I can see us building a full size cobby in the garden.

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Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
Because back then everything was better.Selezen wrote:Did you see last nihts news when an old guy noted with amusement that there was some serious weather in the 60s and the nation did not grind to a halt back then? Why does it happen now?
I wonder, though, how you—as a nation, not personallyDaddyHoggy wrote:When it comes to any weather other than 18degC, not too windy, not too wet, we give up - as a nation we're pathetic in this respect.
Because we had no H&S job's worth sucking his teeth in the background telling us we couldn'tCommander McLane wrote:Because back then everything was better.Selezen wrote:Did you see last nihts news when an old guy noted with amusement that there was some serious weather in the 60s and the nation did not grind to a halt back then? Why does it happen now?![]()
I wonder, though, how you—as a nation, not personallyDaddyHoggy wrote:When it comes to any weather other than 18degC, not too windy, not too wet, we give up - as a nation we're pathetic in this respect.—managed to conquer and rule the whole world, regardless of climate and whatnot?
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
Ah yes but notice how much more common it was that the British Empire was nearer the equator than the poles. Not much snow in the tropics.Commander McLane wrote:I wonder, though, how you—as a nation, not personally—managed to conquer and rule the whole world, regardless of climate and whatnot?
Because the overwhelming majority of people back then tended to live close to, or very close to, their places of work. We also had a very well-used, well-funded, publicly owned public transport system, which looked after itself and employed enough people to keep the network going when things got a little bit out of the ordinary. With the rise of the suburbs, and the huge boom in commuting by car, and with communities broken up and people shunted all over the country in search of work (especially down to the south-east of England, where a huge house-price bubble pushed low- to mid-range salaried workers a long, long way away from where they actually worked), we're now more dependent than ever before on long-range transport networks. In the 60s most of us would probably have lived close enough to our work to walk in, at a pinch.Selezen wrote:Did you see last nihts news when an old guy noted with amusement that there was some serious weather in the 60s and the nation did not grind to a halt back then? Why does it happen now?
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.