollen.
The end of the marsh road is blocked by some M.O.D. buildings. We got through by climbing over a fence, just as a security guard was locking the main gates a bit further on. He waited until we were through and didn't seem too bothered that we'd climbed over an M.O.D. fence. We had to go back a slightly different way though. Up onto the railway embankment for a couple of hundred yards before getting back on to the marsh track.
There were some wonderfully derelict buildings to explore. A pigeon in the roofspace was startled by my presence, and in turn caused me to duck, thinking the roof was coming down as it flapped rapidly away.
Some points:
1. Next time, take a camera. I'd love to post some pictures of the bridge, the buildings, etc.
Here's how they look in google earth anyway.

This is the derelict building. The black bits are holes in the roof.

And this is the bridge.
2. Taking the train was good. There's a cycle track virtually from my front door, right to the station.
3. You can do stuff on a bike that is impossible in a car. Just try lifting your car over a fence, or squeezing it under a gate. Or stopping in the middle of a bridge with traffic whizzing past at 70 miles per hour, while you enjoy the view. Here's a picture I lifted from panoramio...

4. Get a gel saddle cover! And possibly be a little less ambitious with the choice of route when you've had no exercise for donkeys years...
It has gathered dust in the hall ever since, but I had a day off yesterday, and since my mate Pete was still in Neston (his flight back to Thailand having been delayed by events in Iceland) I thought I'd go see him one more time before he left.
So I've been good. I cycled to Bidston station, and got a train to Neston, then off we went on our bikes. We went along the marshes to Deeside, just as I went on foot a few weeks ago, but this time we went a lot further, crossing the new bridge before turning round and heading back.
For me, it was a mixture of pleasure and pain. Pleasure because I had time to stop and really enjoy my surroundings. Pain because I didn't have a gel saddle, and because it's been ages since I got any exercise. My legs, wrists, and especially, my bum were either aching, bruised, sore, or swollen.
The end of the marsh road is blocked by some M.O.D. buildings. We got through by climbing over a fence, just as a security guard was locking the main gates a bit further on. He waited until we were through and didn't seem too bothered that we'd climbed over an M.O.D. fence. We had to go back a slightly different way though. Up onto the railway embankment for a couple of hundred yards before getting back on to the marsh track.
There were some wonderfully derelict buildings to explore. A pigeon in the roofspace was startled by my presence, and in turn caused me to duck, thinking the roof was coming down as it flapped rapidly away.
Some points:
1. Next time, take a camera. I'd love to post some pictures of the bridge, the buildings, etc.
Here's how they look in google earth anyway.

This is the derelict building. The black bits are holes in the roof.

And this is the bridge.
2. Taking the train was good. There's a cycle track virtually from my front door, right to the station.
3. You can do stuff on a bike that is impossible in a car. Just try lifting your car over a fence, or squeezing it under a gate. Or stopping in the middle of a bridge with traffic whizzing past at 70 miles per hour, while you enjoy the view. Here's a picture I lifted from panoramio...

4. Get a gel saddle cover! And possibly be a little less ambitious with the choice of route when you've had no exercise for donkeys years...
Monday, 19 April 2010
Fog on the barrow downs...
Been an interesting couple of days! Yesterday was a bit of a let down, because Bren had a migraine and a bad ear (and bad guts).
So it was hard for her to enjoy what we were doing, and I couldn't enjoy things if she wasn't. If we'd just made a day of it, it would have been a bit of a damp squib.
But I'd planned for us to stay overnight at the Snake Pass Inn, and go back the next day. They had no double rooms available but we got a room in a Glossop B&B.
Went out for a walk on the hills above Charlesworth,but neither of us was particularly up for it, so we spent the evening watching the telly in our room.
But today has been a lot of fun. We ended up visiting a folly, going into a cave, having a meal in the second highest pub in England, and visiting Alderley Edge, which has prompted Bren to pick up the Weirdstone of Brisingham.
Will edit more into this tomorrow, and put some pics up.
nighty night.
So it was hard for her to enjoy what we were doing, and I couldn't enjoy things if she wasn't. If we'd just made a day of it, it would have been a bit of a damp squib.
But I'd planned for us to stay overnight at the Snake Pass Inn, and go back the next day. They had no double rooms available but we got a room in a Glossop B&B.
Went out for a walk on the hills above Charlesworth,but neither of us was particularly up for it, so we spent the evening watching the telly in our room.
But today has been a lot of fun. We ended up visiting a folly, going into a cave, having a meal in the second highest pub in England, and visiting Alderley Edge, which has prompted Bren to pick up the Weirdstone of Brisingham.
Will edit more into this tomorrow, and put some pics up.
nighty night.
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