New bathroom floor

Although it was a lovely hot, sunny day yesterday, I was busy indoors fitting a laminate floor in the bathroom. I didn’t think it would take too long, shows what I know. I finished packing up about half 8 last night and have to go out this morning when the DIY shop opens to get the last bit of moulding to go over the expansion gap round the edge. I’ll refit the door in a short while.

Still it looks so much better and more hygenic than the carpet that was in there. My shoulders are still aching at the moment.

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Blog Nicely

Why can’t people just blog nicely? I don’t know where to start with this. In the last couple of weeks the authors of a few of the blogs that I have been reading have been upset or verbally attacked in posts and comments.

The first was at the end of July when Marzie at Mariuca – Wishing On A Falling Star was belittled for her success at becoming a very popular blog by someone not as successful. His comments were just plain rude. One comment he made was that in a particular 7 day period there were no new posts. Big deal, maybe she has a life outside of the internet and had other priorities those days.

Earlier this week, Becky from Just a Girl In Short Shorts Talking About Whatever had a particularly nasty episode with another blogger who on Monday proceeded to list all the reasons why her blog was so bad, he didn’t want his site linked to from it. This has very quickly got extremely nasty with comments being posted in blogs and on blog communities. I’m not sure if, as Becky says, this guy is evil and a woman hater. After checking out his blog, my personal opinion was that his post on Monday was totally unnecessary and rude. I don’t know what communication was made asking for the link to be removed, I’m guessing it was as offensive. If you don’t like someones blog, just stop visiting. I can see why if it was a particularly offensive site you might want a link removed, Becky’s site isn’t that, well at least not to me. During the posts relating to this, Becky linked to an earlier post that she had written about Mia Zapata who was raped and murdered in 1993. I think the point that Becky is making is that people and specifically women need to learn to fight back and not get verbally or physically abused.

On Friday Polliwog, a friend of Becky, at Polliwog’s Pond posted about the problems with the same blogger. A couple of days ago he had threatening comments left in her MyBlogLog profile by the same blogger as was being abusive to Becky. As fast as she deleted the comments he left another. Polli had not even commented on this until this started, so the attack on her was totally unjust.

So, taken from what I found on Becky’s site and in the comments, this guy seems just rude, but after reading Polli’s post, it looks like Becky’s description of woman hater may turn out to have grounds I don’t normally make these sort of comments, but this time I just needed to rant.

Another type of inhabitant of blog comments is the ‘troll‘. You can recognise them by their comments, they are the one who will always post the argumentative comments designed to get a reaction from others. Usually, if it is a subject that people feel strongly about themselves, they will react quickly and defend their point. This suits the troll, who’s only goal is the infuriate the prey. All they are after is attention, so ‘Don’t Feed The Troll’

Posted in Blogging, Rants | 6 Comments

My Peculiar Aristocratic Title

I found this on Vijay’s blog and had to have a go:

My Peculiar Aristocratic Title is:

His Most Noble Lord Ian the Unique of Lower Beanthrop in the Hedge

Get
your Peculiar Aristocratic Title

While on the site I had to have a go at the fortune cookie as well

My Fortune Cookie told me:

You need… a shrubbery.

Get
a cookie from Miss Fortune

OK, this is getting weird, does it know my name is Hedges? Has it been reading my posts about distributed computing and the Knights Who Say Ni! ?

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Recycling and waste collection

recycling
We got an envelope through the door yesterday from South Bedfordshire District Council explaining their new recycling and refuse scheme.

A few weeks ago we got a orange topped wheelie bin, to go with our existing black wheelie bin and smaller green wheelie bin. (If you keep them happy do they breed?). The green one was introduced a couple of years ago for garden waste and is collected every other week.

We have had a orange bag recycling scheme for several years. We can put cans and tins (drink cans, food tins and pet food tins), newspapers and magazines (plus junk mail, flyers, holiday brochures and telephone directories), card (cereal packets, detergent boxes and similar material, but not corrugated card), plastic (plastic drink & milk bottles, plastic detergent bottles and plastic shampoo bottles). The orange bag gets put out each week and collected with the normal rubbish. It is then sorted out at the recycling facility.

From September, the orange bags will no longer be used. All recyclable waste will have to be put directly in the orange topped wheelie bin. This going to be a bit of a nuisance as we have a bin in our back porch that we use for the orange bag in at the moment. I guess we’ll carry on using this and tip it into the wheelie bin before collection. The collections are going to be every other week, the same day as the garden waste green bin collection. The items we can put in are the same, except they are now asking us to leave the lids on the plastic bottles. This is quite strange as every other recycling scheme asks you to remove the lids as it allows the bottles to be crushed easier and also they tend to be made from different plastic that needs to be removed.

From the leaflet, ‘plastic makes up 11 percent of household waste, 40 percent of which is plastic bottles’. By my calculations that means that 60% of the plastic in household waste or 6.6% of the total is not being recycled as only bottles are recycled. Also from the leaflet, ‘In South Bedfordshire the amount of household waste we produce has risen to over 50,000 tonnes a year’. This means that 3,300 tonnes of un-recycled plastic is still going to be sent to landfill. This is being sold to us as a scheme to protect the environment by reducing landfill, but I find it difficult to see beyond the fact that it is financially viable to recycle and sell the plastic bottles, but the other plastic is worth less so isn’t worth doing.

Overall South Bedfordshire recycled 32% of total household waste in 2006/07, up from 2004/05 which was 15%. The goal for 2010 is 50% of rubbish recycled.

The leaflet doesn’t mention the other change, it just refers you to the enclosed calendar for collection dates. When you check the collection dates you see that the remainder of your household waste in the black wheelie bin will be collected every other week on alternate weeks to the recycling. I’m not sure if I see this as a problem or not. Many other councils have introduced this to the disgust of the residents who raise issues about hygenie and rats. We don’t generate a lot of rubbish in the black bin and so I don’t see our bin overflowing. Time will tell.

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Last week’s visit to Warwick Castle and photos

Hot
Wow it’s hot today. 28’C at the moment. I think it’s the hottest this year so far. As I said on Thursday, I was unable to get my films developed on the 1 hour service and so I left them for collection yesterday.

Sunny
The weather was so good on Friday, we went to the zoo for a few hours in the afternoon and I finished off the last film I started at Warwick Castle. We went into the Woodland Birdwalk this time as we hadn’t been in there before. Unfortunately, there was little to see; I think they were all keeping out of the way. I saw a blackbird, a small mouse and a couple of rabbits from one of the ‘hides’. A bit further round were the ravens, and although I took some photos, I didn’t really expect them to come out well; it was very much in the shadows and without a flash I was taking at 1/8 second exposure. There seemed a lot more mara roaming around this visit.

Warwick Castle
This post seems to be working in reverse order. On Tuesday, we went out for the day to Warwick Castle. Warwick Castle is a scheduled ancient monument and grade 1 listed building owned by The Tussauds Group since 1978. The first castle on the site dates to 1068 when a Norman motte and bailey was built. The mound still stands at the west end of the castle. We went through the new ‘Dream of Battle’ experiance. This is about William, Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick’s squire on the eve of his first battle in 1471.

After this we went to see the ‘Royal Weekend Party’ , a series of rooms decorated and themed for a Victorian weekend party. When we came out, we were by the entrance to the Undercroft restaurant, so we had lunch there. After lunch we had just missed the first birds of prey display, so we went to see them on their perches. On the way back from there, we saw the adult swans teaching their cygnets how to mug humans for food by looking cute.

We saw a demonstration by Warwick Warriors about arms and armour, during which they made a mess of a cabbage with a mace. Then we walked round the outside of the castle to the Mill and Engine House. The castle produced its own electricity in one of the country’s first hydro-electric power stations from 1894 until the arrival of mains electricity in 1940.

American Bald Eagle
We got back in time to see the second birds of prey display. I got some photos including some of ‘Batty’ the Bateleur Eagle when he landed on the speaker. The one of the Golden Eagle flying was out of focus, but I was quite happy with the one of the American Bald Eagle. As that finished we rushed over the bridge onto River Island for the Jousting. If anything they need to leave a bit of time between events; each one finishes as the next one starts.

Jousting
When the jousting started, and I heard the sound of a poor quality recording of a fanfare being played, I thought back to the ‘Knights of the Crusades’ at Dunstable carnival earlier this year and thought the worst. No problem, it was just part of the act and when the jester came out, he provided the introductions and kept it going, providing entertainment in the intervals while the riders got their breath. We had the normal good knights verses bad knights, with jousting, quintain, lancing of rings and finishing of with a grand melee. The knights are from Medieval World who were at Warwick Castle last year.

After the jousting, we walked up onto the mound and took some photos looking out over the castle and grounds before finally heading home.

My photos for Warwick Castle 31st July 2007 are in my gallery as are my Whipsnade Zoo 3rd August photos.

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Visit to the vampire

Yesterday’s plan was to take my films in to be developed on a 1 hour service and while I waiting, to be good and pop into the Blood Donor Centre. Unfortunately, there had been a problem with the film processing machine and so 1 hour was not available. I’ll collect my photos on Saturday.

Anyway, I did walk down to the Blood Donor Centre and volunteer an ‘armfull’. The post I did a couple of weeks ago about BlogCatalog’s Organ Donation Awareness Campaign reminded me that I had been meaning to get back. I used to donate regularly several years ago and it was only when I checked my donor card that I realised it had been over 12 years since I last donated. Because so many things have changed over the years, they had to sign me on as a new donor, but my previous 18 donations were noted.

The first difference that I noticed was the welcome folder with information about donating blood and the donor health check form that has to be completed each time you donate. I’m fairly sure when I used to donate, you were asked questions, but didn’t have to fill in and sign a form.

Then, in one of the screened areas, one of the team members went through my answers on the health check form to confirm that I had answered them correctly and asked me a couple of other standard questions. Then I had to agree to my blood being tested for HIV and other infections and sign the consent form for the donation.

Back onto familiar territory next, the haemoglobin level check. My finger was cleaned with a sterile wipe and then pricked with a lancet to get a drop of blood. I remember on cold winter mornings, the trouble they would have persuading the blood drop to appear after pricking the finger. As that was fine, on to the donation bed.

Another change, the beds are new ones that are shorter. I’m 6’1″ and my feet were just hanging off the end, still I’m not here for a sleep, so no worries. My details were checked again to confirm who I was and then a cuff was used to make it easy to find a vein. Most of my previous donations were from my left arm, except for a couple when the vein would not be found; there was no trouble this time with the left. They use a sterile wipe on a stick to clean the arm, a much bigger area than they used to do with the wipes previously. Then she inserted the needle, I barely felt it. I didn’t watch it though; I did that once and it seemed a hundred times worse.

They used to have wooden rollers that you kept moving in your hand while you donated, but these have been done away with for hygiene reasons, you just have to keep moving your hand without anything to remind you. The first blood goes into a small bag which will be used for doing the sample testing. The sample blood used to be taken at the end after you had given the donation, but this would mean that if someone felt unwell while donating, there wouldn’t be a sample to test and so the donation would be unusable as it couldn’t be tested. After the sample was taken, a valve was moved and the remainder went into the main bag. The bag is on a machine with lights to show what percentage is completed and lights to remind you to grasp your hand or move your fingers. Unlike Monty Python, they didn’t have the ‘machine that goes ping’, but maybe that’s only in hospitals. I was surprised how quick the actual donation took, 6 minutes and 18 seconds to be precise. The needle was removed and sealed in a cover that was attached to the bag. Looking back at when I used to donate, I realise that it is much more sterile and controlled now.

Then, as a ‘new’ donor, I had to rest on the bed for 10 minutes before I went to the refreshment area for another drink.

In all I was probably there for about 45 minutes.

National Blood Service - Do Something Amazing - Give Blood

National Blood Service - Do Something Amazing - Give Blood

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