Can anyone remember anything about it at all? Something tells me that
aircraft featured in some major way and that one of the characters
really wanted to become a pilot but had a 'plane crash which kind of
dashed his hopes, or something.
Anyone?
--
Nos
I vaguely recall seeing this trailed on ITV, in the late seventies I think.
It didn't look like my cup of tea at the time, so I never watched it.
It seems to have been based on a series of novels by K. M. Peyton. The
book previews here may help to jog some memories if I am on the right track.
http://www.cix.co.uk/~asc/trapped/author36.htm
There is also a Cornish theme park of the same name, but I don't think
it's connected in any way.
--
G is for Goddess
Sherilyn|http://www.dejanews.com/~catch_22/
-----------== Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ==----------
http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own
Sorry, but you could try http://tv.cream.org
Although much of the site is dubious and inaccurate (and I have emailed
corrections for them to be mostly ignored), they are pretty
comprehensive. They may well have it listed (and may even have some
screenshots).
--
Marcus Durham
The UMTSDW Homepage. News, reviews, locations and Bates.
http://www.zenn.demon.co.uk/drwho/drwho.htm
Nosmo wrote:
>
> For some reason a programme that I saw as a child entered my head last
> night; a programme called "Flambards".
Sorry nope,
Can anyone remember Holmes and Yoyo, Holmes was a 'tec and Yoyo his robot pal.
Yoyo was my childhood role model
> Can anyone remember anything about it at all? Something tells me that
> aircraft featured in some major way and that one of the characters
> really wanted to become a pilot but had a 'plane crash which kind of
> dashed his hopes, or something.
Steve Austin?, Douglas Bader?
--
Andy
.
I can remember the music quite well. If pushed, I could probably knock
together a midi file of the basic tune. It used to be on on Sunday
afternoons sometime around 1979/1980. One of the characters was called
Christina. Set sometime around the turn of the century(?) in a big house
somewhere.
Talking about old TV series, I have finally (after several years)
managed to track down a recording of the theme music to Tales of the
Unexpected, which was somewhat contemporary to Flambards. I am very
*very* pleased about this. Composer was Ron Grainger, who also wrote the
music for The Omega Man with Charlton Heston (top film, now released on
video).
The soundtrack to The Whicker Man was also released recently, which was
superb.
Drifting off the point even more... does anyone remember the final
Quatermass four-parter from around the same time (1979ish)? The one
where society had broken down and an alien force was decimating the
world's adolescent population? Got that on video too, watch it from time
to time and it doesn't look too dated even 20 years later.
While I'm on the post apocalyptic theme, anyone remember "Survivors"?
BBC series from around 1974 about a plague which escapes from a germ
warfare lab and destroys most of the world's population. Got the first
dozen or so episodes on video - now that *does* look dated. It's
actually quite funny in places: if a disease had killed 99% of the
population, you would expect there to be dead bodies *everywhere*, but
there are hardly any at all. I guess the BBC didn't want to upset
viewers with lots of corpses.
Sorry, Nos, I appear to have hijacked your thread. What was the question
again?
--
Chris Hill
A wobbly bobbly dribbly squiggly dog.
> music for The Omega Man with Charlton Heston (top film, now released on
> video).
Far better book "I am Legend" by Richard Matheson.
--
Craig Oldfield
I love the first episode. You expect Peter Bowells to survive, but he
pops his clogs at the end of the episode.
> Got the first
>dozen or so episodes on video - now that *does* look dated. It's
>actually quite funny in places: if a disease had killed 99% of the
>population, you would expect there to be dead bodies *everywhere*, but
>there are hardly any at all.
[snip]
Well, out in the country? You really need to see the episode called
Streets of London, or somesuch, to get an idea how good Survivors
actually is. The final episodes are also superb. However, the first
season wasn't that good to start with.
<snip>
>Well, out in the country? You really need to see the episode called
>Streets of London, or somesuch, to get an idea how good Survivors
>actually is. The final episodes are also superb. However, the first
>season wasn't that good to start with.
Unfortunately, as far as I know only the first season has been released
on video (unless someone knows different...). I have noticed that the
videos were recently re-released in a new sleeve, so perhaps this means
that the second season will be released at some point. I really hope so.
How do they do that, ditched first person narrative <yuk!>?
--
Sherilyn
G is for Goddess
Catch us on #catch-22 UNDERNET
http://www.sidaway.demon.co.uk/astrology/irc/
Ron Grainer also wrote the famous Doctor Who theme tune (if you can't
remember how that goes, just squat behind the sofa for a few minutes and
it'll all flood back...
>
>While I'm on the post apocalyptic theme, anyone remember "Survivors"?
>BBC series from around 1974 about a plague which escapes from a germ
>warfare lab and destroys most of the world's population.
I never checked, but from my memory of how it sounded, I assume the
music for that was from Dudley Simpson. I think your date is a few
years too early.
[snip]
> While I'm on the post apocalyptic theme, anyone remember "Survivors"?
I remember it fondly...
> BBC series from around 1974 about a plague which escapes from a germ
> warfare lab and destroys most of the world's population. Got the first
> dozen or so episodes on video - now that *does* look dated. It's
... until I bought the first tape.
--
<URL:http://www.pierrot.co.uk/> Team AMIGA
First Law of Wing Walking: Never leave hold of what you have got until you
have got hold of something else.
And Coronation Street. I even bought it when it came out on a single!
--
Ben
Ron Grainer who also wrote Steptoe and Son, A Man in a Suitcase, and the
theme tune to a certain traveller through time, space and quarries in
Dorset. Interestingly his orchestra didn't do any of the realisations of
the DW theme.
Tony Hatch is another name in TV theme tune history, and his work
included Crossroads, Emmerdale Farm, Neighbours (with his wife doing the
lyrics) and a load more.
That's enough sadness for today.
I should hold on to that single if I were you - it's probably worth
quite a bit by now. The bloke who tracked down TOTU for me said there
has been an increase in interest in old TV themes recently.
I've got the single of the Howards Way theme, complete with that
warbling bird singing "Always there" on the B-Side. Yours for only 3
chops squire.
<snip>
>I've got the single of the Howards Way theme, complete with that
>warbling bird singing "Always there" on the B-Side. Yours for only 3
>chops squire.
Howards Way... that was the one about people arsing around in boats,
wasn't it?
I think I'll pass.
A world of sailing, high fashion, fast cars and sexy women.
Never did go a bundle on the fashion bit, but the rest wasn't bad.
Believe me, it gets tiring after a while.
--
JK.
Well, I'm sure Kate O'Mara would tire anyone out.
So let someone else have a go.
> I've got the single of the Howards Way theme, complete with that
> warbling bird singing "Always there" on the B-Side. Yours for only 3
> chops squire.
Does anyone know if the original 'Bergerac' theme tune was released on
single, or if it might be on a compilation somewhere? That's the
version with the bloody brilliant fretless bass on it (Where's Hap,
eh? Seperate, seperate, seperate...).
--
Mike Fleming Team DGAF
Quantum ille canis est in fenestra? - molesworth
> For some reason a programme that I saw as a child entered my head last
> night; a programme called "Flambards".
>
> Can anyone remember anything about it at all?
No, but I do remember that there's some sort of Flambards theme park
or theme place in Cornwall. Can't be any more specific, I'm afarid.
Might be worth doing a web search on 'flambards' and 'cornwall'.
If I've still got it. It's probably in the loft along with the Singing
Nun, Dana, and Francoise Hardy
--
Ben
That'd be Jackie Trent.
--
Ben
I think I'd settle for a sexy car and a fast woman.
--
Ben
Especially once you get to JK's age.
--
Joe
> If I've still got it. It's probably in the loft along with the Singing
> Nun, Dana, and Francoise Hardy
FFS don't let them out, they might make another record.
--
Craig Oldfield
I'd settle for a fast woman.
--
Andy Botterill
I hope you have good soundproofing.
--
Sherilyn
G is for Goddess
Catch us on #catch-22 PowerChat
http://www.sidaway.demon.co.uk/astrology/irc/
>Marcus Durham Kings Oak Anonymous writes:
>>A world of sailing, high fashion, fast cars and sexy women.
>
>I think I'd settle for a sexy car and a fast woman.
^^^^
Same problem as NB, eh?
--
Stuart
'If you can't fight, wear a big hat.'
May well have been. BBC records released loads of theme tunes in the
mid-eighties.
I don't have any problems regarding the speed of women.
--
NancyB
"A friend in need is a friend in debt
I don't wanna be nice" (John Cooper Clarke)
Whoever said that a fast/sexy car was really a phallic symbol was
talking b*lls.
If it was, most men would spend all their time driving their car in and
out of the garage - or polishing it a lot.
--
Richard
<*Chuckle*> Isn't he getting any either?
--
Ben
>>I think I'd settle for a sexy car and a fast woman.
>
>Whoever said that a fast/sexy car was really a phallic symbol was
>talking b*lls.
>
>If it was, most men would spend all their time driving their car in and
>out of the garage - or polishing it a lot.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Lot's do....
--
FionaMc
Strange.Slick.Slut.
Email:Put the name where the bird is.
>In article: <xj1eCIAC...@chris-h.demon.co.uk> Chris Hill
><ch...@chris-h.demon.co.uk> writes:
>
>> music for The Omega Man with Charlton Heston (top film, now released on
>> video).
>
>Far better book "I am Legend" by Richard Matheson.
Richard Matheson. - Where do I recognise that name from? What else has
he written?
--
David Hadley
>I should hold on to that single if I were you - it's probably worth
>quite a bit by now. The bloke who tracked down TOTU for me said there
>has been an increase in interest in old TV themes recently.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Why?
--
David Hadley
>Marcus Durham Kings Oak Anonymous writes:
>>A world of sailing, high fashion, fast cars and sexy women.
>
>I think I'd settle for a sexy car and a fast woman.
I'd settle for a woman.
--
David Hadley
Don't know - he didn't say. Nostalgia perhaps? That was certainly my
reason for wanting the TOTU theme (which has just arrived, and I have
just played, and is bloody wonderful).
[theme tunes]
Alright I give up - just what is TOTU?
Sorry - Tales of the Unexpected.
I'll take your word for it - I wouldn't know <G>
--
Richard
Nah, nostalgia's not what it used to be.
--
Richard
You didn't expect that, did you Fi?
--
Richard
>>
>>Alright I give up - just what is TOTU?
>
>Sorry - Tales of the Unexpected.
Damn! <head hits table>
Does anyone remember the one about the shop girl and the invisble rabbit
[?]
This will not turn into a cascade.
Someone recently posted the URL for an excellent old-TV site:
It mentions some of the TOTU episodes. Maybe this one? I don't know.
I remember Harvey - but he was an invisible rabbit. What type of breed
is an invisble?
--
Richard
I expect you might be right - or perhaps not.
--
Richard
I'm sure that you've said that before
--
Richard
>
> I remember Harvey - but he was an invisible rabbit. What type of
> breed is an invisble?
A pooka, if I remember the film correctly
--
Kate
Need I say more?
"When I want your opinion I'll give it to you" Anonymous RSM
Impression of an out-board motor?
--
Richard
>In article <36a7d5e4.14412100@news>, David Hadley
><da...@dhadley.demon.co.uk> writes
[an increase in interest in old TV themes]
>>Why?
>>
>
>Don't know - he didn't say. Nostalgia perhaps? That was certainly my
I dunno it just seems to be a pretty ephemeral thing to be interested
in, certainly to the extent that there seem to be 'serious' collectors
of this sort of stuff about these days.
It is - to me - a source of wonder that there does seem to have been
an explosion in the things that are collectable these days. All sorts
of toys and stuff (it always seems unbelievably sad to me to see an
old toy still in pristine condition and still in the original box -
it's like a denial of the whole point of being a toy).
Like people who pay out fortunes for old records and don't dare to
play them.
The cult of consumerism is a very weird beast once you start to
deconstruct it though.
>reason for wanting the TOTU theme (which has just arrived, and I have
>just played, and is bloody wonderful).
I've just discovered - from some other post that TOTU stands for what
her ladyship used to call Tales of the Bleedin' Obvious. Wasn't that
the one where they had some bint dancing in flames or something?
I can't really remember the tune that well, but I must admit that it
was - at the time - quite infectious.
--
David Hadley
I can see that point, but someone who is forward looking might buy two
of a particular item - one to use and one to keep for posterity. Looking
at how much things like the old Star Wars figures are worth now (only 20
years old) it seems like a worthwhile exercise. I can easily believe
that in, say, 2019 we will see Tamagotchis, Buzz Lightyears and (God
help us all) Furbys (Furbies?) changing hands for considerable amounts
of money.
>Like people who pay out fortunes for old records and don't dare to
>play them.
I do this, but simply because vinyl degrades if it is played a lot. The
simple solution is to tape the record and listen to the tape instead.
>The cult of consumerism is a very weird beast once you start to
>deconstruct it though.
>
>>reason for wanting the TOTU theme (which has just arrived, and I have
>>just played, and is bloody wonderful).
>
>I've just discovered - from some other post that TOTU stands for what
>her ladyship used to call Tales of the Bleedin' Obvious. Wasn't that
>the one where they had some bint dancing in flames or something?
Yes, that's the one. I wanted this particular theme because it has an
extremely powerful nostalgic effect for me - reminds me of a
particularly happy part of my childhood.
>I can't really remember the tune that well, but I must admit that it
>was - at the time - quite infectious.
A waltz, with saxophone and sort of fairground organ. One day I might
transcribe it and make a MIDI file - purely for my own enjoyment, of
course.
Vinyl? VINYL? The records I collect are 8" 78s, they're on shellac.
--
Ben
Hmm... toys linked to TV series seem to be good investments - the
Thunderbirds die casts(?), even the Space 1999 ones spring to mind.
Anything limited edition, of course. Toys which are not robust and
therefore less likely to withstand the ravages of time under normal use.
On a closely related theme, I have an almost-complete collection of
2000AD comics here (and still growing) which I'm hoping will be worth
something one day.
>I can't help but feeling I should go out and buy a Nintendo Gameboy - I
>wonder how many of these will be around in 20yrs time ?
I've got one of the original Sinclair LED calculators here which I
believe is quite collectable. Many years ago I was surprised to see a
Speak and Spell in the Science Museum. Wonder if it's still there...
>I can't help but feeling I should go out and buy a Nintendo Gameboy - I
>wonder how many of these will be around in 20yrs time ?
>
Same as now - too many
--
Richard
Something of reasonable quality, relatively well known, in relatively
short supply, and essentially ephemeral. Those toys that kids get with
MacDonalds Happy Meals seem to fit the bill.
--
Ben
>Here's a question - what toy would you buy and keep in its unopened box
>and deep-six in the loft, to later sell in many years to come as
>collectible ?
an iMac :-)
I'm keeping an MR1, original battery and charger. They were (are) damn popular,
and may well be worth a fortune one day :-)
(The battery itself was never charged, I'm told).
--
Gary Smith | "waddles like a penguin, honks like a penguin.
No longer employed by | it's a penguin" -- Iain A F Fleming
Ace Connections Ltd |
>In article: <JZ4wcHAD...@chris-h.demon.co.uk> Chris Hill
><ch...@chris-h.demon.co.uk> writes:
>
>> I can easily believe that in, say, 2019 we will see Tamagotchis, Buzz
>> Lightyears and (God help us all) Furbys (Furbies?) changing hands for
>> considerable amounts of money.
>
>Quite.
>
>Here's a question - what toy would you buy and keep in its unopened box
>and deep-six in the loft, to later sell in many years to come as
>collectible ?
>
Now that all depends on what people want to collect. This
'silly-price' collecting thing depends on rarity, and - to a large
extent - fashion. I think you would have to have a fair amount of luck
to get it right.
>I can't help but feeling I should go out and buy a Nintendo Gameboy - I
>wonder how many of these will be around in 20yrs time ?
The thing with stuff like this - like antiques, like even fine art to
some extent[1] - it all depends on how much people are prepared to
pay. Something 'worth' thousands one day could be 'worth' nothing the
next when the fashion changes.
[here we go off at a tangent]
Most things in the modern world only have value because people (in
general) consent to give them that value; gold, diamonds - they have
some uses, but for jewellery and stuff like that they are only
valuable because people agree they are valuable. Like 'branded'
fashion goods, a 'name' can be worth way above the price of an
un-branded item, but there is no real difference other than that of
the perception of the brand.
But that is the nature of consumerism. We are told that what we buy
creates our personalities, buy the right things and you will become,
or at least other people will see you as, the person you would like to
be.
The Post-Apocalypse game is a good game to play in such situations:
what would your bag of gold or designer jeans be worth when you were
the last person alive?
--
David Hadley
>[here we go off at a tangent]
An unusual thing for you to do David.
>Most things in the modern world only have value because people (in
>general) consent to give them that value; gold, diamonds - they have
>some uses, but for jewellery and stuff like that they are only
>valuable because people agree they are valuable.
The same is true of money. If the financial markets agree that the
pound, rouble, franc or whatever is worth less then its value drops.
Witness the Russian rouble a couple of months ago.
[snip]
>The Post-Apocalypse game is a good game to play in such situations:
>what would your bag of gold or designer jeans be worth when you were
>the last person alive?
Also an interesting way of looking at jobs and skills. The basic skills
versus those that are only of use in 'civilized' society.
A load of people show up at the gates of the post-apocalypse fenced
enclosure wanting entrance for food, shelter and safety:
Head Man: OK, next. What can you do?
Man: I'm a doctor
Head Man: A proper medical one or one of them phoney ones?
Man: Medical
HM to armed guard: Let him in.
HM: Next. What can you do?
Man: I'm a computer software engineer.
HM: Sod off. You're no use here. Next. What can you do?
Man: I'm a lawyer.
HM: You've got a nerve haven't you? Sod off.
HM: Next. What can you do?
Woman: I'm a demon.local slut.
HM looking up quickly: So you are, so you are.
HM to armed guard: Keep the rest here, I'm taking lunch early.
HM to woman: Now just step this way. Your name's not Barbie is it?
*Thwack*
HM to himself: Oooh goodie, the genuine article...
--
Tony
I certainly don't subscribe to the notion that in order to invest you
have to pack the collectibles away in an attic. Daft idea!
--
Malcolm
Running it is okay - it's when you eat the product ...
--
Richard
<snip> <BG>
>HM to woman: Now just step this way. Your name's not Barbie is it?
>*Thwack*
>HM to himself: Oooh goodie, the genuine article...
Don't understand this - would you c(d)are to explain?
--
Richard
>In article <36ab4bdb.8756143@news>, David Hadley
><da...@dhadley.demon.co.uk> writes
>>Now that all depends on what people want to collect. This
>>'silly-price' collecting thing depends on rarity, and - to a large
>>extent - fashion. I think you would have to have a fair amount of luck
>>to get it right.
>>
>Collect books. You can enjoy them whether they appreciate or not, and if
If you could see the room I am sitting in, you would not say such a
thing. Although not many of them would be in a collectable state. I
have a very, very serious second-hand book habit, especially from the
library (not that libraries really ought to sell books).
>they do, then that's a happy bonus. I collect arctic books in a modest
Arctic Books?
>way and have enjoyed reading everything I've bought. As it happens, some
I tend to buy for the contents only. I suppose some might increase in
value, but it is not something that interests me really.
>of them have gained in value very considerably (10-20 times) since I
>bought them, but as I've no intention of selling them, only my family
>will benefit, eventually.
>
I have - in the past - sold books, records and other stuff - mainly to
make room and they have been, and still are, some of the biggest
regrets of my life. Not for the things themselves, as artifacts, but
for the sheer irritation of not having a particular book to re-read or
look up something, or to hear a certain tune again, without having to
go out and buy the damned thing again.
>I certainly don't subscribe to the notion that in order to invest you
>have to pack the collectibles away in an attic. Daft idea!
I suppose that is the big distinction seeing the things as objects, or
for their intrinsic worth. What interests me about a thing is what use
I get out of it: A book is only valuable for its contents, a car for
getting me to and from where I want to go, a house for keeping the
rain off and so on. The actual thing as an object, book, CD, lump of
potential rust with a wheel at each corner, ordered pile of bricks and
all that may have some features I find pleasurable; nice cover or
something, but that is not enough for me to value the object over what
it does for me.
I suppose the idea behind things being collectable is that - somehow -
rarity implies worth. To a certain extent I can see that apply to
things like artworks, because there is only one and - most importantly
- we have not found an adequate way of producing exact copies of them,
they are unique. But for mass-produced stuff, I can't really see them
having any value like this.
As for the Holy relics that have been blessed by one of the gods of
celebrity; Jimi Hendrix's underpants, a dress worn by Marilyn Munroe,
Bill Clinton's cigar, Marc Bolan's Mini or whatever. I can't see that
at all.
--
David Hadley
> Malcolm Ogilvie <mal...@ogilvie.org> wrote:
>
> I have - in the past - sold books, records and other stuff - mainly to
> make room and they have been, and still are, some of the biggest
> regrets of my life. Not for the things themselves, as artifacts, but
> for the sheer irritation of not having a particular book to re-read or
> look up something, or to hear a certain tune again, without having to
> go out and buy the damned thing again.
I agree with this for the most part, except I don't regret selling my Elton
John records (indeed, I feel brave admitting I ever owned them).
>
> >I certainly don't subscribe to the notion that in order to invest you
> >have to pack the collectibles away in an attic. Daft idea!
The classic example would be Matchbox toy cars. My brother has quite a
large collection, which would be worth thousands if he'd left them in their
boxes. But you'd have to be a very sad (or very far-sighted) child to put a
new toy away unopened in a cupboard for thirty-odd years as an investment.
As it is, they're all a bit battered, lacking tyres, often with horrendous
luminous paint jobs, but he keeps them for sentimental/nostalgic reasons.
Joe
Watch your attributions, please! I didn't write any of the above. It
probably doesn't matter too much in this particular context but in other
messages it might and I might become more than just peeved :-(
--
Malcolm
<I've re-posted the whole lot because otherwise I'd get confused about who
said what>
I *thought* you'd written the sentence beginning "I certainly don't subscribe
to the notion .." and ending "..daft idea!" If you didn't then I apologise for
falsely attributing those words to you.
HTH, HAND etc.
--
Joe
Oh! Ooops! My sincere apologies to you!!!
I confess I got muddled by the number of >> and the fact that my quote
was below another's not to mention the fact that I didn't recognise what
I had written :-((
I think I'll go and lie down quietly somewhere. It's been a heavy week
and Sri Lanka have just beaten England because of *appalling* umpiring
:-((
--
Malcolm
I know someone who actually looked after his toys, putting them
carefully back in their boxes after playing with them (yes, he *is* a
bit sad), and he's now the owner of some really valuable stuff.
--
Ben
<who said what>
> I confess I got muddled by the number of >> and the fact that my quote
> was below another's not to mention the fact that I didn't recognise what
> I had written :-((
No problem. I'm such an idiot when it comes to computers I was sure I'd made
a mistake; it's nice to be in the right for a change! I did reply to your e-
mail, but the reply's still sitting in my out-box and doesn't seem to want to
leave.
Cheers
Joe
-----------== Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ==----------
http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own
BTDTGTTS. Not always with regret of course as the main reason for
getting rid of them was to replace them with others that I thought I'd
like even better. The regrets were the mistakes (like Love's first album
- whatever possessed me to sell that?). I don't sell my books but have
been known to give them away to jumble sales and charity shops.
>I suppose that is the big distinction seeing the things as objects, or
>for their intrinsic worth. What interests me about a thing is what use
>I get out of it:
I used to think it ironic that when my late husband (I mean my ex-
husband, I wonder what made me write that!), whose goal in life is the
acquisition of money, bought things with the intention of doing them up
and selling them on for a profit, it never worked out and he made a
loss, but when he bought things he actually liked for his own use (art
deco furniture and pottery, his old radios), when he had to sell them
due to moving house, he made a lot of money from them.
My priorities are different. Even if any of my possessions turned out to
be valuable (which is highly unlikely), I wouldn't sell them, unless I
had to.
--
NancyB
"Listen. We are here on earth to fart about. And don't let anybody
tell you any different." (Vonnegut - Timequake)
>The regrets were the mistakes (like Love's first album
>- whatever possessed me to sell that?).
Aghh! *Sob*
I've got it. I adore it. Someone somehow managed (many years ago) to
make what looks like a massive cigarette burn in it - so bad it affects
tracks on both sides - the best ones too.
I got a replacement - someone borrowed it and I can't remember who.
(That's happened to a lot of treasured things - partic books and lps)
I also think that da capo is probably one of the first punk albums
--
regards, andyw
sans record deck too
BTDTSTTS, shirley?
If you mean the same 300 Club I know about, then it isn't geographically
tied to one area. For those who don't know, to become a member you have
to go quickly through 300 degrees Fahrenheit, the usual way being a
sauna at +200 degrees and then straight outside into -100 degrees. It
can certainly be done at the South Pole, but I would guess also in
various parts of the arctic, in, e.g., Russia and Canada. I'm not a
member! I am a member of the Arctic Club, though, which has no such
initiation ceremony :-)
--
Malcolm
> Joe
>
>
>
> ---
> htt
Er, I think Mr Bat just made DEFCON 3...
--
Peter Hutchinson ne...@phutch.demon.co.uk
Birmingham, UK Is your RAM seated comfortably? Then we'll begin...
Er, I haven't the faintest idea what you're blithering on about.
>
> --
> Peter Hutchinson ne...@phutch.demon.co.uk
> Birmingham, UK Is your RAM seated comfortably? Then we'll begin...
>
-----------== Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ==----------
No its not. The sob was self pity.
--
regards, andyw
we're all normal and we want our freedom
Just as well, living where you do.
--
Ben
That your sig is, again, expanding.
DEFCON - "Defence Condition" - DEFCON 1 being WWIII.
> >
> > --
> > Peter Hutchinson ne...@phutch.demon.co.uk
> > Birmingham, UK Is your RAM seated comfortably? Then we'll
begin...
> >
Why are you quoting sigs ?
--
Neil Barker
It is a much propagated myth that the whole of Scotland has a cold
climate. When I moved here (island off the west coast) many years ago
from Gloucestershire, neighbours commiserated with me for moving to "the
frozen north". I pointed out that I would experience much less snow and
frost than in Gloucestershire, though perhaps a little more in the way
of rain and gales. The lowest temperature recorded here in the last ten
years just touched -10 Celcius. A water pipe in the garage burst, one
which I had never lagged as that amount of frost is so unusual.
On the other hand, my greenhouse blew away on Boxing Day, despite being
lashed down with ropes :-(
--
Malcolm
> Er, I haven't the faintest idea what you're blithering on about.
DEFCON -- DEFence CONdition. Indicates state of military operations with
"5" being peacetime and "1" being global thermo-nuclear war (ie World War
III). Mr Bat is reputed to operate on a similar scale; at DEFCON 3 he dons
his cheap suit and starts making menacing advances when someone posts a big
sig...
Let me get this right. I thought the stuff under the broken lines was a sig,
and the stuff above was the article. When I put my name in a sig, it seemed
to make the sig expand, so I took it out of the sig and just stuck it and the
end of the article.
>
> DEFCON - "Defence Condition" - DEFCON 1 being WWIII.
I see.
> Why are you quoting sigs ?
Fuck knows.
--
NancyB
Don't ask me what I think of you
I might not give the answer that you want me to
(Oh Well)
By the time I've finished with my t-shirts they are no longer in a
saleable state. The Ramones wipe the car windscreen, David Byrne is in
the dog's bed, and the Stranglers are lurking under the sink somewhere.
By same token I drive my cars into the ground; when I've finished with
them they are fit only for the scrap heap. The same goes for my men ;)
--
NancyB
"A friend in need is a friend in debt
I don't wanna be nice" (John Cooper Clarke)
Well I never knew that. Thanks for the clarification. Though I must say I'm
becoming a bit bored with this Mr Bat stuff.
Joe
>It is a much propagated myth that the whole of Scotland has a cold
>climate. When I moved here (island off the west coast) many years ago
>from Gloucestershire, neighbours commiserated with me for moving to "the
>frozen north". I pointed out that I would experience much less snow and
>frost than in Gloucestershire, though perhaps a little more in the way
>of rain and gales.
It's safe to move back now - we don't have snow in Gloucestershire
anymore. :-(
--
Alex http://www.lazysod.demon.co.uk/
Mailto:kill...@lazysod.demon.co.uk if you'd like some killrules
New users - Go see http://www.lazysod.demon.co.uk/kill/
I know, really. I've seen palm trees in Rothsay, something that you
couldn't get here in Sheffield.
--
Ben
Well, he did *say* Fahrenheit. Mind you, 200 degrees Fahrenheit doesn't
seem very hot for a sauna.
--
Ben
Yep. Lots of those here, plus Fuschia, etc., which don't survive severe
frosts.
--
Malcolm
> I know, really. I've seen palm trees in Rothsay, something that you
> couldn't get here in Sheffield.
Although there are (or were) fig trees on the banks of one of the
rivers, left over from when industry used to discharge warm water.
--
Kate
Need I say more?