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BigED

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  1. Provisionally taken. I'll confirm after collection.
  2. Sturdy stepladder, very stable - wider tgan most domestic stepladders but also heavier than aluminium ones. Free, collection only, SE23, Forest Hill.
  3. if it's any consolation, food waste bins went uncollected in our street in Forest Hill last week. The bin now seems to be a fly factory. Which is nice.
  4. If you can travel further afield you will get better food... Water House, Albion St, Rotherhithe (not as good as it used to be, but decent Hunanese menu) Sichuan Restaurant, Busby's Way, North Greenwich (next to Odeon cinema) Sichuan Grand, Gerry Raffles Square, Stratford (opposite Theatre Royal) Master Wei Xi'An, Cosmo Place, Bloombsbury (nr Russell Sq) - Shaanxi cuisine, lots of biang biang noodle dishes I've had mixed experiences of Wuli Wuli - very good and a bit rubbish, for the same dishes on different occasions. The only time i went to Silk Road, their only seafood option wasn't available and the non-meat dishes amounted to noodles, with a few fried onions. As I was there with a non-meat eater it didn't rate highly. My meat dishes were forgettable. And Dragon Castle near Elephant was mainly memorable for a Chinese customer racing to the door and vomiting copiously in the entrance. No idea if that was the food but that memory and the mediocre plates we ordered didn't warrant a second trip. One other place that is good is KaoSarn, Brixton Lane (in Brixton Market) - good and cheap Thai food. Excellent green papaya salad.
  5. They are building flats and/or town houses. I think they are only retaining the front on Silvester Road. A quick check of the Southwark Planning pages should give you all the details you need. Or at least, all that are available. The garage/workshop between the sorting office and what was an old corner shop is a separate property and belongs to neither the sorting office nor to the properties on the corner.
  6. The big drivers for pizza's world takeover: 1 - children love it (well, lots of them do) 2 - you can get away with poor table manners - seriously, who eats a whole pizza with a knife and fork 3 - the profit margins are huge - it's very cheap to produce so, provided you get enough customers, you can make a canny profit for relatively little outlay. (Ignoring set-up costs, refurbs, etc).
  7. I think you can still see the old name in the tiling over the awning - The Victory. It was SE22 Bar at the end of the 90s with good, affordable bar snacks. And then it became Franklin's and, though good, the prices pushed it well outside the casual cheap lunch option that I thought I was signing up for when I moved to ED. Little did I realise then how much more of this stuff there would be coming down the line. (I do like Franklin's bar nd still go there, but it is a bit pricey. Go on, admit it.)
  8. People living in LB Lewisham have had to pay for a brown bin garden waste collection for a couple of years now. Can't remember exactly how much- ?60-70, but it is only collected for part of the year (not much call from Nov to Feb, for example). People with low need for this service seem to: hide their garden waste in among their household waste / acquire Southwark paper garden waste bags and leave them in the street / use normal bin bags and dump it in the street / or, like our near neighbours, throw it over the fence into the alley - presumably on the basis that if THEY can't see their garden waste then it doesn't exist. Oh, and very occasionally, people load up their car and go to the tip. Lewisham council tip is more restrictive than Southwark - no rubble, no soil, no DIY waste - so it's a wonder they still take garden clippings. Christmas trees - if you live in LB Lewisham, there is no collection from homes - you have to drag your sorry tree to the nearest municipal park where they are eventually collected. But of course, some people find it easier to just dump them in the street. And others have a bonfire with them (in their gardens, not the street, though that wouldn't surprise me either). Bulky waste collections - ?15 for three items (quite a restrictive list) in Lewisham (fridges are ?30, mattresses free, though people still dump them in the street); ?16 for 10 items in Southwark. When Southwark is as bad at refuse and recycling as Lewisham, you'll have my sympathy. Until then, I shall continue to dream of Southwark's waste and recycling paradise...
  9. Wasn't the Cherry Tree (in an earlier incarnation) where the great train robbers finally met up for a celebration drink having pulled off the big heist (and maimed the British Rail driver in the process)?
  10. There is the Parkhall business centre in West Dulwich. May not be close enough to suit and it is geared to people who want to rent an office space, rather than a desk. Not sure about what constitutes expensive but some prices of available spaces in this link. https://www.workspace.co.uk/workspaces/parkhall/spaces/pe-d119
  11. I've always liked them in there too. Though it hasn't been the same since they fixed the leak in the roof just inside the door.
  12. So long as the board is on the shop's space and not on the public pavement, I think it is up to us pedestrians to walk round it. As nxjen says, otherwise it is a bit like wandering through someone's front garden and asking them to move their stuff because you want to carry on walking uninterrupted. As for people cycling on the pavement, don't get me started...
  13. Yes, pavements are for pedestrians, But the space at the front of the shops generally belongs to the shop. So if they want to stick up a sandwich board then that is their right. So long as they don't encroach on the public thoroughfare.
  14. It's a never-ending battle. You can never win in any absolute sense, but the more you make it difficult for them, the fewer of them you will end up sharing your home with. 1. Starve them out - Put all mouse foodstuffs in sealable jars, tubs etc. Put them in a high cupboard if possible. - clean up scrupulously - don't leave any crumbs anywhere. If you use a toaster, keep it in a high cupboard. And check the crumb tray from time to time. There may things that look lilke crumbs but aren't (says the person who once turned on a toaster and heard a sparking noise which, on switching off the toaster, turned out to be a mouse in his local restaurant). - put traps out - but if you want to keep the place tidy, store your mouse poison in a sealed container - mice love some makes of poison and will happily chew open the packets and distribute the contents far and wide. - vaccum and clean (with disinfectant) surfaces regularly. Daily on food prep surfaces. (Mice follow their scent trails - they love the smell of yesterday's wee, a bit like an old tramp). Block them out - seal up any gaps you find with wire wool. - keep checking - they will just gnaw a new hole next to the wire wool, given a bit of time. - get your neighbours to do the same things - if they are breeding happily next door, at some point they will want to explore new territory for food. - repeat the starving/blocking steps above. Or 2. Scare them away - get a cat. (not perfect, as some have pointed out). - be nice to your neighbour's cat (difficult if it is using your outside space as its toilet). Let it come in for a wander round from time to time. Oh, and get some thick gardening gloves to wear when setting snap traps. They hurt a lot when they go off prematurely with your fingers in the way. Finally, if you have a rat, call a pest control person soon.
  15. Make sure it's a fairly fine mesh - if you can fit a pencil through the gaps in the mesh then a mouse can probably squeeze through it too. Most local hardware shops stock suitably sized mesh. Tell them it's for mice and they will guide you to the right size.
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