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Anti Ds We might be locked out of last thread,..but we will never be totally locked dow 👍

981 replies

Dowser · 01/08/2020 13:56

How did that happen?
Taking one for the team 👍

OP posts:
Thread gallery
12
countrygirl99 · 01/08/2020 20:38

@downer hens are so funny. We had some pak choi that was past it's best so I gave it to the girls. The older 2 are used to getting odd scraps and dived in. The new 3 are only used to commercial feeds and took a while to work out that it was ok to eat. I'm looking forward to them finding out about blackberries and elderberries. The older 2 always rush to the gate of their pen when I go out in the morning as there is always something as a treat even if it's just a bit of birdfood.

Littlebelina · 01/08/2020 20:38

Checking in, dd did an epic nappy that needed changing in a service station loo. One advantage to masks at least....

BogRollBOGOF · 01/08/2020 20:46

Lockdown and constant family life is pretty good for Covid Safe Sex. It's completely quenched my libido.

I wonder what percentage of babies concieved since March are first babies and how much decline there is in conception of siblings...

Dowser · 01/08/2020 20:46

@countrygirl99
I wish they would get more
There were 5 . Two speckled, one black and two brown..now just the brown and one speckled

OP posts:
Supermarketworker06 · 01/08/2020 21:00

[quote Dowser]@Supermarketworker06
You sound just like me
Love my grandkids to bits, I’d take a bullet for any of them[/quote]
Yep, me too. I quite often (in the good old days) had 3 of them in the school holidays, 1 7 year old and 2 6 year olds. They get on a treat and my grandson wants to have a playdate with the other two the minute the virus is gone. We have a marvellous time: paddling pool, tents made with sheets on the table, Lego challenge, dancing. (Oh the dancing, I'm a legend in that department!) And singing- my "Stick" song singing from Hey Dugee is the stuff of dreams (or nightmares, depending). If you want to find something to make you smile, Google it, it's hysterical.

Orangeblossom777 · 01/08/2020 21:05

York sounds quite similar to Bath then. We've got the roads closed and tables in the streets too. Feels quite continental when it's sunny. Bella and cafe rouge have closed for good I think. The independents here seem quite busy though some more than normal. A new thing is some people sitting out in front of the old houses and lots of exercising in the park and things like yoga from the trees. Botanical gardens changed much busier. People taking those camping chairs up there. Mums and babies etc.

countrygirl99 · 01/08/2020 21:14

@Dowser we have a speckled (Bhoona) and a brown (Bertha) that are the old ones. The new ones are a white (Melody), a grey (Harmony) and a brown and black (Rhapsody). The speckled makes s lot of noise and the brown one is a right bitch to the new ones though she is calming down now.

justasking111 · 01/08/2020 22:02

A maths question, according to worldometer the UK has had

303,952 cases of covid and 46,193 deaths. would I be right in working out the percentage of deaths to be 15.197% ??

IAintentDead · 01/08/2020 22:35

@justasking111

A maths question, according to worldometer the UK has had

303,952 cases of covid and 46,193 deaths. would I be right in working out the percentage of deaths to be 15.197% ??

Except that for the first 3 months, when the majority of these people died people were not being tested.

We didn't really start testing properly until May and the majority of the deaths were before that

amicissimma · 01/08/2020 22:45

justasking111, the maths is OK, but the 303,952 is the number of people who've tested positive, rather than the number of cases, and the 46,193 is the number of people who've either a) had Covid mentioned on their death certificates, regardless of whether or not that was what killed them, or, in some cases whether or not they had it, or b) ever tested positive for Covid, regardless of how they died.

So we don't really know what percentage of people who have Covid die of it.

IAintentDead · 01/08/2020 22:55

I'm working my way through the first AD thread.

It's great. (So glad I didn't know then where we would be now) - which is the first issue. If we had known then what we know now, how differently would we have behaved then.

Second .......... it's so bloody frustrating not being able to respond now to those threads then.

Well done the 4 or 5 (more) posters that are still here - great to see your names still here on a regular basis

Mrsfrumble · 01/08/2020 23:41

I think I might have posted on the 1st thread.... definitely missed a few though.

@DominaShantotto have the neighbours shut up yet? I thought we might be in for a night of it as we live very close to the Emirates stadium, but after a few hours of shouting, beeping horns and setting off random fireworks they seem to have shut up and gone home now. Maybe Arsenal fans have forgotten how to celebrate properly.

All this talk of butterscotch angel delight is giving me the munchies. Can you even still buy the stuff?

BogRollBOGOF · 01/08/2020 23:45

I used to love Butterscotch Angel Delight. My housemate and I used tò go down the student union shop and get our supplies in on a Wed pm when we had no lectures. We'd mix it up then sit there poised with our spoons waiting for the timer to ping and then shovel it down.

Sadly my tolerance to lactose isn't great and it just diesn't wirk with oat milk and goes sloppy and curdles.

I've got to page 20 of the original thread. 3 months on and it's still all true!

Ibake · 01/08/2020 23:46

@Mrsfrumble 55p! Now there's a product that must be all natural at that price!

www.tesco.com/groceries/en-GB/products/271247103

PickAChew · 01/08/2020 23:48

Yes, and it seems to cost the same as it did 30 years ago!
www.tesco.com/groceries/en-GB/products/271247103

PickAChew · 01/08/2020 23:49

Must try it with lactofree. Tell Ds2 it's cheesecake.

IAintentDead · 01/08/2020 23:51

I know Eid isn't always in the summer but FFS why can't we have a national celebratory holiday in the summer.

(Queens birthday and today Yorkshire Day and summer bank holiday aren't the same)

I do know it would always rain but WWWHHHYYYY are all our celebratory days in the autumn/winter.

We need a national BBQ day. If only to coordinate the 24 hour noise. I know whatever date we choose will immediately become the wettest summer day but at least we could try and have a national SUMMER DAY

TheOrchidKiller · 01/08/2020 23:56

I joined part-way through these threads -about thread 16 maybe. But I read them all from the start.

I've thought that they would make an interesting part of our history, if anyone decides to look back in years to come & wants to study how a bunch of us from all over, who don't know each other, got through covid.

I write for the Mass Observation Project. It started decades ago & asks "ordinary" people to write in with their thoughts & opinions & experiences of a variety of topics on life in the UK. If you read or watched Nella Last's War (with Victoria Wood) then Nella sent her diaries to Mass Observation as part of that.

Have a look on their website if you fancy it. They were looking for more contributors recently.

www.massobs.org.uk

Ibake · 02/08/2020 00:01

I was thinking the same thing @orchidkiller, a fascinating study of human behaviour. I'll look at that link, sounds interesting

BogRollBOGOF · 02/08/2020 00:03

Angel Delight serves 4??? 4??? Who are they trying to kid???

MaxNormal · 02/08/2020 00:12

@justasking111 current research indicates that the case fatality rate is 0.65%.
There was very little testing done initially so fatality rates are skewed very high.
There have now been various studies of sample populations carried out which gives a clearer picture.

HeIenaDove · 02/08/2020 01:07

HeIenaDove Sun 02-Aug-20 00:50:36
www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/01/mask-face-coverings-i-cant-wear-one-health-reasons

Mask rage: ‘One man told me I shouldn't be allowed out if I can't wear one’
With face coverings compulsory in many settings, people unable to comply for health reasons are being challenged and abused
In the past few weeks, Paul Feeley has been abused four times for not wearing a mask on public transport. “I have a disability lanyard, which signifies I have a hidden disability. I tried to show it … And all I got back was a complete torrent of abuse.”

The most recent incident took place just after he first spoke to the Observer on Thursday. The abuse has made Feeley, who suffers from fibromyalgia, borderline personality disorder and panic attacks, feel “extraordinarily angry, anxious and upset”. He is unable to wear a face covering due to his medical conditions, and legally he is exempt – but he is now worried about travelling on buses and trams in his home town of Manchester. “One man said to me, ‘If you can’t wear a mask, you shouldn’t be allowed out.’”

Incidents of “mask rage” are making disabled people who are unable to wear a covering fearful of going out in public, charities warn, as they call on the government today to raise awareness about the legitimate reasons many people cannot wear them.

A wide range of charities – including Mind, Dementia UK, the National Autistic Society, Mencap, Asthma UK and Sense – want the government to mount a public awareness campaign about hidden disabilities and the mask exemption rules. These state that, for example, you do not need to wear a face covering in shops or on public transport if you find it difficult because of a physical or mental illness or disability, or if you are assisting someone who relies on lip reading to communicate, or if wearing a mask would cause you “severe distress”.

You can feel like you’re being smothered and suffocated. If people understood, they would feel more empathy
Tim Nicholls, National Autistic Society
Charities are being inundated with calls from disabled people who are feeling extremely anxious. “We’ve seen a significant number of people raising it [the issue],” said Tim Nicholls, spokesperson for the National Autistic Society. “What they have told us is that they can’t wear a mask and they also don’t feel like they can go out without one because they will be challenged, so they are just going to stay in.”

Wearing a mask can be overwhelming for an autistic person, he added. “You can feel like you’re being smothered and suffocated. I think that if people understood, they would feel more empathy and sympathy.

Face masks can also be problematic for people living with learning disabilities and anxiety disorders, leading to extreme distress or panic attacks, the charities say. “If people aren’t able to wear a mask for health reasons, they may feel guilty and worry about what others think. Challenging or verbally assaulting someone [for not wearing a mask] is likely to negatively affect their mental health, set their recovery back and could even prevent them from leaving the house,” said Stephen Buckley, spokesperson for the mental health charity Mind.

‘It’s been a real rollercoaster’: navigating autism in the Covid-19 chaos
Read more
The government needs to do more to communicate the exemption rules, said Sarah MacFadyen, head of policy at Asthma UK and the British Lung Foundation. “There’s not a lot of clarity in the public communications about who does and doesn’t need to wear a mask, and why that is,” she said. “The government needs to communicate that better and explain the full range of reasons why some people – such as those with severe lung conditions – might find it impossible.”

The charities are also calling on supermarket chains and public transport companies to make announcements reminding people not to assume that anyone not wearing a mask is breaking the rules. “The government needs to lead the way, but it’s also about supermarkets, transport companies and other places where masks are needed, being confident about communicating that – and saying please don’t challenge anyone,” said Sarah White, of the disability charity Sense"

DominaShantotto · 02/08/2020 07:17

We had an incident locally where someone who couldn’t wear a mask was shoved out of the queue in Boots by another shopper because “ you shouldn’t be in here”

countrygirl99 · 02/08/2020 07:49

They had frequent messages in Sainsbury's yesterday reminding customers that some people can't wear masks.

PinkFondantFancy · 02/08/2020 08:02

@justasking111

Well as I was saying re: jelly. Mum used to add a little water to dissolve jelly, then whisk up carnation milk and make an amazing mousse type thing which we loved in rabbit form or any other.
I've only just caught up with this thread but I made this for my kids yesterday! Not in a rabbit mould Sad but it was absolutely fantastic!
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