i use my toes! btw - will try the caps lock 1 day
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The World Gone Mad
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Originally posted by rustylady View PostI think someone has misinterpreted the rules (maybe a tad over-zealous?). You have to be very careful when selling "prepared" foodstuff and edibles such as cakes, jams, preserves etc as you probably need to prove what's in it, where it was made, and whether or not the maker holds a food hygiene certificate, but I've never heard of any restrictions on selling home-grown plants (except cannabis, SORRY LJ)Always thank people who have helped you immediately, as they may not be around to thank later.
Visit my blog at http://podsplot.blogspot.com/ - Updated 18th October 2009
I support http://www.hearingdogs.org.uk/
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Thank God I live in France, none of that bloody PC rubbish down here - you make stuff to eat, sell, buy whatever.
Every year our commune has a Fete de Pain where everybody in the village makes and takes to share with everybody else, nobody bothers about the rights and wrongs of the food police. And if the gendarmes turn up, it's cos they want something to eat and drink, not to check who's doing what and to whom. Local walnut growers make walnut cakes and sell them on the market. Fruit and veg sellers also sell plants.
I once worked for a local government organisation that took over funding voluntary sector groups from the old GLC - even back then, bloody PC nightmare and from what I understand, even worse now.
Some sad b*star* at the local authority want to get a grip I think.TonyF, Dordogne 24220
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By all accounts this is a true event. It was reported on a local radio station. A farmer complained to the Council, because they had left piles of grit in various places for the winter (roads) and his sheep were eating it!!!. The Concil's considered response? A notice was posted that said, I kid you not, "Sheep must not eat the grit".
I rest my case.
Zebedee
"Raised to a state of heavenly lunacy where I just can't be touched!"
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Originally posted by zebedee View PostBy all accounts this is a true event. It was reported on a local radio station. A farmer complained to the Council, because they had left piles of grit in various places for the winter (roads) and his sheep were eating it!!!. The Concil's considered response? A notice was posted that said, I kid you not, "Sheep must not eat the grit".
I rest my case.What lies behind us,And what lies before us,Are tiny matters compared to what lies Within us ...
Ralph Waide Emmerson
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We have a public right of way across our paddock and a local wanabee complained that our horses were "leaving a mess" on the path! The same person also complained that she was being nettled on local footpaths. Oh dear. I wonder if she subscribes to this forum!I you'st to have a handle on the world .. but it BROKE!!
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Originally posted by terrier View PostWe have a public right of way across our paddock and a local wanabee complained that our horses were "leaving a mess" on the path! The same person also complained that she was being nettled on local footpaths. Oh dear. I wonder if she subscribes to this forum!Last edited by pigletwillie; 28-05-2007, 09:29 AM.The river Trent is lovely, I know because I have walked on it for 18 years.
Brian Clough
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My friend's Ma & Pa have a pub on the edge of our village, surrounded by farm land. A couple of women from 'the city' bought a house opposite the pub, very historic, with a stream running underneath it. Since they moved in they have;
Complained so vociferously to the council about noise from the pub that they have had to pay ££££s for soundproofing just to hold a 'bingo nite' - why live next to a pub?
Complained to the farmer and the council about the noise of sheep baa-ing (I kid you not..) and the muck spreading - why live next to a farmer's field?
Best of all, they have applied to the council/environment agency to change the course of the stream so it doesn't run under their house (or the 3 next to them, who quite like it) anymore 'because it's a bit damp and smelly'.... WHY BUY A HOUSE WITH A BL**DY STREAM UNDER IT??!!
Luckily most of the locals have decided to treat them as a joke/circus sideshow, or they'd have been lynched by now...!!!
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Originally posted by seasprout View PostBeware the tomato police.
According to The Bill, "Toms" is Police slang for "ladies of the night". I'm sure if you clarify that they are not one and the same, the whole matter can be resolved quite amicably.A simple dude trying to grow veg. http://haywayne.blogspot.com/
BLOG UPDATED! http://haywayne.blogspot.com/2012/01...ar-demand.html 30/01/2012
Practise makes us a little better, it doesn't make us perfect.
What would Vedder do?
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I thought the collective noun for 'Ladies of the night' was an anthology of pros!Whoever plants a garden believes in the future.
www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated March 9th - Spring
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Originally posted by HeyWayne View PostI think this is all one big missunderstanding.
According to The Bill, "Toms" is Police slang for "ladies of the night". I'm sure if you clarify that they are not one and the same, the whole matter can be resolved quite amicably.Last edited by Lesley Jay; 22-05-2007, 09:43 AM.The river Trent is lovely, I know because I have walked on it for 18 years.
Brian Clough
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