Sugarlump 75 miles is nothing!!! Hubby 105 km to go to his dialysis clinic 3 times a week for 6 years ( that's one way - 206km return) The dialysis unit where we did the training for home hemo is 6 hours drive away!!!Here's a picture of the ATV we bought today. It was almost dark when I took the picture so I had to lighten it.
See I think 20 miles to go to the supermarket is a long way!!! Everything in England is dinky in comparison!I have never ever driven 6 hours anywhere would probably end up in the sea if I did!!!!
Fortunately my daughter is bilingual and came with me to the sessions . The dialysis tech's only English was yes, no and come on baby! Not a lot of help in a dialysis setting!!!She lives in Clermont-Ferrand which was a wicked city to visit. I love France. Everything about it. Especially the food and drink.Proudly climbed to the top of Puy-de-Dome (1650m) day after dialysis! my french not fantastic but can get by with a "Parlez vous anglais?" and smile sweetly!!!!
I think the worst thing about the distances in the US was being a kid with a dad who didn't ever want to stop when we were headed somewhere on vacation. Northern Michigan to Southern Texas, 1800 miles, leave one morning, get there the next afternoon, no motel stops. The floor of the backseat of the station wagon just isn't that great for sleeping - remember the hump in the middle?For those of you in the UK - that's like the distance from Calais to Istanbul - in a day trip. And my dad would brag about it......"Left at 6 am and made it before lunchtime, even with having to stop to let the kids pee!" If he could have convinced my Mom to put a porta-potty in the back and make everyone just crawl over the seats, he would have.
Quote from: Sugarlump on April 04, 2011, 11:32:22 AMFortunately my daughter is bilingual and came with me to the sessions . The dialysis tech's only English was yes, no and come on baby! Not a lot of help in a dialysis setting!!!She lives in Clermont-Ferrand which was a wicked city to visit. I love France. Everything about it. Especially the food and drink.Proudly climbed to the top of Puy-de-Dome (1650m) day after dialysis! my french not fantastic but can get by with a "Parlez vous anglais?" and smile sweetly!!!! You brought back lovely memories. I spent a year in Vichy at a language school which was under the control of the University of Clermont-Ferrand. And we also SAW the Puy-de-Dome. Why did you call Clermont-Ferrand a 'wicked city to visit'. I found it quite quiet.
Sugarlump 75 miles is nothing!!!
But the bad news is creatinine raised to 163, Biopsy number 3 Monday week. Ugh!
Urgh! Lemon coke is nasty!
Quote from: del on April 05, 2011, 03:46:53 PMSugarlump 75 miles is nothing!!! *chuckles* ... when you live on an over-populated island with too-many drivers using too-rubbishy roads, 75 miles is everything! The road Sugarlump has to use is one of the worst in England for congestion, busy-ness and stupid lorries (trucks) who think it's okay to overtake another lorry going at the same speed, thus causing tailbacks for about five miles. One day traffic in the UK will come to a complete standstill because they'll be too many drivers and too few roads (and nowhere to create new ones)!And it doesn't help when the local bus company are cutting bus routes, and making bus journeys more expensive (but that's another rant, for another day ... ho-hum!)I am ill. Give me *huggles* ...*grin*
Quote from: Poppylicious on April 07, 2011, 08:16:06 AMUrgh! Lemon coke is nasty! It's a reference to Blanche in Streetcar. She drinks them, but I think we are meant to understand that she is really indifferent to them, they are just a convenient carrier for the liquor.
Ever read the kid's book The Pushcart War?
Describe the cream cake so I can lust after it without any calories.....mmmmmmmmmmmmmm
details taste shape colour cream etc mmmmmmmmmm feed my fantasy please say chocolate!!!!