D
durhamplumber
..no LAL. To use your word,,she was a c,,,t....Was she the sensible one?
..no LAL. To use your word,,she was a c,,,t....Was she the sensible one?
Or maybe she had the sense to leave a 'union' only when necessary?she was a c,,,t....
They'll come in handy in your old age...I also have a pair of very expensive waterproof sailing shorts that I never wear
I love the French solution for that one...breathalizer for France - not actually needed and just sat under the seat in the motorhome.
That,,,is a serious death trap NO NOThe extension lead was a lead that had a three pin plug AT BOTH ENDS
Not me but my dad. Years ago when we moved into our first house with grass in the garden, my dad bought an electric lawnmower. It was a standard cylinder mower that had been converted to electric by bolting a washing machine motor onto it, fitting a couple of pulleys (one to the motor, one to the cylinder) with a fan belt connecting them together. There was no on/off switch but the weirdest thing was that the power cord came from the motor to a socket outlet that was mounted on the frame. The extension lead was a lead that had a three pin plug AT BOTH ENDS. He brought it home and told me to plug it in in the house, I warned him that the pins on the plug at his end would be live, he said something like “Don’t be effing stupid”, touched them and got thrown across the garden! He still used it for a while but remembered to plug the lawnmower end in first. Oh, and someone had to remain indoors to man the plug switch when it needed switching off.
The most 'odd' thing that was bought for me, though it is a very welcome addition, is a bomb release button from an Avro Lancaster Bomber.
It sits proudly on my lounge window ledge between four small models of Lancaster Bombers.