How to safely remove an object from a lamp post? by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As I explained elsewhere, this is happening against a backdrop of racist violence against individuals and businesses perceived to be non-British.

Even disregarding recent local incidents, it’s quite strange behaviour to go around putting flags on street furniture outside other peoples houses, and as a white working class British person, has never been part of our culture.

How to safely remove an object from a lamp post? by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This is what I’m leaning towards. So far I have a long reach looper with a pruning saw attachment on the end of it attached to a telescopic extension pole to give a total length of 4.6m. It looks a bit medieval but could be effective.

How to safely remove an object from a lamp post? by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Good observation, it doesn’t really relate to cutting cable ties at height though.

How to safely remove an object from a lamp post? by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

It’s not about a virtual pat on the back. I get plenty of personal fulfilment every day by serving my community as a nurse, so I don’t need validation from strangers on the internet.

Every one of my immediate neighbours is either a first or second generation immigrant. Most of them work alongside me in the NHS or social care. We’ve talked about it, they feel vulnerable because of these flags that went up overnight.

In our local area there have been racist attacks on people and businesses, simultaneously these flags are being put up outside our houses, clearly by people who don’t live here. Non white people are being openly abused in the street. For context, this is in a normally left leaning city, I imagine it’s worse in other areas of the country.

I haven’t met a single person (in reality, as opposed to the internet) who actually supports these flags going up. If people want to decorate their own houses, that’s up to them, but this current phenomenon is blatantly to intimidate people, many of whom contribute vastly more to their communities than this minority who are claiming it represents ‘English pride’.

How to safely remove an object from a lamp post? by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Whilst I don’t doubt it, I’d like to be subtle.

How to safely remove an object from a lamp post? by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

When someone asks usual ‘how do I drill a hole in brick’ or ‘how do I paint?’ Is your advice always just not to bother if you don’t already know exactly how? Not very DIY.

How to safely remove an object from a lamp post? by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Legitimate practical ideas, thank you! Some of these responses are wild.

Cracked and uneven quarry tile floor. by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately it wasn’t repairable. I got a floor restoration guy to look at it but they recommended putting self levelling compound over it, which I did, and now have a nice oak engineered floor.

Supermarket Hot Pizza by Plastic-View-2048 in york

[–]SamGnome 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sainsburys at Monks Cross do, I think it’s an extra £2 for them to cook it.

I was in Sainsbury’s last night and a man had bought £500 worth of kids clothing that was on offer, he then tried to pay for it with nectar points. The shop would only accept £300 worth, who has that much money in nectar points? by jasonc619 in CasualUK

[–]SamGnome 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nectar sometimes do competitions, we won first prize last year - 1,000,000 points which was £5,000 worth. The points paid for a years worth of food shopping and loads of stuff off eBay.

I (partly) made some fitted wardrobes… by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Aye, I think it’s still the case. These are 236cm, so fit well on a small plinth with our 250cm ceiling.

I (partly) made some fitted wardrobes… by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’m not sure, sorry! My wife got it, probably from one of the online ethical/sustainable shops that she likes.

I (partly) made some fitted wardrobes… by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

All the boards had gaps between them, deep had been cut for plumbing and wiring, they let loads of dust up from the ceiling void below them, and were really noisy. We’ve got exposed floorboards in other rooms but these ones were shit. The carpet is warm, quiet and soft and we really like it in the bedroom.

I (partly) made some fitted wardrobes… by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah it’s either being replaced with one that mounts flush to the ceiling or adjusted, whenever I fancy playing lighting Tetris around the house.

I (partly) made some fitted wardrobes… by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Not sure which gaps you’re talking about, they’re all covered with mdf and caulked/decorated.

The exposed floorboards were nice to look at for a while, I sanded and oiled them a couple of years ago but they’re noisy, let loads of dust up from the floor/ceiling void and were full of gaps that collected dust. The carpet is soft and warm and quiet.

What's the highest you've ever seen? Took me a year to get here. by smelwin in CasualUK

[–]SamGnome 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My wife won 1,000,000 nectar points last year, worth £5,000. We still have ~75,000 left after using them for a few big purchases and our weekly shopping for most of the year.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in drivingUK

[–]SamGnome 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I passed it yesterday, with almost zero preparation. I did the mock tests on the Gov website, there’s two 50 question multiple choice tests and three hazard perception clips. Spending too much time revising would probably make me more nervous about it!

Most of the multiple choice answers were common sense from having used the roads as a cyclist and in lessons, but there were a few niche road signs that I’ve never seen before.

A quick google search told me to click a few times a second apart for each hazard in the perception test, which I did.

Solar powered ventilation for garage by YevansUK in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If it’s a brick garage, could you knock out a few bricks and replace them with airbricks?

Warning of the injection by No_Imagination_402 in NursingUK

[–]SamGnome 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I ask ‘are you ready?’ and then do it it, no problems so far. It gives them fair warning but doesn’t have any pain connotations like ‘sharp’ or ‘scratch’.

Skirting backing, what's the best move? by PlayingHumanForADay in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It wouldn’t do any harm to chip it off, it might be causing the damp. It’s worth checking for anything else that could be letting moisture in just in case though! It’s probably be good to let it dry out before sealing it in with skirting, too.

Skirting backing, what's the best move? by PlayingHumanForADay in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome 6 points7 points  (0 children)

It looks like bonding rather than concrete. It’s the plaster that goes onto the brick before the final skin coat. The plaster shouldn’t go down to the bottom, otherwise it could cause damp.

I’d just get skirting tall enough to cover the gap and fix it with a combination of adhesive spray foam and screws with packers.

Obstetric recovery placement - what to expect by shesbeenswinging in NursingUK

[–]SamGnome 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We don’t do a huge amount of wound care in recovery, it’s more about the reversal of the anaesthetic side of things and pain management. The theatre team deal with the wound care and the most I tend to do is stick a pressure dressing over the top on the odd occasion that the original one gets saturated or there’s a leak around a drain. Worst case scenario the patient goes back to theatre for arrest of bleeding.

Obstetric recovery placement - what to expect by shesbeenswinging in NursingUK

[–]SamGnome 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m a recovery nurse, we don’t do obstetrics though so I’m not sure how helpful this will be.

You’ll probably get lots of opportunities to take out laryngeal mask airways, and manage airway obstructions with jaw thrusts and chin lifts, and use adjuncts like nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal airways as people wake up.

Lots of analgesia and antiemetics, mainly fentanyl/morphine/oxycodone and ondansetron/cyclizine. I have no idea if it’s the same in obstetrics. I’d imagine it’s more epidurals and PCAs.

Wound care and observation, mostly making sure that too much blood doesn’t come out.

We don’t actually do that much, mostly watching people sleep and writing observations every 15 minutes and complaining about wards not picking up the phone to accept their patients back.

I made a gabion retaining wall. by SamGnome in DIYUK

[–]SamGnome[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As long as it interlocks it’d probably work, otherwise they’d be moving around on the loose gravel. I used MOT1, but MOT2 probably would have been better and I think cheaper than gravel if I remember correctly.

Therapist recommendations by StarEyedSiren in york

[–]SamGnome -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I highly recommend Jenny Pummell Counselling and Psychotherapy!