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Things you’ve noticed/ newly appreciated since the lockdown

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  • 3blokes said:
    I really hope your grandad is all right and that once this is all over you can spend a bit of time with him. I am sure he will really appreciate seeing you again too 👍🏻

    Thank you very much!  fingers crossed , there isn't really much I can do really. He has people looking after him (Nan/Auntie who live with him). just pray he is ok :)
  • 3blokes said:
    I really like being at home, always have done. So being told to stay at home doesn’t feel that difficult for me but it clearly is for some people. My wife hates being cooped up at home for instance. Possibly because it’s with me 😉👍🏻 there are 4 kids here as well, but they are coping with the lockdown mostly reasonably well.
    It’s a gilded cage here for now, but for some I can understand how significantly more demanding this is for them. A friend with medical complications is finding the isolation really difficult meanwhile, but he needs to stay isolated for his own safety.
    We have wondered how we will all feel when this eventually lifts. Seeing people in close proximity on programmes on tv has actually felt a little odd and uncomfortable to us at times, and we’re still only at the start of all this. So when we do all start mixing again, I suspect it might all feel a little anxious initially.

    So you love being at home, and your missus can't stand it?  
  • The air quality is definitely better, there's a lovely waft of fresh manure over Mottingham this morning. 
  • Now if you asked my wife this question (I asked her this the other day actually) and the answer surprised me...

    Apparenty I've stopped moaning.  Hard to believe I know but apparently true.

    I think this whole situation makes you appeciate everything so much more.

  • JohnBoyUK said:
    Now if you asked my wife this question (I asked her this the other day actually) and the answer surprised me...

    Apparenty I've stopped moaning.  Hard to believe I know but apparently true.

    I think this whole situation makes you appeciate everything so much more.

    You'd certainly hope that people will come out of this with a better sense of perspective
  • I found out my wife was made redundant from her job at Woolworths.
  • You'd certainly hope that people will come out of this with a better sense of perspective
    Not sure, once you’ve stabbed an old lady in the co op over a tin of chopped tomatoes there isn’t really any going back
  • I found out my wife was made redundant from her job at Woolworths.
    This must be the 10th time I have seen this on here. 

  • I know. My parents do that and I'm always flabbergasted. I've always put leftovers in the fridge for my lunches. I also serve small portions saying that everyone can have seconds but must eat what they take. This means that all leftovers are left in the pan, pot or oven rather than on someone's plate.

    All peelings or leaves go to the rabbits or compost.

    Only tea bags and nut shells go in the bin. Nothing else.
    Tea bags make good compost, better still if you give them a tear to help the process along.  Coffee grounds also good and plain cardboard like toilet roll tubes and egg boxes.  Don't like to brag, but I have two compost heaps one of which I distributed yesterday - not a teabag or piece of cardboard in sight.  
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  • Hmmmm. Tea leaves are ok. I've always frowned on tea bags. Does the bag decompose well?
  • How brilliant the Madagascar sequence of cartoons actually is, and not crap at all as I mistakenly believed previously. It gets better and better each time I watch it.
    I can highly recommend the Shreks  too
  • Hmmmm. Tea leaves are ok. I've always frowned on tea bags. Does the bag decompose well?
    Depends ........ if it's a traditional paper teabag, of course. Tea leaves and coffee grounds are high in nitrogen, so good to add to the compost heap.

    Beware, some teabags today are synthetic, so made from some form of plastic I suppose. Some of the popular brands, like PG Tips pyramid teabags are synthetic, so not good to add to to the compost heap - unless anyone knows different?


  • A number of teabag brands still contain polyprolylene (plastic!) but PG and Co-op have both changed in recent months to be compostable.
  • Hmmmm. Tea leaves are ok. I've always frowned on tea bags. Does the bag decompose well?
    Nothing wrong with Tea Bagging.
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  • It is quite nice to be able to walk in the middle of the road. No dog poo there.
  • yesterday I left the house/garden for the first time for over two weeks for a prearranged medication pick up. Took the car, roads were pretty much empty.
    10.30 in the morning going along a straight stretch, nice houses one side, fields on the other, as bold as brass a fox strolled across the road 30/40 yards in front of me, strolled mind you, not rushed at all. When it got to the pavement it gave me an 'oh yeah look' and disappeared into the garden of one of the houses. A nocturnal animal out of hiding and not concerned at all. Rare sight even round here in semi rural land. 

     My highlight of what has been a pretty mediocre and mundane week ((:>)
  • Numbers said:
    Before all this lark, my main aim was to be able to one day not work/be at home etc.
    I started to think I was wrong and wouldn’t like that, but being cooped up is the main problem. 
    I can find a lot of things to do, but ah DIY shops are shut, no sport, can’t visit people, can’t get different supplies to do anything. 
    I’m running everyday but drinking more. I’m worried about the long term effects of all this. Not just for me, but for  society and economically. 
    We'll all balloon in weight and the off licences will all become millionaires.
  • I am cooking more meals from scratch in a week than I used to do in a month.
  • My job.
    I feel so lucky to have a job to go to. I've been off on annual leave since the lockdown began. I go back to work on Monday night in A&E. Whilst I've been off I keep getting updates from my colleagues on a closed WhatsApp group. I am missing being there, but can't say I'm not nervous. There are so many people going through hell, physically, emotionally and financially,  so I'm a lucky one at this time. Looking forward to getting back to doing my job. 
    Thank-you.
  • SX_Addick said:
    Appreciate ‘Big Shed’. My pub at the bottom of the garden. At least we’ve got somewhere to go for a night out. 
    Quality mate - looks great. The Diet Coke has go to go though.
  • yesterday I left the house/garden for the first time for over two weeks for a prearranged medication pick up. Took the car, roads were pretty much empty.
    10.30 in the morning going along a straight stretch, nice houses one side, fields on the other, as bold as brass a fox strolled across the road 30/40 yards in front of me, strolled mind you, not rushed at all. When it got to the pavement it gave me an 'oh yeah look' and disappeared into the garden of one of the houses. A nocturnal animal out of hiding and not concerned at all. Rare sight even round here in semi rural land. 

     My highlight of what has been a pretty mediocre and mundane week ((:>)
    You should have run the lairy little dick over
  • Quality mate - looks great. The Diet Coke has go to go though.
    It goes with the JD apparently. 
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