MagicaPractica
Alchemist
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2004
- Posts
- 20,069
Who wants a latte? I'm making one for myself.
Oooo, me, me! Thanks!
Got through the munchkin's dental work this morning. I'm ready for lunch.
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Who wants a latte? I'm making one for myself.
Oooo, me, me! Thanks!
Got through the munchkin's dental work this morning. I'm ready for lunch.
White Chocolate Mocha? Or just a plain latte (I'm afraid I don't have other flavors on hand...)
Plain is good for me. I always have cinnamon on hand to put on top.
Coffee needed, please.
I've just taken son-in-law and his drinking partner into Canterbury. My normal route has a closed road with a diversion in place. The diversion route is now closed because of flooding.
They are coming back by bus - they hope.
I need coffee!
'Yer Tiz, my friend.
I suspect you also hope they return by 'bus.
Coffee needed, please.
I've just taken son-in-law and his drinking partner into Canterbury. My normal route has a closed road with a diversion in place. The diversion route is now closed because of flooding.
The main road is closed for road works and now a burst water main. My alternate back road route is closed for a gas main replacement.
I went a long way round by major roads. On the outskirts of Canterbury there were temporary traffic lights for emergency gas pipe repairs but the lights had a long interval for a twenty yard blockage. The traffic, diverted from the other closed routes, was backed up in both directions.
Closer to Canterbury, the railway level crossing was closed and partially blocked by a disabled Alfa Romeo being loaded onto a recovery truck. A few yards beyond the level crossing, once it had opened, two vehicles had crashed on a small roundabout and were blocking the route I wanted to go down. I went a different way and dropped my passengers to walk the last 100 yards because it would be quicker than waiting for me to negotiate the traffic jam.
When I got through the traffic jam the only clear route had a sign - closed from 10pm to 3am for road works.
They are coming back by bus - they hope.
I need coffee!
What a mess! I thought it was bad here.
More coffee coming.
Here, have a latte. Full milk or fat-free? Would you like some sugar?
Full but no sugar, please.
Now back to writing. The Muses are getting antsy.
It's the school holidays. The authorities schedule all the road works for the time that children aren't at school.
It's the school holidays. The authorities schedule all the road works for the time that children aren't at school.
BUT - they don't coordinate the various utility contractors so several routes can be closed at the same time. A few weeks ago they announced that ALL the level crossings along one stretch of railway line would be closed for a whole weekend from 10 pm Friday to 7 am Monday. Apart from one bridge there would have been no way to cross the railway line...
...for 14 miles.
.
.
More coffee coming.
Apparently, there is some new concept that children are incapable of walking to school.
Oh Hell. I taught for 23 years and that entire time parents found it necessary to drive their tender darlings the few blocks it took to get them to school. I don't know what the problem was. Didn't the kiddies go to bed at a reasonable hour so they could get up in time to walk/bicycle to school? Was there a unreported rash of kidnapping going on that none of the rest of us heard about. Did they have a genuine fear of the Zombie Apocalypse? And when school was getting in and going home who do you think was expected to direct traffic so the fools wouldn't get run over? Uh-huh.

Forgive me, but I'll take the conversation serious for a moment here.
My parents never drove me to school until we moved to a cold climate where the winter weather made the walk a serious threat to my health. I suffered the results of mild frostbite for years.
In elementary school I walked several blocks to and from school. There were kids everywhere and we usually ended up walking in groups.
My wife walked our oldest the two blocks to school, but then when my second daughter started she left them to walk together. They were 6 and 5 at the time. About half way there they would pick up a group of friends and a few more steps they'd be in view of the crossing guards.
It sounds like VM and sharingfantasies see the same thing I see. What has changed since then that makes it more dangerous to walk to school? We actually have more protection for children now than we had then. Personally, I think it's a perception of dangers that don't exist--a sort of parenting paranoia, and maybe an unwillingness to depend on friends and neighbors.
Or perhaps not even knowing those neighbors? I work an hour from home and have only met my neighbors a few times, and not all of them. We keep very different hours.
I was never driven to school either. I'm not sure my mother even had a car when I was little.
Now, we live an eight minute drive to the school so it's unlikely my child will ever walk or even bike there but my husband hasn't even wanted her to ride the same school buses he did as a child because he's "seen what goes on."
But I still think children in a group should be able to walk back and forth to school as long as there are no major roads to cross. By ten, they should be riding a bike to school. I understand not wanting a child to walk alone. The ironic thing is that many of the children walked or rode their bike to the park, which was directly across from the school or to the market which WAS across a busy street. But they couldn't walk to school.![]()