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Local authority cuts

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    #51
    Originally posted by Sysman View Post
    I can get purple carrots. Yellow ones too if you want.

    P.S. Some marketing type was trying to persuade me that the reason most carrots today are orange is that sometime long ago the Dutch promoted orange ones. National colour and all that. Was it BS or is there a grain of truth?
    Might be true. Probably some inbred king who felt that he could make a name for himself in the field of 'changing the colours of well known vegetables'.

    Recently I've been seeing bright green cauliflower in the shops, so it's obviously a specialism of this country.
    And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014

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      #52
      Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post
      Might be true. Probably some inbred king who felt that he could make a name for himself in the field of 'changing the colours of well known vegetables'.

      Recently I've been seeing bright green cauliflower in the shops, so it's obviously a specialism of this country.
      William of Orange commissioned De Beers to cut a 100 carat diamond, and there was a mix up in the purchase order. The rest is agricultural history.

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        #53
        Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post
        Yep, that might be an issue. However, at my rugby club here in Holland, although we charge a membership fee it can be waived for people who really can't afford it, in return for some volunteer work for the club; it wouldn't surprise me if other sports clubs etc are prepared to do the same deal.
        I have memories of my old rowing club doing similar. I can see that working where the majority of folks can afford to support the club, but unfortunately that can be difficult in the unemployment hotspots that we are addressing here.

        And here we land up back at council cutbacks. One cutback many years ago led to abandoning a council run scheme to organise the unemployed to help old folks by painting fences, gardening, doing shopping etc. Worthy stuff and I didn't mind a small bit of my rates going to that. All it took was an office with phone, plus a van, but that was an early victim of the cuts.
        Last edited by Sysman; 3 February 2011, 12:59. Reason: typo
        Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

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          #54
          Originally posted by Old Greg View Post
          William of Orange commissioned De Beers to cut a 100 carat diamond, and there was a mix up in the purchase order. The rest is agricultural history.


          Carrots - The Road to Domestication.... AND the Colour Orange!

          A tale, probably apocryphal, has it that the orange carrot was bred in the Netherlands in the sixteenth century to honour William of Orange. Though the development and stabilisation of the orange carrot root does appear to date from around that period in the Netherlands, it is unlikely that honouring William of Orange had anything to do with it! Some astute historian managed to install the myth that the work an unexpected mutation was developed especially to thank King William I as a tribute to independence from Spain. Dr T Fernie (Herbal Simples1875) reported - "The Dutch Government had no love for the House of Orange: and many a grave burgomaster went so far as to banish from his garden the Orange lily, and Marigold; also the sale of Oranges and Carrots was prohibited in the markets on account of their aristocratic colour."
          For yet more on carrots, see www.carrotmuseum.co.uk - History of Carrots - A Brief Summary & Timeline
          Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

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            #55
            Which is more sad? That someone created these web sites, or that we are referring to them and learning from their content?
            My all-time favourite Dilbert cartoon, this is: BTW, a Dumpster is a brand of skip, I think.

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              #56
              Originally posted by RichardCranium View Post
              Which is more sad? That someone created these web sites, or that we are referring to them and learning from their content?
              Or the fact that some of us already knew the information in the first place?

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                #57
                Originally posted by RichardCranium View Post
                Which is more sad? That someone created these web sites, or that we are referring to them and learning from their content?
                Not as sad as taking a perfectly satisfactory root vegetable and changing its colour out of veneration for some six-toed national leader.
                And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014

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                  #58
                  Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post
                  Not as sad as taking a perfectly satisfactory root vegetable and changing its colour out of veneration for some six-toed national leader.
                  The six toes is historically very interesting. William of Orange was invited to depose James II, not because he (William) was protestant, but because he was a reptilian. This is how the reptilians took over the royal family (as attested to by Diana's friend Christine Fitzgerald).

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                    #59
                    Originally posted by Old Greg View Post
                    The six toes is historically very interesting. William of Orange ...
                    When I said accountant, I meant William of Orange
                    If you think my attitude stinks, you should smell my fingers.

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                      #60
                      Originally posted by Old Greg View Post
                      The six toes is historically very interesting. William of Orange was invited to depose James II, not because he (William) was protestant, but because he was a reptilian. This is how the reptilians took over the royal family (as attested to by Diana's friend Christine Fitzgerald).
                      David Icke says so, it must be true.

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