@ponderable saidmunsterlander?
we had no meat (neither fish nor otherwise). We eat a kind of cake called "struven"
10 Apr 20
@ponderable saidSoon after I retired I worked in a German friends community bakery on the Wirral making sourdough bread. His wife also made amazing traditional cakes at Xmas. I think he took up baking and brewing as a survival strategy after trying our bread and beer (although in fairness it has improved a lot since the days when he settled here)!
we had no meat (neither fish nor otherwise). We eat a kind of cake called "struven"
@petewxyz saidI note Higsons Brewery has arisen. Is that one of those of which you refer?
Soon after I retired I worked in a German friends community bakery on the Wirral making sourdough bread. His wife also made amazing traditional cakes at Xmas. I think he took up baking and brewing as a survival strategy after trying our bread and beer (although in fairness it has improved a lot since the days when he settled here)!
@great-big-stees saidCertainly a local brewery that's on the up. If I'm brutally honest though I don't think there is anything over here to compare to German beer. When I was a student I got a sport visa to cross into what was then Czechoslovakia to compete in a five day orienteering event. I never knew Pilsner was a Czech town. Anyway you could buy Pilsner beer for seven pence a litre. Impairs your running though.
I note Higsons Brewery has arisen. Is that one of those of which you refer?
Although we hitched most of the way we did the border crossing on a train as the east to west borders were pretty scary in those days. There is a way of carrying a gun that looks like you mean it! We had to change a minimum amount of currency for every day of the visit and it was forbidden to take it home. We didn't want to just give all the leftover cash to the government, but you just couldn't spend it. Superb four course meal in Prague only used up £4. In the end we stood earnestly contemplating the work of a guy selling his art by the main bridge and then gave him the lot for one painting. His reaction was priceless. Felt like a millionaire for a day, but totally skint hitching back through Germany and Belgium!
10 Apr 20
@whodey saidHow sad for you. Maybe on this special weekend everyone in your situation can find some faith, love and inspiration.
Does anyone know what time it is?
Does anyone even care?
Now that we have Covid, we are in a perpetual states of indifference and apathy just sitting around waiting for our political leaders to tell us it's safe to breath once again and resume our lives.
And to think, many thought their lives were already pathetic before Covid.
LOL.
It's a special day for a lot of people - a celebration of grace.
At the house of hope it will be Lasagna Bolognese and a bottle of Barbi Il Ruspo Sangiovese Umbria 2014. The same grape used in Chianti, but much softer.
Here we are thankful for our many blessings - in our own agnostic way :-)
@whodey saidYou sound like someone that has given up any hope.....Negative thinking is not healthy for you, just as 'goad' if you don't believe me!
Does anyone know what time it is?
Does anyone even care?
Now that we have Covid, we are in a perpetual states of indifference and apathy just sitting around waiting for our political leaders to tell us it's safe to breath once again and resume our lives.
And to think, many thought their lives were already pathetic before Covid.
LOL.
EDIT: Have you thought about meditation?
-VR
@very-rusty saidOr medication.🤔
You sound like someone that has given up any hope.....Negative thinking is not healthy for you, just as 'goad' if you don't believe me!
EDIT: Have you thought about meditation?
-VR
@Great-Big-Stees
Life hasn't changed all for the bad. We are down to scratch and when a more normal life is visible, we can return to what was good and leave out what was bad. I'm sure some of us have learned to live more quietly with less activities, and for me personally some of the changes are good.
@torunn saidI agree. I never thought that I could be as, relatively, inactive as I have become, were it not for the present situation. Maybe I needed an excuse. I am now able to actually use the word, “no” and not feel like I am not being kind.
@Great-Big-Stees
Life hasn't changed all for the bad. We are down to scratch and when a more normal life is visible, we can return to what was good and leave out what was bad. I'm sure some of us have learned to live more quietly with less activities, and for me personally some of the changes are good.
@petewxyz saidVery much so. Tonight I talked to one of my sisters on the phone, which was pleasant, and immediately afterward to a friend who’s husband is on a ventilator trying to survive COVID-19, which wasn’t. Her closing words were “if he goes I go”. Weeks seem to have alternative punctuations to the usual “days”.
Anybody else didn't notice what day it is?
@great-big-stees saidA change of lifestyle. It could be an opportunity of making life better.
I agree. I never thought that I could be as, relatively, inactive as I have become, were it not for the present situation. Maybe I needed an excuse. I am now able to actually use the word, “no” and not feel like I am not being kind.
10 Apr 20
@divegeester saidDifficult times. One of my daughters has a friend whose stepfather is on a ventilator. Enough people are close enough to the really bad situations that it makes it hard to remember that the majority should come through okay 🤞🤞🤞
Very much so. Tonight I talked to one of my sisters on the phone, which was pleasant, and immediately afterward to a friend who’s husband is on a ventilator trying to survive COVID-19, which wasn’t. Her closing words were “if he goes I go”. Weeks seem to have alternative punctuations to the usual “days”.