Horse meat.

Discussion in 'Off-Topic Discussion' started by pete, Feb 10, 2013.

  1. Jenny namaste

    Jenny namaste Total Gardener

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    My little "The Sausage shop" in Catsfield rears his own pigs and that is the only meat in them.
    I trust him implicitly,
    Jenny
     
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    • Jiffy

      Jiffy The Match is on Fire

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      Yes we have the rules for traceabily but they're not being enforced or policed and it's a :lunapic 130165696578242 5: :roflol: :lunapic 130165696578242 5: :mute:

      The little pony must be Farm Assured, Why, because i could see a little red trator at the end :snork:
       
    • Phil A

      Phil A Guest

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      • Jenny namaste

        Jenny namaste Total Gardener

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        Ah yes Zigs - I see what's funny. Honest, no cats in it!
        Jenny
         
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        • Phil A

          Phil A Guest

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          From The Big Red Book,

           
        • Freddy

          Freddy Miserable git, well known for it

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          PICT0012.JPG


          Could it be? Nah...:nonofinger:
           
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          • Lolimac

            Lolimac Guest

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            • Freddy

              Freddy Miserable git, well known for it

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              Was gonna, but then I thought better of it:biggrin:
               
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              • Mike Allen

                Mike Allen Total Gardener

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                Browsing and I found this thread. Wiseowl you and I must be about the same age. @Being sent to the butchers in the early 1950's for horsemeat.

                Having read most of the comments. Many rules and regulations are and have been ignored over the years. probably because to be honest. How many of us know or are aware that such rules exist. eg; You have been out for a drink or two +++++ and leaving the bar you realise you are not fit to drive home. Would you leave your car keys with the landlord. Give them to a friend who might be just as tidderly as you, or might you drop them in a post box, or keep them in your pocket.
                In this situation. In short. You have the keys, this in law makes you responsible for the car. Add 2+2 and you are over the limit and in charge of a motor vehicle. So get rid of the keys. or get done for, drunk in charge.

                We Brits are often called a nation of animal lovers. A few years ago, the winters were hard and New Forest ponies were starving to death. NO! these animals are NOT wild. They belong to Commoners who have ancient rights to let their animals graze the forest. Hard winter meant the owners had to pay out for fodder. At local auctions, a New Forest colt could be bought for as little a 50-150p Sad but it came to this. Leave the animals to starve to death or slaughter them. What to do with the dead bodies. British animal societies deplored marketing the corpses. So the EU especially France stepped in and lorry loads of these unfortunate animals were transported across the channel. Ironically the transportation was heavily monitored and yes, the rules were enforced. The animals had to be fed and watered etc. Sorry but this tends to bring back memories of the concentration camps of WW2. Display a kindly and generous forebearing and then ZAP! Reachin their destination,these animals were slaughtered and processed as pet food and British firms soon stocked up with foreign pet food.
                 
              • shiney

                shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                Good point but I remember an interesting case. The car owner called for a taxi to take him home, he was already in the taxi when the police arrived and stopped the taxi leaving. He got done for drunk in charge, fought it in court (he was a solicitor) and the magistrate agreed with the defence that the taxi driver was in charge of the keys. He also told the police off for wasting court time! His comment was that 'some common sense should have been used'. The solicitor was my 'best man'.
                 
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                • wiseowl

                  wiseowl Admin Staff Member

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                  Good morning @Mike Allen you should never ask an Owl to reveal ones age:heehee: “I’m as old as my tongue and a little bit older than my teeth;)

                  I do remember ration books and going down the coal yard to collect the coal in a bucket that had slipped through the bottom of the fence,and gas lamps in our first house and a tin bath,and had many a clout round the earhole's by the local constabulary if he caught you ,Oh those were the days my friend;):smile:
                   
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                  • shiney

                    shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                    I think we had our tin bath until well into the 1950's. I remember getting my green ration book changed for a blue one, working on my greengrocery stall in the East End market when they lifted restrictions on veg (don't think it was actually rationed as I don't remember having to ask for ration stamps), powdered egg (much better for making cakes and for scrambled egg), and collecting the wooden tar blocks when they were dug up (roads were paved in tar blocks) to use for the fires. This was a real scramble and we were running backwards and forwards collecting the blocks in wheelbarrows. It was a free for all - literally - and a real challenge. I think the burning of these tar soaked blocks contributed considerably to the horrendous London fogs in the early 50's.
                     
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                    • wiseowl

                      wiseowl Admin Staff Member

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                      Hello @shiney 1952 I believe or thereabouts 12000 people were lost:sad:

                      download.jpg
                       
                    • shiney

                      shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                      Yes, it was a sad time. :sad: I knew a few people who succumbed to it.

                      Without meaning to be macabre about it, or too trivial, I remember getting lost as well. When walking along we had trouble seeing our feet and had to guess about kerbs.
                       
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