I am Glad Peter got in first and sent his message before I had composed mine. Happy Birthday Colin, And, I am sure although we will not meet on this day we will meet, during the weekend to drink and toast your birth.
Dave Stephenson.
I am Glad Peter got in first and sent his message before I had composed mine. Happy Birthday Colin, And, I am sure although we will not meet on this day we will meet, during the weekend to drink and toast your birth.
Dave Stephenson.
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A few things to comment upon here.
Firstly, it was interesting to recall the metal fatigue incident at Southampton station, almost 25 years since the event itself. How time flies.
Next, upon reading Peter's post after so many years, it occurs to me that Peter might have originally been referring to the motorised rotating roof antenna on Colin's house, rather than the mobility implements previously mentioned, which operate very much at ground level. In the final analysis, I would suspect that both concepts of rotary movement would retain a measure of validity.
Finally, permit me to mention my own cane story, which similar to the incident involving Colin's implement which I happened to witness, was very successful in attracting the attention of facilities personnel, in ways where a general appeal for assistance might be considered on a discretionary basis, depending on staff availability among other variable factors. Anyway the incident in question, which happened over a decade ago one wintry Saturday evening, involved my attempt to access the main sales area of a certain sports retailer, in which an escalator ride from a small, unstaffed display area on the ground floor was required.
Things proceeded routinely enough, until when nearly half way up the ride, I decided to transfer the long cane I was using from my right hand, so I could adjust a conspicuously sagging shoulder strap on my back pack. Although it was very much my intention to transfer this cane back into my right hand once this most incremental of adjustments was completed, the coldness of my little used left hand, resulted in my cane falling to, not so much the ground, but a selection of metal steps, which were still in a self elevating state of movement. My assumption at this point, was that if the cane remained in a sufficiently static position, I could retrieve said object, before the steps began to level off.
The first suggestion that this task might prove to be more tricky than I was hoping for, was when the tip of the cane made contact with the step below, indicating immediately that the rubber grip section of the cane would no longer be where I'd been expecting it to have rested. The second complication, detected around a couple of seconds later, was that the handrail was already entering its levelling off phase, which in turn meant any residual chance I had of retrieving the cane in a state of relative safety, was diminishing very rapidly. To compound matters further, any hope I had that the flat lining phase would enable the cane to drift its way onto the static floor space at the end of the ride, was effectively dashed when I heard the cane slip its way down yet another step level with a similar metallic clash effect to the first, and then another, then yet another, with my cane now gathering its own gravity induced momentum at a considerably faster rate compared to the relative consistency of the escalator's own rate of self sustaining movement.
Meanwhile, one consequence of this unexpectedly sudden surge of sonorous intensity, to an otherwise routine shopping soundscape, resulted in one staff member rushing from his habitual sales point location with a state of counterintuitive urgency, compared at least to the time normally required to attract assistance in a shop normally known for its 'pile em high', and sell em, well not so low as the time the shop in question opened its doors some 20 years ago. Such digressions aside, the precipitous urgency with which this staff member almost fled to the discharge point of the escalator, may have been prompted by a fear, that these spontaneously accelerating clashes of metallic percussiveness, might be a warning, that some kind of catastrophic mechanical failure might be in the offing, unless evasive action was taken to disengage the escalator's power supply by activating the emergency stop button forthwith.
As things turned out, the staff member spotted my run away cane, by now near the bottom of the ascending conveyor, by the time the button was pressed that would put the system into freeze frame mode. Luckily, no other passengers had stepped onto the escalator since the moment of my fateful mishap, so all that was now needed was for the sales assistant to walk the length of the now static escalator, to return into my possession what might otherwise have turned into a dangerous projectile. And then, once a few apologetic pleasantries had been exchanged, I witnessed my first ever occasion of observing an escalator being returned to active mode, with the shop employee no doubt relieved that an emergency call to the relevant service engineer, was no longer necessary.
So, if I had some 8 years ago, shared what might have gone down in history is one particular tale of the unexpected, my curious incident of the cane on the escalator, might be another story, for the AVIP equivalent, of the Tales of the Unexpected archives.
Oh and by the way, if you wanted a pop song which might serve as a match for the story just regaled, you could do no worse than go for an early classic by Suzy and the Banshees called, "Staircase Mysteries".
That's All Folks!
Chris B.
---Original Message---
From: Colin Howard <colinho...@gmail.com>
Sent: 2026-06-04 17:58:05
Subject: Re: [avip] ON THIS DAY
Chris,
Yes, it was, for anybody interested, I intended to demonstrate to Chris how
such objects can or I thought could, be bent but not so far as I tried,
resulting in a loud bang like a gun shot, bringing a couple of railway staff
running, I suspect thinking something nepharious was afoot
instead of which, my newly acquired white stick or rather long cane, was
cleanly snapped in half.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris Biles" <chris...@guidemail.co.uk>
To: "'peter wilkins' via AVIP" <avip...@googlegroups.com>; "AVIP World"
Sent: Friday, July 27, 2018 12:19 AM
Subject: Re: [avip] ON THIS DAY
Hi Peter and all.
A slight modification to my previous message on this thread.
I now realise that the metal objects I referred to in my recent post were
not the same was the one Peter alluded to, which is in effect, a variation
on the theme of a sattelite dish. More haste less speed, (smile).
It was the rotating feature Peter mentioned which caught my attention,
leading me to impulsively think of the metallic antennae like protrusions
such life forms often carry as an extension to their abdomen for the
purposes of navigation, including the deployment of echo location.
It was one of these objects which sustained a catastrophic failure as
previously reported, the 17th anniversary of which occurs to day, rather
neatly coinciding with the 69th anniversary of the birth of its owner.
Sorry, that was rather a mouthful, so I'd better go and lie down in a corner
somewhere.
Cheers, CB.
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