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Nigello

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Everything posted by Nigello

  1. Maybe this is the way to go? Trialling free public transport in some German cities to combat pollution. I think it is acceptable on a small scale, such as hopper buses (ideally electric) to take people from pinch points to larger stations or points of interest but I would hate to add to the crowdedness and sometimes unpleasantness of the daily commute. We'd all do a bit better if we walked more. Sitting on a bus going nowhere is no fun and walking liberates you and sometimes is only marginally slower. In the meantime, the Mayor ought to do more to fine engine idlers. The problem is endemic and I have never seen a police officer or warden or PSO asking drivers (often of diesel vehicles like vans, lorries and taxis) to turn off their engines. (I try, but it's not much fun being sworn at by selfish morons.)
  2. Our friendly, neighbourhood pavement contractors have left five - yes, five - of those raised covers/gangways strewn outside the bus stop, dry cleaner's and PO. Watch your step!
  3. I also noticed the lack of traffic and was pleased, especially since half term was last week. Still not surprised at the big amount of traffic at school opening/closing times, though and glad I am a pedestrian and not a driver.
  4. Goose Green
  5. It looked a bit fuller than a normal rat and had that golden/yellow tinge to its coat. I was too far away to see its tail in de-tail....
  6. https://ptes.org/get-informed/facts-figures/water-vole/ Is this what you sawy? I saw something like this a couple of weeks ago on the pond bank. "Status & conservation Native and locally common but vulnerable to extinction in the UK. They are a priority species in the UK Biodiversity Action Plan. A reintroduction programme is currently underway as well as our new National Water Vole Monitoring Programme. Water voles are fully protected under section 9 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981(as amended). Schedule 5 of this Act makes it an offence to intentionally damage or obstruct access to water vole burrows."
  7. https://earth911.com/living-well-being/events-entertainement/balloons-environment/ Some people don't like helium balloons.....
  8. I saw a large rat - about 12" nose-to-tail - at the pond in Peckham Rye Park. It was a golden colour, not dark brown, which struck me as odd.
  9. Tacks
  10. Tall
  11. You win first prize for common sense and the manager/server comes a close second.
  12. Rod
  13. Kills
  14. Plenty of blackbirds and the odd magpie picking off the shrivelled crabapples near Goodrich School and - strangely - inch-long caterpillars that coil up when touched in the house. What could they be? (I put them outside thinking they must have come in on shoes, etc.)
  15. POUS - I totally disagree. The best behaviour in places like London is neutral behaviour when it comes to public space (including your front yard). When you've had a crowded bus/train journey with inconsiderate people listening to convos on loudspeakers, stuffing litter down the back of the seats, then you step out onto dog muck and have to walk in the road because bins are blocking the route, you realise that it is not "twitchy-curtains" at all. I really believe that everyone should be as considerate as they can be and shoulder-shrugging and saying "hey, this is London" means you are racing to the bottom with little chance of return. I would have thought that "community spirit" means being aware of such problems and doing one's best to avoid them or put them right.
  16. There is nothing wrong in being concerned about the ugliness of one's environment. I am bothered by the bins because they are ugly and also because they cause micro-annoyances, like having to walk in the road in an area of busy footfall, and because they attract other litter (with folk stacking stuff around them thinking they are not littering because they have put their trash near rather than in a bin). Other people's anti-socialness and selfishness is also annoying and should be challenged. I get that it is not a huge deal in the scheme of things but that shouldn't stop people from trying to make micro-improvements to their immediate environment.
  17. So, we're mainly agreed that bins on the pavement with no good reason is a bad thing. The only way forward is to put roll them back over the threshold (though I have sent Cllr Barber a link to this thread) and/or ask your neighbours to keep them in the right place.
  18. My gripe is that they are likely to cause obstruction which, on certain roads at certain times, could make an accident more likely to happen. I also think they look really ugly and could encourage tipping and littering. (One of the brown bins, meant for garden waste, is full of any old rubbish and it has no lid.) Again, if this is you - please put the bin back in the yard/garden!
  19. Binmen (I have yet to see a female binperson) do not always put them back. In and around Goodrich, they are nearly always left on the pavement. Perhaps certain routes are busier and the time allotted is not enough or perhaps they simply CBA.
  20. ..why are there so many of our ugly bins stored outside gardens and on the pavement? Some householders are simply choosing not to make room for them and the result is an eyesore. If you have a bin that can be housed in your property, please do so. Young children, parents and assorted pets are having to fight for space, some of them going into the road, which can get pretty busy during the school run hours.
  21. A fair few of the newly-painted double yellows are not finished because the bar at the end has not been painted on. I phone the number on the A4 sheet attached to lampposts and got a text (requested) reply saying that the council is aware and that they will be finished anon. In the meantime, does it mean you can park on them because they are not finished and not get fined?
  22. I am pleased that Southwark is going to enforce the rule, but much more disappointed that it was not the done thing beforehand - because I take it that the law was there all along, not the enforcement. For the message to get through there has to be consistency, in each and every borough (or, ideally, across the UK). Can you imagine if only certain police forces enforced laws against going through a red light or parking on yellow line? The result would be a lack of respect for the law. So, unless all boroughs/all of the UK gets with it, people will more likely ignore the law.
  23. PS I had to walk a fair distance today because the buses I need to take were not running along the route I wanted because of the fun (for some) run in and around east central London. I like walking, so I walked to where I needed to be. As I walked I witnessed four vans/lorries (all associated with the running of the said event) with their engines idling. I asked drivers of all four to switch off, politely but not greasily (because they were in the wrong to idle, not me to ask) and all four switched off. Perhaps the fact they were wearing hi-vis and had firm names and phone numbers on their vehicles informed their decision to switch off.
  24. I wrote to Caroline Pidgeon, GLA member and transport point-person, asking her to ask Mayor K about the powers that traffic wardens and police officers have to stop people idling their engines and about whether they can or should (if they have the powers) fine those who are idling. It took ages to get a reply, and even then it was not one to Caroline but to another GLA member (Labour, I think) which did not answer my question at all. I still do not know whether traffic wardens and/or police have the power to fine those people who idle their engines but I do know that the Mayor/GLA will continue to work towards...etc. etc. (It also mentioned "education" and that phrase or word that is to do with when you have a set piece "show" to describe best practice, usually in front of lots of officials, local press and press-ganged shool children.) So, I do not have faith in Mr Mayor because I get the impression that laws to fine exist but that he/his people prefer the carrot to the stick. If I am wrong, please correct me, but provide evidence.
  25. Conway once left barriers for ages around a trea near my house and I complained directly to the firm. I told them I would send a copy of correspondence to my councillor and MP. The barriers were gone quickly.
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