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So in the absence of being able to fix it ourselves...we're asking for your help!
Please don't post here - go HERE. (And please, no profanity...)


~RS~q~RS~~RS~z~RS~31~RS~)
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RE GARY GLITTER,THE HOME SECRETARY SAID THE HOME OFFICE HAD AN EXCELLENT RECORD ON TRACKING PEOPLE LIKE HIM,BUT IF I REMEMBER CORRECTLY IT WAS REPORTED ON PM AT THE TIME THAT GG HAD GONE MISSING AND RESURFACED IN VIETNAM.THEY SAID AT THE TIME THEY COULD NOT STOP HIM LEAVING BRITAIN AND IN FACT HAD NOT REALISED HE HAD.I GUESS THIS MAKES THE HOME OFFICE RESPONSIBLE FOR WHAT HAPPENED TO THOSE VIETNAMESE GIRLS AND ANY OTHER
UNSUSPECTING CHILD HE MET ON THE WAY.HOME OFFICE WHATA JOKE.
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Testing for level bozzieboy?
:-)
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Jay-Kay-Galbraith.
A great economist, but profane as hell.
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Eddie: Did you receive my 'pointless postcard' from Twatt in Orkney?
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We get a lot of mail from the said person.
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Eddie, they have excavated barrows in Twatt! As for me, the most I've ever found in my garden is half a clay pipe ...
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... and a selection of victorian soda water, and other, bottles. The marmite ones are cute.
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I thought barrow was in furnace.
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It is, Horse (8), and not all that far from Cockermouth...
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But quite a way from Pratts Bottom near Keston!
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Felixstowe - an old East Anglican game that involves hiding cat food.
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Ap (9) - In centuries gone by Cockermouth was under Scottish control. The Celtic 'Cocker' means "crooked" and 'mutha' means a "river-mouth".
I don't get to Cockermouth as often as I would like but it is wonderful when I have the opportunity.
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Fogot to mention that Cockermouth is also the birthplace of William Wordsworth.
Cockermouth honoured Wordsworth with the planting of thousands of daffodils in his memory. The daffodils refer to his famous poem of the same name.
I wandered lonely as a cloud
That floats on high o'er vales and hills,
When all at once I heard a shout,
"Oi, Get off my daffodils!"
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Worcestershire has Wyre Piddle (the local brew is called Piddle in the Straw!) and the End of a Bell (guess what, the profanity filter doesn't like it the right way around!). Dorset has a S + hit + terton (apparently residents reacted furiously to a suggestion they remove the h), Shropshire has a New Invention and Knockin (apparently the village store is The Knockin Shop), Staffordshire has a Loggerheads, and up north there's Pity Me. Not to mention a handful of places called No Mans Land (with variations in the use of spaces).
Not to mention the wonderful pronunciation of Towcester :)
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Meanwhile, it looks as though the blog birthday card I posted on Sunday (from the relatively normal sounding Kenilworth) still doesn't appear to have arrived - it'll soon be scoring extra points for pointlessness by arriving nearly a week late!
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Near Henley, there are Upper Assenden, and then middle and lower....
;-)
ed
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No inner, though
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I retract that last statement, courtesy of this, which has just appeared: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/pm/2008/08/happy_birthday_to_the_blog.shtml
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Ed I - There really should be a Greater and Lesser!
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Near Shrewsbury, my esteemed SO informs me, are Great Piddle and Little Piddle.
England just wouldn't be England without a Little Piddle, would it?
Also Hayton's Bent and Aston Rogers, although I thought they were only malicious rumours till I saw it on the map just now.
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We just don't hear enough from Robert Pisston these days, do we?
(Horse, that one's just for you!)
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Fifi: There are loads of piddles in the South West, but Queen Victoria insisted they be renamed puddles, I believe!
After all, who'd want to write about the Tolpiddle Martyrs? :)
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If we have time on our next visit to East Sussex, I'm definitely going to Upper Dicker.
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My gazetteer informs me that there is a Brown Willy in Cornwall. Why it should think that worth recording, I have no idea.
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Horse (23): You'd find it a pretty boring place.
Yes, the pun is intended.
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BS 6, I might have the other half. Maybe we should meet and connect our bits.
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There's an offer you don't get every day Big Sis (see 26) -- or perhaps you do...
As well as Pity Me in County Durham, there's also a No Place. And Once Brewed and Twice Brewed in Northumberland.
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David: Mine's the top (bowl) end, what's yours? Or shouldn't I ask ...
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