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StreetCowboy

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Posts posted by StreetCowboy

  1. 11 minutes ago, Keeps said:

    Johnny Marr from the Smiths is pretty good. Does a very good cover version of one of their own songs aswell

     

     

    I've got friends, relatives and acquaintances that will be after my life for this, but that is dross - its (edit: almost) worse than the Gallachers

     

    To suggest that this was comparable to Bruce Dickinson -- who did not make my suggested top three -Well - I don't know what to say.  It's not exactly a Tony Lomi riff.

     

    • Confused 1
  2. On 12/30/2023 at 6:13 PM, advancebooking said:

    I used to drive fast here when there was no traffic on the road but now keep under the limit as Thai drivers a unpredictable. 

     

    Recently I was nearly killed walking fast across a zebra crossing. It was a small crossing really close to my kids school. Actually a car on the left side was trying to turn right and I walked fast across the zebra crossing behind that car. Suddenly a pickup truck was speeding very fast and I nearly accidentally walked in front of it. It could have been a school kid killed. The idiot was driving so fast. 

     

    I just read on the news re a Brit who was hit by a motorcycle on the road in Pats. 

     

    This can happen to any of us. Its very important to be careful walking on the roads in Thailand. 

     

    Happy new yr to you all.  

    People get killed in road accidents all over the world.
    The risks are higher in some places than in others, and at some junctions than others.
    I don't want to sound Woke, but its always good to look both ways.

  3. 7 minutes ago, flyingtlger said:

    No.....Are you drunk?

     

    image.png.1d7411377c13b50fcb13c48952263f32.png

    Seems like a bit of a non sequitor.

    Is it after midnight?

     

    I'd kind of hoped (poor grammar - but that's what old people had to cope with...) that people would have offered up their favourite guitarists.  Maybe I've noted them all. 

     

    It's only fair to warn you that Youtube has offered me The Nolans next up.   

    • Haha 1
  4. 5 minutes ago, xylophone said:

    Being woken up at 3 am and more often on a daily basis is THAT BAD as far as I am concerned and I am certainly not going to take drugs to counter the wailings of 2 wild cats.......paracetamol it will be as it is toxic to those wild, wailing and indiscriminate killers.

    You can kill yourself or kill the planet.  Close your windows and turn on the air conditioning.  Although if you went the other way where you would go.   Whatever.

    • Confused 1
  5. 10 minutes ago, xylophone said:

    All windows closed and aircon on.......the next move is cat food mixed with paracetamol.

    I don't know if you've ever been woken up in the morning, but it starts with the birds going "Hawey! Hawey!", and just as you're getting used to that, the Imam starts off "Helloooo Gasgoooow", and as your fumbling for the Yellow Pages and looking for snipers' rifles, he's off on "andyecannaebuythatheer"

    You can suffer in stoic silence, or complain pointlessly to yourself.  

    • Confused 1
  6. 4 minutes ago, xylophone said:

    All windows closed and aircon on.......the next move is cat food mixed with paracetamol.

    Calm down, man - it's not that bad!

    Start off dosing yourself on Tramadol

  7. I think there is an argument against eating predators that concentrate toxic material from their prey, and in turn from their prey's fodder.  It's also uneconomic to eat third-hand nutrition.

    There is also a strong argument against eating animals that are as hard to catch as cats.  Better to eat the dogs, who are better at catching the cats.  Though I don't know why she swallowed a fly... 

    • Love It 1
    • Haha 1
  8. 8 minutes ago, Chomper Higgot said:

     

    ...

     

    I don’t ride at night.

     

    I am not sure whether you are more visible with good lights in the dark, or no lights during the day, and probably less visible with no lights (or even with lights) at dusk.

     

    I can see why you might prefer not to ride at night, but its better than pushing your bike home, and I'm in no fit state for walking.
     

     

    • Haha 1
  9. 1 minute ago, Chomper Higgot said:

    CatEye lights don’t extinguish between flashes.

     

     

    There are all sorts of flashing patterns.
    My absolute top number one favourite was the Cateye rear rack mounted AAA light with a flickering always-at-least-one-on pattern; it was vibration sensitive, and came on if you were moving, and it was dark (so they said) and the batteries lasted for ever.  Sadly, the product is no longer available.  My Moon Nebula have several patterns, one as described, and one Bright Highway Flashing, which will let every traffic copper from here to Arkansas know you are on the highway, but is good for making people aware of your presence in advance for a modest battery consumption.

    Maybe I should practice cycling home from the pub with my eyes closed, as practice for if my lights ever fail. 

    • Haha 1
  10. On 1/8/2024 at 1:05 PM, xylophone said:

    Hmm......you have talking birds at your place!!! 

     

    On a serious note, I'm thinking of getting some of these to put along a wall which runs outside of my apartment, because for some unknown reason a couple of large cats seem to like walking along the top of this wall and at 3 AM in the morning they make a hell of a din with their meowing, and I have been woken up many times by this noise, and I have to do something about it, and this could be the first effort. 

    Close your windows an run your air conditioning.

    • Confused 1
  11. By way of possible digression - what do you carry on your bike?
    I have four bikes:

    1 Road bike for long rides on a Sunday
    2 Shopping bike for commuting, and - possibly obviously - shopping
    3 Inherited lady's folding bike (very wide size range, so quite comfortable)
    4 Mountain bike - a little bit too small, my first bike which the shop was keen to sell me, it's OK with the seat post over-extended, and it really is a nice bike

    On 1 &  2 I have frame pump, top-tube bag with a multi-tool, inner tube, tyre levers, tube patches.
    On 1 & 2 I have front and rear rechargeable lights, on 2 I have emergency battery lights front and rear. Also battery lights front and rear on 3 & 4
    On 2, 3 and 4 I have a rear rack
    On 2 & 3 I have a front basket.
    On 1, I have a compass on the handlebar.
    I am remiss that the rear reflector has broken off the rear of 1, but all bikes should have front and rear reflectors, and pedal reflectors. I see I am also remiss on reflectors for 3 & 4, and the basket would obstruct the front reflector.
    I have a Cateye speedometer and sensor on 1 and 2.

    When it comes to lights, I would recommend carrying some AAA / CR2032 battery lights, because your rechargeables could cut out at any time - they do not fade like alkali batteries, but you can always replace your AAA batteries at 7-11 or any garage for a few baht.  And unlike rechargeables, they last a very long time when not in use.

     

     

  12. 1. I don't think daytime flashing lights will be a problem for other road users during daylight.  I agree that flashing lights at night are a distraction and confusion.  I get annoyed by trucks with flashing lights; they are big enough that they are easily seen, and if someone unobservant drives into the back of a truck, who cares? - that's their lookout. Thank goodness they didn't collide with anyone else.  
    It's hard to judge the distance of flashing lights, but when judging the distance matters, I hope that car drivers can see the cyclist during the day.  The flashing light is there to warn them well in advance - there is a cyclist about.
    2.  Lights are really important at night.   All my cycling is either to the pub, or from the pub, and I don't want to be cycling home dark in the dark, so I am sparing with my lights during the day.
    3.  Motorists get upset if you go through the tunnel with no lights, despite the tunnel being well-lit, so I normally put my rear light on flashing for the tunnel
    4. Actually pulsing - at night, flashing lights disappear when they are off, and multiple flashing lights are just baffling, so I have my rear light showing steady, with bright pulses.  When I am cycling home from work at dusk, I will put my front light on flashing until it is more dark than light, and then on steady.

    5. The front light battery on my road bike disturbs the compass on my handlebars, so if we are off into the boondocks I take the light off and put it in my top-tube bag; otherwise, my lights live on the bike except when they are charging. 
    6. I sometimes put my lights on flashing for riding on the Highways, depending on whether I think the traffic or arrest is the greater risk.  

    I'd quite like to have indicators on my bike, as I feel somewhat hypocritical shouting "Signal!" at the people who turn across me.

  13. A few weeks back I took our new members to The Great Wall of Rawang - where, you might remember, last St Rongbows’ Day, our melon-scrumping excursion might have ended in miserable disappointment had not our return route passed by Sungai Buloh Pasar Segi.
    IMG_3496.thumb.jpeg.cb19fa6ddd330932f38af8e13e33b14b.jpeg
    As before, the road is closed by an easily-circumvented barrier, and I was pleasantly surprised how far the road remained in good condition, and how much downhill we encountered.

    Beyond the last track into the plantation, the road has deteriorated somewhat

    IMG_4781.jpeg.9a34c6ccb354ecfdda4627cf497dc2ea.jpegIMG_4779.jpeg.6a4c85b35b7f0dfc6706e0cd14b91225.jpeg

    though the views remain spectacular.

    IMG_4776.jpeg.2b9cd259afda7838bf370837d4a52002.jpeg

    The ride is made painfully hazardous by hanging prickly slender creepers which look benignly harmless, but have the smallest, sharpest thorns I have ever encountered. My gloves and shirt are quite torn to holes, and the first indication that the thorns were fractionally longer than I had first thought was the blood oozing through my torn glove.

     I took a tumble over a log hidden in the leaf debris, and walked down the descent to The Great Wall.  With four of us, it was easier to pass the bikes over the wall and across the ditch - certainly easier than going back through the thorns.

    Back in the day, we would merrily sail down the far side towards the cement works, but this time we erred on the side of caution.  The traffic was lighter (i.e. faster) than last time, but we put trepidation to one side and strode into middle of the road - it was as we were cresting the hill on way home that I remembered we had a choice of alternative routes turning left at the cement works - including but not limited to the North South Highway, where cycling is statutorily banned.

    I’m not anxious to repeat that route, not without a machete.

     

    • Like 2
  14. 1 hour ago, Yellowtail said:

    No, a scale will not help you lose weight. 

    On one of my groups, it is normal to post a banana for scale.  There are also tablets that you can use for scale.  Fish or snakes may give you advice on scales.

     

    When it comes to losing weight, I would recommend either the slow way - transcontinental hitch-hiking; or the quick way - traumatic hospitalisation.


    A serious drinking habit can help you lose hundreds of pounds in a single evening.

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