novacaine
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posted on 24/8/08 at 10:33 AM |
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done and will get everyone at work to sign it, as we are having trouble with the same thing
And you run and you run to catch up with the sun but its sinking, Racing around to come up behind you again, the sun is the same in a relative way but
your older, shorter of breath and one day closer to death
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MikeR
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posted on 24/8/08 at 10:34 AM |
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done.
Had a friend who almost moved next to mallory park. The person selling only let them view at certain times. It was an idillic house, in an idillic
setting. Partner is a painter / picture framer and wanted somewhere quiet in the countryside to work. They where about to put an offer on.
I told her to take another look the following weekend - at the following times (times when they weren't available to have a viewing and it just
happened Mallory had a classic car race on).
Once she came back i made sure she read the diary for mallory so she knew how often it would happen.
She was VERY grateful - i'm sure the seller wasn't.
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repper
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posted on 25/8/08 at 11:21 AM |
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chears guys
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David Jenkins
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posted on 25/8/08 at 02:47 PM |
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Maybe these new 'home owner selling packs' or whatever they're called ought to have a compulsory section that covers 'things
that can sometimes be noisy or disruptive in the neighbourhood'. If you know there's a racetrack or private airfield nearby, and
you've still bought the house, then you should have no right to complain! (Not that I think you should have such a right anyway, if whatever it
is has been there long before moving in).
For example, I live in a village with fields next door. Several times a year we get tractors and farm machinery working from dawn to way past dusk,
we frequently get evil smells when they spray muck on the fields, and so on. I wouldn't dream of complaining (a) because they were doing it long
before I arrived, and (b) if you don't like smells, don't live in the countryside!
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