SlimLizzy
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 3,685
- Location
- Normandy, previously Worcestershire
- Type of diabetes
- Prediabetes
- Treatment type
- Diet only
- Dislikes
- football, both the game and the culture.
And there are other options than panels. Recently saw a house where the whole roof was covered in some kind of fabric(?) The whole roof was one big solar panel. And it looked very similar to normal roofing felt. Of course it wasn't.I would investigate your new solar panels capabilities,Ann, the very newest ones have more output per unit area.
D.
Thank you Ian, he does look as though he has achieved something big.Thank you for another wonderful owl and more autumnal colours. That boy badger looks quite self satisfied. While I'm here @jjraak very useful guide to London. I'm taking egg and flip as nick rather than the NSFW meanings google suggested but ....... whatever boils ya bacon
Hi Ian,@SlimLizzy I'm so thankful for and humbled by your, indeed anyone's, prayers and thoughts God bless you. The process is fine thank you, as much a social event as anything and I haven't experienced any side effects in my 15 months. In terms of effective we are talking about a handbrake - but level 1 as it were - not a cure but so far so good. I'm thankful this was discovered when it was purely by chance. My stenosis is a bigger problem for now and if I'm honest so is LC/Keto diet but research suggests keto helps immunotherapy.(my chemo is in tablet form) Hug for your headache and lessons being cancelled. @dunelm thanks for sharing your art, that picture and fond memories of Round the Horne: listened after Sunday lunch as a boy, one of Dad's favourites. I would say radio did more for my language skills than A Level English. Precious memories. Enjoy your own version of Super Salmon Friday my teapot is singing a siren song.
I hope they don't kill them, monotremes are very endangered.Something to think about.
From Papua, Indonesia.
The echidna is embedded in the local culture, including a tradition that states conflicts are resolved by sending one party to a disagreement into the forest to search for the mammal and another to the ocean to find a marlin, according to Yongsu Sapari elders cited by the university.
Both creatures were seen as so difficult to find that it would often take decades or a generation to locate them, but, once found, the animals symbolised the end of the conflict and a return to harmonious relationships.
Wish we could do something like this now. Although I did wonder if this means the conflict went on until searches were successful.
Thanks for all That @jjraak. We are in Kensington and it’s the Albert Hall tomorrow. It’s been a tiring day as sitting on trains is. There is a well appointed kitchen in our apartment so probably dine in tonight.Welcome to the hood
Word to the wise, tubes great but if you're using a jam jar don't get caught by ulez or you might end up in the egg & flip.
Talking of food, Never had jellied eels, more a madras man...plenty in brick lane.
Chinatown for Chinese, obv..wong kei for the 'experience' 5 floors of Chinese eating says a lot.,
( I'd recommend duck noodle soup BIG bowl & the salt & pepper ribs )
& for Vietnamese, you could do a lot worse than kingsland road, dalston.
(Lchf v life is for living )
Oh & don't get mugged off by riskshaw drivers...100+£££'s for a very short ride
Some utter melts out there .
Had northern bikers friends looking to visit London, and realised how off they were in distances.
Made a little map with directions, reasonably fit (I know you, like myself might not be) easy enough to see houses of parliament, trip up the Thames, look at the tower of London from the river, then walk around Trafalgar Square, covent garden, theatre land, Leicester Square, and buck pal, all in one day (ignore Oxford Street ..utter hole)
Enjoy London, on a good days it's pukka, mate.
View attachment 64207
Hard to do I know.And that's not even considering the loft.
Not sure if it's a case of skynet infiltrating the BBC or just sheer coincidence, but tin foil hat is prepped & ready just in case the sirens do go off ...Something to think about.
From Papua, Indonesia.
The echidna is embedded in the local culture, including a tradition that states conflicts are resolved by sending one party to a disagreement into the forest to search for the mammal and another to the ocean to find a marlin, according to Yongsu Sapari elders cited by the university.
Both creatures were seen as so difficult to find that it would often take decades or a generation to locate them, but, once found, the animals symbolised the end of the conflict and a return to harmonious relationships.
Wish we could do something like this now. Although I did wonder if this means the conflict went on until searches were successful.
I think that one is a particular rare species of echidna.Not sure if it's a case of skynet infiltrating the BBC or just sheer coincidence, but tin foil hat is prepped & ready just in case the sirens do go off ...
First-ever images prove 'lost echidna' not extinct
Sir David Attenborough "delighted" as mammal named after him is filmed for the first time.www.bbc.co.uk
So not skynet, then ...phew.I think that one is a particular rare species of echidna.
D.
Thanks Derek. Oddly enough I used to take Vit D3 and K2 . They expired but will order some more. I quite like many of the foods high in vits D and K.Hi Ian,
Apparently it often helps your T and B cellsto execute their work in killing cancer if you enhance them by high dose Vit D. K2 is also said to be necessary to help the assimilation of D.
I hope they don't kill them, monotremes are very endangered.
D.
Yes I am, the traffic has been a blight of many where I live. My garden is my sanctuary and a lot of the time, my sanity@Lainie71 Sounds like you may be having your very own Tale of two Cities.
There is just something about trees that I Iove, many walks with the kids when they were younger, standing looking up at trees that had been standing when I was small and before I was born. I went conker picking late September to use on my wreath, but none around. Makes me wonder if they were all cleared up due to elves and fairies. As a little one I remember hundreds of fallen ones, but not this year.I took this beech tree in our front garden this am.
It's particularly colourful at ATM whereas all our Ash trees have lost their leaves
I like trees, but not the local ones!There is just something about trees that I Iove, many walks with the kids when they were younger, standing looking up at trees that had been standing when I was small and before I was born. I went conker picking late September to use on my wreath, but none around. Makes me wonder if they were all cleared up due to elves and fairies. As a little one I remember hundreds of fallen ones, but not this year.
Oh dear, I hope there are no Triffids listening.I like trees, but not the local ones!
7 (ish)reasons.
1. The foliage from them end up in piles in my garden, even though I don't have any! All through the year!
2. I would always have something happen to me if it involves a tree! Climbing fell off, swing, fell off, lean agsinst, get dirty or splinter. And so on.
3. They grow.
4. I can't draw them.
5. Difficult in jigsaws.
6. Don't know their names. Don't care about that!
7. Don't like forests, woods, copses etc. Give me concrete every time!
I'm a townie, rural is not in my genes!
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?