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Posted: Mon Sep 25, 2006 7:36 pm
by J.R.
DavebytheSea wrote:
huntertitus wrote:I once saw a tortoise who had fallen in love with a small football and tried to mount it but the ball kept rolling away so the poor tortoise just kept on walking along on his hind legs following the ball all over the garden

It was hilarious but a little tragic as we knew he would never get his way and he would not give up

It was a bit like an allegory of the human condition
Didn't Flanders and Swan have a song about a lovesick armadillo ton Salisbury Plain that fell in love with a tank?
I'm sure you're right, Dave. I seem to remember my Dad telling me about that song ! :lol: [/b]

Surprise find!

Posted: Thu Sep 28, 2006 6:40 am
by Angela Woodford
Caroline!

Have braved cupboard under stairs and found box of slides taken by my father 1963 - 65 - pix of Richard Atkins and CH. Lying in the dark since then, they seem to be in good nick. He even took photos of the Needlework Exhibition, and DR West mingling away at Speech Day. I believe it's possible to convert old slides to a ?disk of some sort. You see, I'm not so good at technology! I will find out.

We drove past your home in New Park Road on Tuesday on a Jean Visit trip! There were the shops opposite! I remember on the way back form school, a bakers' shop there which sold hot peanuts out of a dispenser machine. They were so delicious. Nobody else remembers hot peanuts!

Lovely to talk to Alex on the phone the other day.

Love

Munch

Re: Surprise find!

Posted: Thu Sep 28, 2006 6:56 am
by icomefromalanddownunder
Hi Munch

I dug out some photos and scanned in the CH ones this morning. Will try to remember to bring in the Richard Atkins ones tomorrow, but it may not happen until after the weekend (a long one - yippeeeee).

I look forward to seeing the slides. At my last place of employment we had a scanner which would scan slides and negatives.

Oh, the photos to date are in Hertford Memories, pics from the 60s and 70s. Not wonderful quality - seriously dodgy viewfinder, or distracted photographer - but some faces are recognisable ;-).


Please watch out for a private message :-).


Love

Caroline

Re: Surprise find!

Posted: Thu Sep 28, 2006 10:36 am
by huntertitus
Angela Woodford wrote:Caroline!

Have braved cupboard under stairs and found box of slides taken by my father 1963 - 65 - pix of Richard Atkins and CH. Lying in the dark since then, they seem to be in good nick. He even took photos of the Needlework Exhibition, and DR West mingling away at Speech Day. I believe it's possible to convert old slides to a ?disk of some sort. You see, I'm not so good at technology! I will find out.

We drove past your home in New Park Road on Tuesday on a Jean Visit trip! There were the shops opposite! I remember on the way back form school, a bakers' shop there which sold hot peanuts out of a dispenser machine. They were so delicious. Nobody else remembers hot peanuts!

Lovely to talk to Alex on the phone the other day.

Love

Munch
There are scanners which can now convert slides and negatives to digital format which then can be sent to you on cd or emailed to you

I am getting one soon as funds allow - they are over £2000

If I had one I could do it for you but I'm sure Snappy Snaps or someone will do it for you and it shouldn't cost a fortune

Slide Conversion

Posted: Fri Sep 29, 2006 6:57 am
by Angela Woodford
Very grateful for your advice here huntertitious, am going out tomorrow to town where there's a Snappy Snaps and will ask them! How kind of you.

I'm getting into my boots for work now Caroline (not a day for killer heels) but will look for your pix later! Peers out of window - v wet!

Love

Munch

Re: Slide Conversion

Posted: Fri Sep 29, 2006 10:32 am
by huntertitus
Angela Woodford wrote:Very grateful for your advice here huntertitious, am going out tomorrow to town where there's a Snappy Snaps and will ask them! How kind of you.

I'm getting into my boots for work now Caroline (not a day for killer heels) but will look for your pix later! Peers out of window - v wet!

Love

Munch
Glad to have been of service, ma'am

Judging by the time of your post and the boots you are getting into for work, would I be guessing right that you are a farmer?

Boots on!

Posted: Sat Sep 30, 2006 7:38 am
by Angela Woodford
Huntertitus -

When I left CH I was deemed one of the hopeless career wise, so did what I knew, joined a uniformed female heirarchy and trained as a nurse!

At the beginning of this year, I realised that nursing is no longer what I could possibly cope with - "treat 'em and street 'em" etc, and I'm as soft as a Mc Flurry left out in a heatwave. I belonged to a womens' gardening association, so joined their scheme of being placed to garden at a historic house. I love it!

Hence the boots!

Munch

Posted: Sat Sep 30, 2006 8:56 am
by huntertitus
What a lovely thing to do

I love the early morning when the mist is rising from the fields and rolling about

I'm off to photograph a family now

see you later

Posted: Sat Sep 30, 2006 5:30 pm
by UserRequestedRemoval
CH was as I remember, a photographer's heaven.

Posted: Sun Oct 01, 2006 12:53 am
by huntertitus
I took a few pictures there but most of my hampster and me and bad friends hangin abaht in the art skool bogs!!!

Should Have

Posted: Sun Oct 01, 2006 8:37 am
by Angela Woodford
My camera was only a small simple effort, but surprisingly there was no ruling on photography - no confiscation, no forbidding of taking pictures. I really wish I had recorded more - as you say, a photographers' paradise! A frank powerful study of a hamster in the Art School loo...hmm....

Sunday Times potential!

Posted: Sun Oct 01, 2006 9:03 am
by englishangel
That is an interesting thought. We didn't have radios, record players or any of that normal stuff, but a lot of us had cameras.

I had a little Instamatic and probably still have a lot of photos somewhere, mainly 2's I suppose as there were very few friendships between houses.

Posted: Sun Oct 01, 2006 11:04 am
by icomefromalanddownunder
englishangel wrote:That is an interesting thought. We didn't have radios, record players or any of that normal stuff, but a lot of us had cameras.

I had a little Instamatic and probably still have a lot of photos somewhere, mainly 2's I suppose as there were very few friendships between houses.

How true Mary. I have been wondering about that since soc asked if you were in any of the photos.

Does anyone have any insight into why this was? It wasn't that I didn't like anyone outside of 6s, it was just that we didn't associate outside of the school block.

Inter-house friendship

Posted: Sun Oct 01, 2006 11:26 am
by Angela Woodford
I was the last of my year to be left in 6's - it seemed fine to have friends in other houses too!

I'd love to find Josephine Maude again.

Munch

Posted: Sun Oct 01, 2006 12:59 pm
by englishangel
I think once we got further up the school there was more interaction especially in the Sixth form, I was quite friendly with a couple of 7's and Ailsa and Carol in 3's.