The Anonymous Widower

Assembling My New IKEA Kitchen

I like putting flat pack furniture together.

The pictures show some of the units as I assemble my new kitchen.

IKEA says that assembling the frames is a two-person job. But if you think about it, if this one good-handed pensioner can put it together, then everybody can, especially with a helper.

My rules for success in assembling furniture like this.

1. Assemble the furniture in a large space, preferably on a carpet, close to where the furniture is to go.

2. If like I do, you have to carry the parts upstairs, for the heavier units unpack them by the door, where they came into the house. I’m lucky, in that my integral garage opens onto the street, so IKEA just put all the boxes there. I unpack them there if needed.

3. Clear up all the endless cardboard packaging as you go.

4. Use little bowls to keep track of the screws.

5. Have a large pair of scissors handy to cut all the little plastic bags.

6. I also use a magnetic screwdriver, which is useful for picking up screws that get stuck in difficult places.

The only problem, I’ve had is that I put the wrong front on a drawer and couldn’t get it off. IKEA actually phoned me back within three hours of an e-mail, but I still can’t get the front off and in trying I cut a knuckle on my right hand. And of course, my left hand isn’t dexterous enough to put a plaster on it.

In the end I found that this drawer front problem is a common one and there a very good video. IKEA should put up an even better one!

Incidentally, after my cut knuckle, how many people end up in A & E with similar injury, because they live alone and there’s no-one to kiss it better?

Now here’s an offer to anybody living alone in the vague N1 area of Hackney and Islington. If you are thinking that say buying and assembling flat pack furniture is beyond you, why not contact me. Two brains and four good hands will be better than half the number.

 

February 4, 2015 Posted by | World | , , | 1 Comment

BT Broadband’s Crap Football Broadcasts

BT now deliver their sport channels by broadband, which generally makes it unwatchable, unless you’ve got BT Infinity. Which of course is not available to me, as I’m too close to exchange. BT’s words not mine!

I often joke about what Brian Redhead said about the relative merits of radio and television.

If television had been invented first, radio would be the dominant medium, as the pictures are better!

Today, it’s absolutely true, as the pictures my mind are creating from the words on BBC Radio 5, are an order of magnitude better than BT’s crap pictures of the football.

February 3, 2015 Posted by | Computing, Sport, World | , , | Leave a comment

Her Majesty’s Daily Telegraph’s Guide To Energy Companies

This article in the Daily Telegraph entitled The Best Energy Companies You’ve Never Heard Of is a must read.

I swapped about fifteen months ago to OVO and don’t regret it one bit.

What nobody tells you is that to switch your energy supplier the first time, you probably spend an hour or so getting all the numbers of meters and other things you need to swap. Let’s say my big energy supplier didn’t cooperate.

But now in my profile on OVO all of those numbers are clearly displayed. So a second swap should be a piece of cake, if I needed to do it.

There are lots of these new small energy supplies out there, so when you swap choose one that suits your needs. Or perhaps one that is local to your residence or business!

 

February 3, 2015 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment

Three Parent Babies

MPs are set to debate the ethics of so-called three parent babies today.

I was reasonably lucky with my three children and there won’t be any more, as I’m had the snip.

But I’m certain, that C, would have been distraught, if she’d produced a string of handicapped babies. I certainly would have been and any technique that stopped problems is to be welcomed.

So let’s hope narrow-minded religious minorities don’t stop the adoption of this technique.

It is interesting to read this article in the Telegraph, which gives the view of Lord Winston, who is an Orthodox Jew

On a related point, I have a genetic disease, but sadly I only found out about my coeliac disease, when I was fifty. If I’d known earlier, it might have meant that my son, who died from cancer, had been found to carry the disease, so perhaps he would have led a better lifestyle.

If it had been known to earlier generations of my father’s family, I suspect that the family wouldn’t contain the large number of childless females and those who have suffered from serious cancer that it does.

 

February 3, 2015 Posted by | World | , , | 1 Comment

The Eden Project, Geothermal Energy And Fracking

In Iceland last summer, I saw the benefits of geothermal energy, with one of the most spectacular being the amazing Blue Lagoon.

We don’t have any volcanoes in the UK, but in places like Cornwall and London Bridge station, projects are starting to test the feasibility of using heat from deep in the ground.

According to this article in the Glasgow Herald, the Eden Project is investigating geothewrmal energy. This is an extract.

Given the prominence of Friends of the Earth in the shale gas debate it often comes as a nasty surprise to local anti-fracking groups that most green groups do actually support drilling and fracking for deep geothermal projects. Only yesterday, the famous Eden Project in Cornwall announced such a project.

Today though, I read in The Times, that this £35million project is now under threat from an anti-fracking amendment in a bill in Parliament.

I suspect that the problem is if you wrote down all the science known by Members of Parliament, it would just about fit on a small postage stamp.

I wonder what will happen when politicians find out about the ground source heat pump at London Bridge could use fracking techniques, to enable it to be built properly and run efficiently.

February 2, 2015 Posted by | World | , , , | 1 Comment

Are Americans Too Stupid To Be Allowed Firearms?

This story on the BBC web site is entitled US boy, three, shoots both parents in New Mexico, which says it all.

Luckily, it appears his parents will live.

The story is the most read on the BBC web site.

February 1, 2015 Posted by | World | , , | 3 Comments

Where Did That Go?

Jerry had put up this awful piece of granite as a splash back in the living room.

Jerry's Bad Plastering

Jerry’s Bad Plastering

Perhaps he put it up, as he had a spare one and it would cover up his dreadful plasterwork. I sometimes wonder if Jerry’s surname was Boughton.

Before I went away, two guys took it off and down the stairs, leaving it on my patio by the street.

I then put a stick note on it, saying that anybody who wanted it could take it.

And take it they did!

I wonder how many hernia they got lifting it into the back of their car?

It really was a case of good riddance to bad rubbish!

January 31, 2015 Posted by | World | , , | Leave a comment

The Wignacourt Aqueduct

Often, we think that big infrastructure projects are very much something of the last couple of centuries. Just as London built the New River to bring fresh water to the city, Valletta built the seventeenth century Wignacourt Aqueduct to supply water.

Sadly, it is no longer used for water, but it stands there as a reminder of the skills that our ancestors possessed.

January 29, 2015 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment

Valletta – A Fortified City

Valletta is a city of fortifications.

I took these pictures as I walked in a loop from the bus station, past St. John’s Co Cathedral past Fort St. Elmo and then back along the road overlooking the Grand Harbour. I trhen took a lift to the Upper Barrakka Gardens for views of the Grand Harbour

Sadly the National War Museum in Fort St. Elmo is closed at the present time.

I will return to Valletta again.

January 28, 2015 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment

St. John’s Co-Cathedral, Valletta

St. John’s Co-Cathedral in Valletta is one of the world’s great cathedrals.

It takes your breath away.

January 28, 2015 Posted by | World | , | 1 Comment