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Hi Jon! Long time no speak!!!

Love the flat - where are you, your not in Notts are you? WOW if you are then we can meet up I'm in Derbyshire!

Love the dryer!

Be careful with counter top dishwashers there are lots of rubbish ones out there - the Swan / Kenwood ones are awful!

Have a Bosch myself, well had one but may have broken it!

xxx
 
Cheers Liam - the oven is a bit of a bugger but tbh we've got used to it's quirks now and have adapted to it. Course you are welcome anytime :-)

Jim - ah, unfortunately we only have a cheap supermarket-brand matching toaster and kettle set - though if you look in reply 21 you can see the teapot under the boiler next to the water filter - handily placed next to the kettle and sugar and tea caddies. No tea cosies needed in this house - my flatmate and I drink it like water. Admittedly I do use teabags even in the pot, bit of a faux pas really but as long as you don't tell the guests nobody knows better ;-). You may have also noticed the vodka bottle next to the kettle - let me clarify now that I am not the sort to spike the vicars tea :).

Jon
 
Oh Jon thats great news! We will have to get together for alittle wash in sometime!

Have you been on the Robin Hood experience yet - its so funny!

I am going to be between Derbyshire and the SOuth from September - hopefully to become Dr Sparkle!
 
Is that the place near the castle with the Robin Hood ride? If so my grandma took us there when I was about 8 lol. I also the caves under the Broad Marsh centre quite bizarre!

Jon
 
Hi Jon, I belong to an Anglican parish here but have never spiked the vicar's tea. ;) Besides most of the clergy here are hooked on coffee. The term "vicar" here is used to denote the head clergyman/woman of a "mission" congregation, i.e. one that is not self-supporting and which receives financial support from the diocese. The two most common reasons for mission status are:

1. parish in a newly developed area which is still trying to grow and get on its own two feet

2. parish in an area that is becoming lower income, with middle class moving out, and thus seeing a decline in its tithing revenues.

Churches here do not receive state funding, nor is there a payroll withhold tax that goes to one's church, as in the case in many European countries (Germany, Italy, Sweden, etc.). All donations are voluntary, but ARE tax-deductible up to a limit (I think it's like 40 or 50% of one's income). Say someone earns $100K per annum but donates $10K to registered charities (one's parish, Red Cross, Cancer Fund, whatever). The taxable income will be only $90K and the last $10K would avoid taxation.

It is not uncommon here to see people who donate 5-10% of their annual income to various charities, including churches, but then again it's interesting how the tax regulations bring out the generosity in so many people. ;) Very wealthy people, who still have lots of money left over after donations, often donate much larger % amounts, 20-40% or more.

The result for a particular parish here is that its financial fortunes hinge largely on the size and prosperity of its congregation. The bishop can help fund a financially distressed parish if he/she (yes, we have female Anglican bishops here....the Los Angeles diocese has two women Suffragan Bishops) wishes to keep a church presence in the area, and such parishes revert to "mission" status. I believe in this situation that the bishop can directly make hiring decisions re: clergy, whereas in a parish this is the decision of the Vestry.

PS when I have asked in the past WHY the tea kettle HAS to be Russell Hobbs, the answer is always "because it's Russell Hobbs." Um, yeah, right. ;) The other amusing aspect is when relatives from the UK visit here and whinge about how slow our tea kettles are....forgetting that we are cooking with 120V and not 240V (i.e. 1500-1800 Watts rather than 3000 Watts). Their "only the UK knows how to do things right" attitude is actually the result of their poor education in Basic Physics.

PS#2 I have a relative in London who is a physician who still insists that Nobel Prize winner James Watson was British (despite having been born in Chicago to American parents). His co-winner and collaborator Francis Crick WAS British, but my cousin is convinced that Mother England has a monopoly on the structure of DNA.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_D._Watson

Disclaimer: while Anglican churches in USA respect the Archbishop of Canterbury as head of the worldwide Anglican Communion, HM The Queen is NOT the legal head of the church here (and prayers for the Royal Family have been purposefully deleted from the American version of the Book of Common Prayer). This was necessary after the Revolutionary War in order to save the many existing Anglican parishes from extinction. For one, clergy had had (pre-war) to make loyalty oaths to the King, and any faith that regarded the British monarch as its head would not have long to survive. The 39 Articles were re-written to omit royal references. The newly independent church was rechristened The Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States (today: The Episcopal Church) and eventually was admitted into the Anglican Communion (remember, this was new territory for the Church of England, the first time a colony had rebelled successfully, so there was no procedure of what do to if they had many parishes in a newly independent country). On major occasions, HM is invited as an honorary guest to cut ribbons and open things. For example, when construction was completed on Washington's National (Episcopal) Cathedral, HM cut the ribbon and dedicated the completed structure. (no one asked her what she thought of the Darth Vader gargoyles carved into one of the columns....).

The article gives details of HM's 1977 dedication visit

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Cathedral

[this post was last edited: 8/11/2010-14:48]

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Liam

Hi Liam.

Hope your well. Where in Manchester did you live?. I left Manchester 4 years ago to live with my partner in Royton.

The only thing I miss about Manchester is the buses on hyde road, and, when I use to go out with my mate, getting the last bus home at 0245hrs for £2.50.

Royton out in the sticks, last bus back from Manchester is 2305.

Take care

Paul
 
"Their "only the UK knows how to do things right" attitude is actually the result of their poor education in Basic Physics"

I actually have a huge problem with this comment. That's the equivalent of me saying (in response to your post) "in typical american fashion, you are generalising British people as tea-slugging, pompous know-it-all's" which is, of course, not the case, but I wouldn't post a comment like that knowing how many american people are on this forum and knowing what a ridiculous generalistic comment it is. Maybe think twice before tarring the whole of the british population with the same brush on a forum with a large number of british members next time.

On a final note, Jon was joking with his post, so your response was incredibly unnecessary.
 
^ok, yes I might have read too much into your post, I apologies. I'm slightly frustrated and totally took that the wrong way.

Just for reference, I've never owned a tea pot in my life :P
 
PassatDoc your response seems to be very passionate, however I have had to re-read the thread in case I missed something, was all that post just from Jon joking that he is going to spike the vicars tea with vodka? Or have I in fact missed something?

As for the kettle thing, well if your used to something boiling fast like we are here in the UK, you take it for granted and assume all kettles boil as fast. Not everyone thinks about vols and watts, rather they are just waiting for the kettle to boil and commenting on it.

As for the thing about British only knowing how to do things right, I am British and you can ask me any day of the week who makes the best engines and I will say AMERICANS! As will any of my family. We fell in love with American enginering living on an American Airforce Base.

Please do not tar us all with some colonial stiff upper lip, funny talking brush as you have done in your very long post. What ever steriotypes you see in the movies playing British bad guys, I can assure you that there are the rest of us, going about our normal daily lives without such complexes about how we are the only nation to know how to make things.
 
AquaCycle, I am afraid you have described the majority of my UK relatives better than we can....I know you haven't met them, but some really ARE more or less tea-drinking slugs. Many of them could be described fairly as whingers. Several of them hold honourary knighthoods and various OBE levels...are they pompous? Yeah, baby!

That said, nearly all UK visitors I meet here (other than my own relatives...) are kind and polite. Occasionally I'll get some bizarre questions (in particular, from Disney aficionados who think the locals are all Disneyland history experts---I've actually been asked whether I think "Space Mountain" is better in California or in Florida...) but then again US tourists must ask some idiotic questions too. I never ask anything more intrusive than street directions.

I simply seem to have been stuck with more than my fair share of bizarre UK relatives. If you met them, you'd understand. I visit Europe roughly once a year, but my last time in UK was long ago. When people ask why so long no time in UK (given that I have relatives there), I am tempted to say "If you knew them, you wouldn't ask that question" but I just give a rather nebulous answer like "well, they visit here in the winter, so I see them here."

Five minutes with my cousin R----- and you'd be climbing the walls, too---he fairly oozes pomposity.

PS: I have a set of Margaret Thatcher tea mugs, a gift from one set of the UK relatives. THIS WAS NOT A JOKE, they gave them to me in all seriousness. He was chair of the Tories in Kent at the time. (yes, I have had high tea inside the Conservative Club of Margate....what an experience. It was BYOGM: Bring Your Own Gas Mask, as protection against the cummulonimbus clouds of cigarette smoke).
 
Im completely lost......

could've sworn this thread was about Jon's new kitchen & new Beko machine, but since it's gone completely off topic i'll make it even worse.

Hi Paul,

I lived in 3 places whilst in Manchester (when i say Manchester i should really say Greater Manchester). First of all i was in Sharston, between Gatley and (sadly) Wythenshawe. It was actually quite a nice place. Had a Zanussi Jetsystem Excel Turbodry there (FJS1397W i believe).

Then moved into the City Centre and lived just behind Picadilly Station. Had integrated Teka appliances there, which i believe were Hoover/Candy but staggeringly never broke or burnt the appartment block down in the 6 months i was there.

Finally i bought my own place and moved out near where you are now. The house is on the Heywood/M62 side of Middleton. I rent it out now and am back down south, but i love my lil house, it's so well located for getting places, albeit not by public transport! May go back one day depending on how work pans out. The appliances that are left behind there and some that i brought back home with me are all Zanussi of varying ages. Can't get enough of Zanussi!

Liam
 
Liam

Hi Liam,

My God Wythenshawe,LOL. I use to live in Bramhall for quite some time, but split up with my partner.

Royton ok, bit bad for buses, but very quiet. I live on Broadway now.

Regards

Paul
 
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