Nickfromwales Posted Wednesday at 15:01 Posted Wednesday at 15:01 12 minutes ago, SteamyTea said: Not like the Dutch, they are allowed to put a finger in a dyke to stop the dribbling. So much more liberal. Oh Lordy 🤐
ToughButterCup Posted yesterday at 08:50 Author Posted yesterday at 08:50 17 hours ago, Nickfromwales said: That's a very big "no". And that, exactly that - is the point. I'd love to be challenged. The local paper can do with some relevant content. 50 meters away is a similar size pothole that has been filled with concrete. The repair is at least four years old. It's a beautiful neat job. Nobody was taken to task about that. ( A local business owner sorted it out quickly, quietly) It's stopped raining - if I get time I'll pop out and buy some quick-dry, and document the repair here. Up The Revolution Citizens! 3
SteamyTea Posted yesterday at 08:59 Posted yesterday at 08:59 6 minutes ago, ToughButterCup said: Up The Revolution Citizens One pothole at a time. 1 1
Nickfromwales Posted yesterday at 09:03 Posted yesterday at 09:03 3 minutes ago, SteamyTea said: One pothole at a time Gonna be a while….
Ferdinand Posted yesterday at 09:38 Posted yesterday at 09:38 19 hours ago, SteamyTea said: Is one allowed to repair a public asset without permission? It depends if anyone notices. Horse stiles need "repairing" by removal of the pieces that block wheelchairs. Sometimes.
Ferdinand Posted yesterday at 09:39 Posted yesterday at 09:39 18 hours ago, Nickfromwales said: Oh Lordy 🤐 The Dutch redo their streets on roughly a 30 year cycle. But they plan ahead, and invest, and have decent design standards, all of which are anathema in the UK. Here's a video an online friend made when his was done. 12 minutes.
jack Posted yesterday at 09:48 Posted yesterday at 09:48 7 minutes ago, Ferdinand said: The Dutch redo their streets on roughly a 30 year cycle. But they plan ahead, and invest, and have decent design standards, all of which are anathema in the UK. Here's a video an online friend made when his was done. 12 minutes. One of my kids lives in Amsterdam. The roads near where he lives are being redone. It's taken a year but you can really see the quality of the work.
SteamyTea Posted yesterday at 10:19 Posted yesterday at 10:19 (edited) 43 minutes ago, Ferdinand said: It depends if anyone notices. Horse stiles need "repairing" by removal of the pieces that block wheelchairs. Sometimes. I was with your old Mayor on Tuesday, he is a relative on mine. Did not mention your problems as he now deals with nuclear stuff. Was interesting as we had not seen each other since 1968. Edited yesterday at 10:21 by SteamyTea
ToughButterCup Posted 20 hours ago Author Posted 20 hours ago Right I'm going to photograph the 'repair' near our house. That'll take the wind out of the sails of local TutTuts if they so much as whimper.
Iceverge Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago 6 hours ago, ToughButterCup said: Nicely done. I wonder who could have done that. (Mk4 mondeo Titanium btw?
ToughButterCup Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago Who, @Iceverge indeed ? SEAT SummatOrOther. Designed - but not built - in The Fatherland. Only just forgiven them for the Emissions Scandal. ( A relative, Queen of QA at Mercedes , assures me the individuals concerned will never work in the automotive sector again) Post Mix bag bought, and dumped next to the hole. It's the next job after looking after Debbie's broken foot, pooped the dog and dropped the grandkids off at school . I'm quite excited at the naughtiness involved. No need for water is there if the puddle's already got water in it ....?
SteamyTea Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 6 minutes ago, ToughButterCup said: assures me the individuals concerned will never work in the automotive sector again That is a shame, we need more creative engineers, even misguided ones. 7 minutes ago, ToughButterCup said: No need for water is there if the puddle's already got water in it We tried filling a hole in the car park with Postcrete, was a water filled and it never set properly.
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