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Ping Adrian (OT, of interest to Brits only)
June & I were up in your neck of the woods today. We went on a coach trip to Whitby. I told June you lived up there somewhere - and on the way back I saw a sign pointing to where you live. ;-) We very much enjoyed Whitby - neither of us had been there before - but hadn't realised quite how far away it was. We spent 10 and three quarter hours on the coach there and back to have just less than 4 hours at Whitby! Got back less than an hour ago. I said to June "if we go again I'm going to wear those special knee high whatnots they gave me in hospital to prevent deep vein thrombosis.." g Tweed |
#2
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Ping Adrian (OT, of interest to Brits only)
Christina Websell wrote:
June & I were up in your neck of the woods today. We went on a coach trip to Whitby. I told June you lived up there somewhere - and on the way back I saw a sign pointing to where you live. ;-) We very much enjoyed Whitby - neither of us had been there before - but hadn't realised quite how far away it was. We spent 10 and three quarter hours on the coach there and back to have just less than 4 hours at Whitby! Got back less than an hour ago. I said to June "if we go again I'm going to wear those special knee high whatnots they gave me in hospital to prevent deep vein thrombosis.." g Tweed I'm glad you had a good day, it takes me about an hour to get to Whitby from here so would probably take about five hours by car from your neck of the woods, maybe four if I drove the way I see some people do. ;-) -- Adrian (Owned by Snoopy, Bagheera & Shadow) Cats leave pawprints on your heart http://community.webshots.com/user/clowderuk |
#3
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Ping Adrian (OT, of interest to Brits only)
On Aug 15, 2:57*pm, "Christina Websell"
wrote: I said to June "if we go again I'm going to wear those special knee high whatnots they gave me in hospital to prevent deep vein thrombosis.." *g You mean TEDS (thrombo-embolic-disease-stockings) Dave has to wear them all the time at the moment Lesley Slave of the Fabulous Furballs |
#4
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Ping Adrian (OT, of interest to Brits only)
"Lesley" wrote in message ... On Aug 15, 2:57 pm, "Christina Websell" wrote: I said to June "if we go again I'm going to wear those special knee high whatnots they gave me in hospital to prevent deep vein thrombosis.." g You mean TEDS (thrombo-embolic-disease-stockings) Dave has to wear them all the time at the moment ___ They are very comfortable to wear - although they take two strong people to get them on ;-) I only had to wear them whilst in hospital and for a couple of weeks after each operation. I was allowed to take them home. The hospital staff were absolutely paranoid in case any surgical patient got a DVT, if you lay on top of your bed with your ankles crossed a nurse would come along and slap your feet "put your legs straight.." My surgeon sent me home while I was waiting for my ca operation after a week of tests. He said "you needn't think you're going to lie around here getting a deep vein thrombosis!" Sort of like he thought that was my plan ;-) "Oh, I'll just lie here, get a DVT and sue the hospital." That's what they are afraid of, of course. A lawsuit. A colleague of mine got a DVT after a minor surgical procedure, it went to her lungs and killed her, she was only 44. Tweed Just thought I'd cheer you all up. |
#5
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Ping Adrian (OT, of interest to Brits only)
I stayed at Whitby for a week when I was about 15 years old.
I loved it. The Abbey and the Harbour were great. Have you read a book called "The Whitby Witches" by Robin Jarvis? It's a children's book really but I enjoyed it. It's set in Whitby, (yeah obvious really) and mentions various places including the Abbey. Whitby has a week-long annual folk festival which I think starts next week - I'm told it's very good for traditional singing. The book that made Whitby famous was "Dracula". I've been there once. The fish smokery on the dockside is an amazing place. And the town specializes in the creepiest jewellery ever made, "Whitby Jet" - it's a black stone like super-tough coal, which only seems to be made into things your great-great-grandma might have worn just for funerals. ==== j a c k at c a m p i n . m e . u k === http://www.campin.me.uk ==== Jack Campin, 11 Third St, Newtongrange EH22 4PU, Scotland == mob 07800 739 557 CD-ROMs and free stuff: Scottish music, food intolerance, and Mac logic fonts ****** I killfile Google posts - email me if you want to be whitelisted ****** |
#6
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Ping Adrian (OT, of interest to Brits only)
"Judith Latham" wrote in message ... In article , Christina Websell wrote: June & I were up in your neck of the woods today. We went on a coach trip to Whitby. I told June you lived up there somewhere - and on the way back I saw a sign pointing to where you live. ;-) We very much enjoyed Whitby - neither of us had been there before - but hadn't realised quite how far away it was. We spent 10 and three quarter hours on the coach there and back to have just less than 4 hours at Whitby! Got back less than an hour ago. I said to June "if we go again I'm going to wear those special knee high whatnots they gave me in hospital to prevent deep vein thrombosis.." g Tweed I stayed at Whitby for a week when I was about 15 years old. I loved it. The Abbey and the Harbour were great. It was lovely but we couldn't do it justice. Although we set out at 7.30 we didn't get there until 1.15 and had to be back on the coach at 5. On this first trip we were struggling to know where the beach was and we didn't find the cobbled streets until an hour before we had to come home. The beach was beautifully sandy, no pebbles and the sea was only 50 yards way. It wasn't crowded and there were 6 nice donkeys giving rides to small children. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitby Have you read a book called "The Whitby Witches" by Robin Jarvis? It's a children's book really but I enjoyed it. It's set in Whitby, (yeah obvious really) and mentions various places including the Abbey. No, I haven't read that. Tweed |
#7
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Ping Adrian (OT, of interest to Brits only)
Christina Websell wrote:
"Judith Latham" wrote in message ... In article , Christina Websell wrote: June & I were up in your neck of the woods today. We went on a coach trip to Whitby. I told June you lived up there somewhere - and on the way back I saw a sign pointing to where you live. ;-) We very much enjoyed Whitby - neither of us had been there before - but hadn't realised quite how far away it was. We spent 10 and three quarter hours on the coach there and back to have just less than 4 hours at Whitby! Got back less than an hour ago. I said to June "if we go again I'm going to wear those special knee high whatnots they gave me in hospital to prevent deep vein thrombosis.." g Tweed I stayed at Whitby for a week when I was about 15 years old. I loved it. The Abbey and the Harbour were great. It was lovely but we couldn't do it justice. Although we set out at 7.30 we didn't get there until 1.15 and had to be back on the coach at 5. On this first trip we were struggling to know where the beach was and we didn't find the cobbled streets until an hour before we had to come home. The beach was beautifully sandy, no pebbles and the sea was only 50 yards way. It wasn't crowded and there were 6 nice donkeys giving rides to small children. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitby Have you read a book called "The Whitby Witches" by Robin Jarvis? It's a children's book really but I enjoyed it. It's set in Whitby, (yeah obvious really) and mentions various places including the Abbey. No, I haven't read that. Tweed Did you have fish and chips while you were there? Whitby is famous for great fish and chips. -- Adrian (Owned by Snoopy, Bagheera & Shadow) Cats leave pawprints on your heart http://community.webshots.com/user/clowderuk |
#8
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Ping Adrian (OT, of interest to Brits only)
Christina Websell wrote:
They are very comfortable to wear - although they take two strong people to get them on ;-) I only had to wear them whilst in hospital and for a couple of weeks after each operation. I was allowed to take them home. The hospital staff were absolutely paranoid in case any surgical patient got a DVT, if you lay on top of your bed with your ankles crossed a nurse would come along and slap your feet "put your legs straight.." My surgeon sent me home while I was waiting for my ca operation after a week of tests. He said "you needn't think you're going to lie around here getting a deep vein thrombosis!" Sort of like he thought that was my plan ;-) "Oh, I'll just lie here, get a DVT and sue the hospital." That's what they are afraid of, of course. A lawsuit. A colleague of mine got a DVT after a minor surgical procedure, it went to her lungs and killed her, she was only 44. Tweed Just thought I'd cheer you all up. Maybe that's why those bullies of nurses insist that you get up and start walking around after surgery when you just want to pull the covers over your head and die. It hurts, and they say 'get up and walk down the hall'. Cheryl |
#9
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Ping Adrian (OT, of interest to Brits only)
On Sun, 16 Aug 2009 23:53:38 +0100, "Christina Websell"
wrote: "Lesley" wrote in message ... On Aug 15, 2:57 pm, "Christina Websell" wrote: I said to June "if we go again I'm going to wear those special knee high whatnots they gave me in hospital to prevent deep vein thrombosis.." g You mean TEDS (thrombo-embolic-disease-stockings) Dave has to wear them all the time at the moment ___ They are very comfortable to wear - although they take two strong people to get them on ;-) I only had to wear them whilst in hospital and for a couple of weeks after each operation. I was allowed to take them home. The hospital staff were absolutely paranoid in case any surgical patient got a DVT, if you lay on top of your bed with your ankles crossed a nurse would come along and slap your feet "put your legs straight.." My surgeon sent me home while I was waiting for my ca operation after a week of tests. He said "you needn't think you're going to lie around here getting a deep vein thrombosis!" Sort of like he thought that was my plan ;-) "Oh, I'll just lie here, get a DVT and sue the hospital." That's what they are afraid of, of course. A lawsuit. A colleague of mine got a DVT after a minor surgical procedure, it went to her lungs and killed her, she was only 44. Tweed Just thought I'd cheer you all up. That's what killed my DH after out-patient hernia surgery. He was a large man with very bad knees which made it difficult for him to get out of his chair, so he didn't. Hugs and purrs, Nan and the furkids |
#10
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Ping Adrian (OT, of interest to Brits only)
"Adrian" wrote in message om... Christina Websell wrote: "Judith Latham" wrote in message ... In article , Christina Websell wrote: June & I were up in your neck of the woods today. We went on a coach trip to Whitby. I told June you lived up there somewhere - and on the way back I saw a sign pointing to where you live. ;-) We very much enjoyed Whitby - neither of us had been there before - but hadn't realised quite how far away it was. We spent 10 and three quarter hours on the coach there and back to have just less than 4 hours at Whitby! Got back less than an hour ago. I said to June "if we go again I'm going to wear those special knee high whatnots they gave me in hospital to prevent deep vein thrombosis.." g Tweed I stayed at Whitby for a week when I was about 15 years old. I loved it. The Abbey and the Harbour were great. It was lovely but we couldn't do it justice. Although we set out at 7.30 we didn't get there until 1.15 and had to be back on the coach at 5. On this first trip we were struggling to know where the beach was and we didn't find the cobbled streets until an hour before we had to come home. The beach was beautifully sandy, no pebbles and the sea was only 50 yards way. It wasn't crowded and there were 6 nice donkeys giving rides to small children. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitby Have you read a book called "The Whitby Witches" by Robin Jarvis? It's a children's book really but I enjoyed it. It's set in Whitby, (yeah obvious really) and mentions various places including the Abbey. No, I haven't read that. Tweed Did you have fish and chips while you were there? Whitby is famous for great fish and chips. Yes, we did, but we were a bit disappointed, no better than we get here in Leics, worse actually. Small thin fish, not chunky. Chips were OK and the mug of tea that came with it was heavenly. Nectar. We went back before we went home just to get another mug of that tea. Tweed |
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