Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 226 Threads: 9
Reputation:
5
Location: Edinburgh/Lothians
Car type: Seven Special
Could it be that the Guardian tries to disguise itself as a newspaper for liberal thinking middle class types but is actually full of pinko jurnalists who typically went to grammar school then the LSE and convey a whif of 'do as I say' rather than 'do as I do'.
Readers may of course also take solus from persuading themselves they really are liberal middle class thinkers.
On the other hand the Daily Mail is full on in your face with an obvious agenda and probably the only thing most takers will read that day which is of course the very market the paper wants to influence.
Am I painting a caricature? Am I being too cynical?
Compare and Contrast. 2000 words on my desk by Friday please.
Of course many households/offices used to take many titles daily so readers were exposed to a much broader view.
Paul N-M
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 629 Threads: 19
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Location: Sheffield South Yorks
Car type: 1932 RN saloon
I am curious to know what is the newspaper without an “in your face”agenda and the allegedly hidden agenda of the Guardian. What is the point in reading a newspaper owned by the billionaire Barclay brothers or the delightful Mr R Murdoch? You are hardly likely to get an unbiased view from those 3. Perhaps this should have gone under the contribution “Are we Stoopid?
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,644 Threads: 93
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Location: Monmouthshire
As an unashamed Grauniad reading Seven/2CV owner, I think it is time to move on, or maybe take a few steps back, or at least to a stop lock in Cheshire, where Tim Leech operated.
The workshop contents were removed I think by Mike Cockrell, the towpath being accessible for 4w trailers reversed down from the cottages above the tunnel end. The submarine lathe story may or may not be true, was it a Boxford, a Myford or a pillar drill? There is a recovery involving hire boats, unknown to the hirers, which can be discussed in private as one sincerely hopes it is apocryphal. I have been promised pictures of the removal of a Petter PD4 from the side of the dry dock, involving scaffolding and Tirfor winches unless those involved in the operation do not wish to be recognised, either by their wives or their insurance companies.
Was Arthur Howard still with us in the late 80s? Whilst Taylors Yard was built by the Shropshire Union for maintenance and building of narrow boats and indeed wide beam carrying craft was the original intention, the use of the yard for building pleasure boats had gone on for a long time. These were both privately owned boats as referred to by Bruce, and the big mahogany River Dee trip boats, Bithell Boat as I recall, was the owner Ted? Arthur was a brilliant boatbuilder, and in the busy run up to the start of the season heavy handed narrow boat stranglers were sent to help Arthur. Steaming ash timbers, delicate copper riveting, working with thin hard wood planks, he was very good at showing how it should be done, and very patient with those wanting to observe and learn. David Jones was somewhere between Arthur's boss and his patron. Bruce, which boat was yours?
As for the list of pubs in Sandbach once famous for lock-ins, someone will have to explain to the younger forum users how, barely after Queen Victoria left the throne, pubs were meant to close in the afternoon. Right, before we find out how many Sevenists ever had a pint, or two, in the Commercial in Wheelock it's time to go back to the workshop.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,539 Threads: 61
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The lathe was recovered next day and after a liberal dose of duck oil and drying out was not much worse for it.
C
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,341 Threads: 34
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Location: Cheshire
Car type: Race Ulster, 1926 Special, 1927 Chummy, 1930 Box
25-03-2020, 08:05 PM
(This post was last modified: 25-03-2020, 08:20 PM by Alan.)
The Commercial in Wheelock. A weird pub with a strange landlord. Firstly he would decide if the pub was going to open that day, then he’d decide if he was going to serve you. Good beer though. Closed a couple of years back.
And the Cheshire Cheese on the other side of the bridge wasn’t bad either.
Alan Fairless
Joined: May 2018 Posts: 2,121 Threads: 111
Reputation:
22
Location: Llandrindod Wells
Car type: 29 Special, 30 RK, 28 C Cab
Hi All
Wasn’t completely truthful regarding my pub exploits in Cheshire in an earlier post but I had to be careful. My fathers aunt (my great aunt?) ran the Chequers in Sandbach and as a boy my father “holidayed” at the Kinderton Arms on the towpath near Middlewhich. Landlords were a close knit bunch as I found when returning home to be informed By Dad exactly which pub I’d visited as an underage drinker!
Cheers
Howard
Joined: Mar 2015 Posts: 5,465 Threads: 231
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Location: Scotchland
In 1992 my only car as a student was an RN saloon, I used to travel between Glasgow and Bristol each term in it to visit my parents.
It took about three days each way, the very first journey home I stayed with Tony and Anne Griffiths in Wardlow - a little off piste if you google a direct route! They looked after us very well and we are still in touch today - thank you.
Latterly I took a route to Westmoreland, then to through the Birkenhead Tunnel and on through places like Northwich, Middlewich and Nantwich. After this we would normally head towards Dave and Hillary Tedham's place near Bewdley and then on to Bristol the next day.
This was all before SatNav - we used a huge number of OS maps to keep us on the smallest roads - it was fabulous and I miss it greatly.
We were to do the very same route this summer in our 1926 Austin H 12/4 Clifton, to surprise my niece by taking her to the Grad. ball at the hotel and in the same car her mother got married in. This secret was divulged to her and my sister last week when it became clear to me that it was not going to happen just now.
Stay safe everyone.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,341 Threads: 34
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Location: Cheshire
Car type: Race Ulster, 1926 Special, 1927 Chummy, 1930 Box
The Bird in Hand closed down late 1990s I guess.
Alan Fairless