An excellent Restaurant to visit.

I was away on a short break in Cornwall last week and during an afternoon trip along the south coast happened on a very good restaurant in the small Cornish port of Porthleven.

The Lugger Bistro is a small, friendly restaurant serving brilliantly cooked and presented food – I would rate the sirloin steak I had, as one of my top-ten steaks I have ever eaten – something that is a rarity in the UK these days!

Although it was a quite night – I suppose this is a big problem with all restaurants in the off season – we had a very enjoyable evening and full praise must go to the owner Dane Benner and his staff for running such an excellent ‘eatery’. I’ll go back again when I’m next in that area. If you get a chance, call in, you won’t be disappointed.

Location details: 7 Fore Street, Porthleven. Cornwall, TR13 9HQ

Where have all the Bees gone?

I saw a story in the International Herald Tribune (IHT) in February about the worrying trend of disappearing bees, particulalry in the USA. Following on from that story it appears that this phenomenon is not restricted to the USA, a recent report shows that this is also happening in South Western France.

They are also poised to cross the channel this summer according to this report.

To show how the life and work of the humble bee effects all of us, here is a graphic from the IHT. It certainly surprised me! I wonder if there is a similar graphic for the UK?

Copyright as indicated in the graphic
I also found this report written by two Academics – Mike Edwards and Paul Williams in June 2004.

Another picture of Paris!

Visited Paris last Monday for a day return business trip. Still managed to get down to the center for coffee by the river. Paris still fascinates me! Always a new view to see.

It was quite a cold evening though, but saw this evening sky just after they turned the lights on, good picture I think, especially being able to capture a rising Venus.

The Changing face of the High Street

I was in London on business last week and needed to find a branch of the Nat West Bank, that took some doing – even the central Nat West help line couldn’t tell me the nearest branch to Oxford Street was, how incompetent is that! I eventually popped into an Internet café and found the info myself. Can I have my £1.00 back please?

That started me thinking about how many bank branches have closed over the years and what the buildings were now being used for. Certainly walking around various streets at the Tottenham Court road end of Oxford Street, you can see many former Bank buildings now being used by companies such as Car Phone Warehouse and various Coffee companies.

I had a look on the internet to see if there was a site that looked into this, but apart from planning applications to turn yet another bank in to another Wine Bar/Mobile Phone shop/Coffee shop, I couldn’t find any. May you might know of some!

Oh! and by the way, Nat West; get someone in who knows where your branches are located, use some of the massive profits you make, it’s called customer service!

Lock your car doors, always!!!!

A friend mine related this story to me about his friend that was driving through Slough on the A4 last week, as he stopped at one of the many traffic lights along that road, a pretty young girl opened the front passenger door of his car and jumped in. “I just lost my purse and I have no money! Can you take me to Slough Station?” she asked.

After a few moments of thinking and initially asking her to get out of the car, and the traffic lights turning to green (with the accompanying ‘hurry-up’ horns from behind), he agreed to take her along to the station, perhaps not the right thing to do! As they were driving to the station he asked her where she was headed. The girl replied that she was on the way to Southampton and perhaps it might be a good idea if he took her there instead!

Just then, they arrived at another set of traffic lights on red! As he stopped, he demanded that she get out of the car or he would drive to a police station; the girl did as she was told, seemingly quite upset at being ‘dumped’ out of the car. He then drove off to his meeting destination, calling in at a petrol station for another journey later in the day… Yes you’ve guessed it, when he came to pay for the petrol, his wallet was missing from his jacket!

Was this story about me, no! I’ve always kept my car doors locked in built up areas ever since two incidents that happened to me some 25 years ago. During the Cheltenham Gold Cup week, two rather shady looking characters jumped into my car outside of Cheltenham railway station and demanded to be taken to the race course. Did I do as requested, yes! Compliance being the lesser of what I though could have been at the time, a bit of a nasty incident. Doors now locked in towns!

The second incident happened not to me, but I saw one and read about many others happening over a period of a month. I used to travel down to London from Cheltenham as a service engineer to visit clients etc. I always used the A40/Westway in and out of that part of London and one particular set of traffic lights (A40/Old Oak Common Lane, I think) always seemed to back up the traffic going back out of London in the evening. The only advantage of this was that at that set of traffic lights, you could always buy a copy of the London Evening Standard from the lads that ran up and down the central concrete wall.

One night I was stopped in the traffic queue at the lights, when from across the other side of road these two other lads ran over, smashed the rear window on the drivers side of the car in front and high-tailed it off with his jacket, needless to say containing his wallet etc. The following weeks saw a number of repeat incidents, but soon stopped, due I suppose to police action. Of course this was before we had the massive amounts of CCTV and traffic cameras that we have in place today.

Could they (the cameras) be a deterrent that worked? I haven’t travelled that route for years so have no idea if the incidents ever reoccurred! I can only say that the two incidents told me too things…

Keep your car doors locked at all times, especially in built up areas and never keep anything of value in your jacket/coat pockets on the back seat of your car.

Trident related E-Petition

As you will have seen from my previous posts [1], [2], [3], [4]; I have taken a particular stand against the spending of any money on a replacement for the aging Trident Nuclear missile system.

I had not thought of this before, but with the high-profile achieved by the Anti-road Charging ‘E-Petition’, there should be one (maybe more) relating to the costs surrounding any Trident replacement.

Well, now there is one and I managed to be the first person to add my name after Sian Davies, the creator of this new ‘E-Petition’.

Add your name to this one and lets see if we can get even more signatures on this than were collected on the Anti-road Charging petition.

What’s left of the British Empire!

When I was obtaining the latest figures for the ‘Car Pricing’ E-petition, I came across the list of British dependencies that people could vote from. Where are these places? Some are obvious, like the Isle of Man, some maybe not so obvious.

So for my own appreciation here the list with some interesting (maybe only to me?) links about them.

Is this a plug for Wikipedia? No, its just a place with a lot of good info.

Anguilla – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

Ascension Islands – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

Bermuda – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

British Antarctic Territory – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

British Indian Ocean Territory – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

British Virgin Islands – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

Cayman Islands – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

Channel Islands – Wikipedia Entry, Guernsey Government Site, Jersey Government Site, Visitor Information

Falkland Islands – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

Gibraltar – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

Isle of Man – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

Montserrat – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

Pitcairn Island – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

St Helena – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

Tristan da Cunha – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

Turks and Caicos Islands – Wikipedia Entry, Government Site, Visitor Information

Will the petition mean anything?

As the Downing Street E-Petitions ‘Anti-vehicle tracking and road pricing’ petition reaches the closing date, over 1.6 million people have signed it, I do wonder just how much notice the politicians will take of this ‘feedback’? If past examples are anything to go by, not very much.

I’m quite disappointed that so much of the traditional press have viewed this petition as just another example of British eccentricity. Combined with the ‘self-serving’ ambivalence that government ministers have towards the British public, I think there is no chance of stopping ‘monitored ‘road-pricing’, which for me will be yet another example of this governments inexplicable march toward total surveillance of the British public.