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• #9252
The UK waiting for Public Health England to tell them they can cover their mouth and nose with an old t-shirt.
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• #9253
Yeah probably but they don't make the whole 'social distancing' thing any easier when you walk past a parked car and you look down and instead of a closed window like with all the other parked cars you see the face of some geezer reading a newspaper a foot away from you.
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• #9254
Prime idiocy from our government atm.
We are going to 'ban exercising' because other people sunbathe and have bbqs..
Why not just go hard on the fines and dispersals for that lot then? Ugh.
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• #9255
Just seen this on the tinterweb..
Has exercise just been removed from the .Gov site?.
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/coronavirus-covid-19-information-for-the-public
***Stay at home
Only go outside for food, health reasons or work (but only if you cannot work from home)
If you go out, stay 2 metres (6ft) away from other people at all times
Wash your hands as soon as you get home Do not meet others, even friends or family.
You can spread the virus even if you don’t have symptoms.***
???...
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• #9256
"Health reasons" could be construed as exercise I guess?
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• #9257
I was thinking that too.
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• #9258
Indeed it could.
Hopefully it is clarified to avoid confusion.
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• #9259
'Avoid' and 'confusion'.
In the same sentence, from this government...... -
• #9260
Has exercise just been removed from the .Gov site?.
Check web.archive.org and the answer is no... that was the text a few days ago.
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• #9261
Yeah - this. Everyone our way seems to be obeying the rules. Anyone at the park is keeping a reasonable distance and not being a dick about it - it seems low risk to me (obviously not an expert). It's certainly lower risk than Sainsbury's.
The govt has managed to stop (I imagine) 95% of gatherings and travelling. My personal interactions have gone down from hundreds per day on the tube, to half a dozen or less. Is that last 5% worth the loss of goodwill?
In other news, I got an anonymous note through my door this afternoon referencing the virus and asking that, in this time of national peril, we refrain from using our barbecues due to, I assume, local asthma suffers.
Thought that was a bit over the top.
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• #9262
I got an anonymous note through my door this afternoon referencing the virus and asking that, in this time of national peril, we refrain from using our barbecues due to, I assume, local asthma suffers.
Thought that was a bit over the top.
I think this is totally fine.
But then, I don't have a garden and I am jealous and this is how I can deal with that jealousy.
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• #9263
No issues thanks for clarification.
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• #9264
Don't walk that close to cars, you might get doored.
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• #9265
Ha!
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• #9266
Agreed.
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• #9267
The previously gloriously clean air of outer north west London
is now (locally) polluted with the distinctive odours of unburtn hydrocarbons
as this years debutant BBQ-ers attempt to light garage/shed-damp charcoal
and revert to firelighters.(Just for clarity: I have not put any notes through neighbours letterboxes,
nor yours). -
• #9268
Might be applicable: I bought a ladder, can now climb down on my kitchen roof. So worth it!
Edit: To clarify not for bbqs, but at least get some sun
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• #9269
Good to hear. Hopefully this means that the police have been told to ignore cyclists for now, which wasnt the instruction they were receiving last week.
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• #9270
christ are we ragging on people having a fucking barbie in the comfort of their own homes now?
get a grip.
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• #9271
well that would be reckless and put more of a strain on the emergency services.
Outside their home is preferred.
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• #9272
Outside their home is preferred.
Not everyone has a field.
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• #9273
I'm assume the local asthma sufferers are doing quite well due to the general reduction in diesel and petrol fumes. Although the ones that are triggered by hay fever not so much.
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• #9274
Apparently this is the problem of the people without a field. People are allegedly feckless if they have kids before they have moved to a house with a garden.
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• #9275
Although the ones that are triggered by hay fever not so much.
In all seriousness though, even as someone with a hay fever I think having lower general pollution is good as your membranes are just slightly less stressed to begin with.
Obviously that doesn't help when everything is in full bloom and you start to see layers of pollen on cars etc.
Isn't this quite effective if you're old and self-isolating? Better than chancing it with the dog walkers etc.