Itβs true that you need a design solution for chutes that deters folk from chucking fireworks down them.
Itβs true that you need a design solution for chutes that deters folk from chucking fireworks down them.
I've never had a balcony of my own either. In my last flat (90s-built, well-insulated but hotter than the lunar surface), I spent most of the summer wishing for one.
Totally. The architects were 100% working with the north-east Scotland setting here.
Can't like this comment enough. There was a chute in my grandparents' block and I feel cheated that no flat I ever lived in had access to one. See also: the ventilated communal drying rooms on each floor, which should be a standard thing everywhere. www.thecourier.co.uk/fp/past-time...
Would be totally worth sleeping on a bench outside Kingβs Cross for that. I still mutter βWho the hell does Jeff Dreadnought think he is?β under my breath after any negative feedback.
Poetry.
βDarts in soap operas, oh so wrong, oh so wrong
No-oneβs scoring and thereβs too much chat between each throw
Worse than this, though, is when cheers are raised for the bull
Granted, bullβs a double and an out, but I know that they donβt
Know, therefore
I propose
No soap dartsβ
Nuts in May on BBC FOUR tonight.
Have always wanted to do the latter. With a brew and a fig roll
Excellent use of shoe leather by the great @chloehadj.bsky.social, here
La vol continue! β
Cheers Vince, means a lot coming from you. Being a total coward, Iβm very glad I never saw Crane up close.
Important π¦ information β¬οΈ
Thanks T, v kind of you to say.
You can also listen to me reading this article on BBC Sounds, if that's how you prefer to #consume #media #content www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/...
It's nearly The Traitors finale time so I asked a bunch of social scientists whether the UK is becoming sneakier. (Turns out there's evidence it might be.) Obviously I made sure to ring up the the pre-eminent expert in this field [Wilf from series one]. www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
S/he did get off at Waverley, so we canβt rule out an appearance today, perhaps as the celebrant
The enormous white poodle from the previous post, in a train vestibule, preparing to disembark
Weβre all getting off now
The inside of an LNER train carriage travelling from London to Edinburgh pictured from the vestibule door. An enormous white poodle is sitting in the aisle
Just riding the train with my fellow passengers
This is a thing of beauty, like an illuminated capital from a medieval manuscript or Celtic knotwork in wrought metal. You wouldn't be surprised to find a few running greyhounds or unlikely-looking whales hidden among the undulating curves.
The Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire is a respite, not a wider solution
The carpet museum in Baku is shaped like⦠Over to you Keswick Pencil museum.
Anyway, hello from platform one of Exeter St Davidβs station, where I have plenty of time to think about what to do with my latest yield.
Delay Repay, plus the general order of UK rail, means I keep in effect lending money to various train operating companies, who then give it back me several weeks later, along with a free, albeit massively delayed journey. DISCLAIMER: this is not investment advice; your funds may be at risk etc.
Via BBC housing corr Tarah Welsh, a fascinating (albeit frightening, especially if you own a leasehold) analysis of why service charges on flats in England and Wales have rocketed: www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
A very good starter pack of London pubs, via the excellent @thefence.bsky.social
Screenshot of an exercise on Duolingo. Alongside a cartoon character, the text reads: βTranslate this sentence: Vous prenez des biΓ¨res pour le petit dΓ©jeuner?β Beneath, the translation is: βYouβre having beer for breakfastβ
POV: Duolingo reckons you need an intervention
Beware, this "BBC Breaking News" account is fake. It's not an official BBC News account.
If BBC News ever joins this platform, it'll be publicised via official BBC platforms.
Really, really loved this.
Same - mutuals from the old place, real-world pals, folk Iβve worked with, hmuπ