Strange British Things.

wild greens

Well-known member
Tobacco spliffs make me feel ill now, cant do them anymore. I can understand the spanish doing it as there's such an abundance of slightly shit resin out there

But there were big points in my life where I've been smoking proper pricey skunk with l&b or fucking embassy number 1s, i cant get my head around it now
 
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Leo

Well-known member
Start your own "Quintessential British Things" thread, @wild greens. This one's for pointing out all the nonsensical, joyless things you do.
 

Mr. Tea

Let's Talk About Ceps
How do you wash dishes, for instance? That takes a steady stream of warm-to-hot water for several minutes at least. Ice cold won't wash them well at all.
Vast majority of kitchen sinks, certainly any installed within the last few decades, will have a mixer tap arrangement. Separate hot and cold taps are more common in the bathroom/bog.
 
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Mr. Tea

Let's Talk About Ceps
I actually have a mixer tap in the sink in my bathroom, but then I am practically landed gentry.

However, I still habitually turn it on full hot, scald myself because the heater is adjacent to the bathroom, and then do a little hopping sweary dance of pain as I slam it to the cold position. Because I am British.
 
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wild greens

Well-known member
@wild greens is discussing joyless things so far as I can see
I am. Super beers are for street drunks and under-15s only

When we were skint kids- I'm talking 13/14- before we had grafts i would do 2/3 supers on a Friday or Saturday night and just lose the plot. Park oblivion

Skol is scottish, it was Graham's Continental first. A really weird rebrand but there you go
 

Clinamenic

Binary & Tweed
Tobacco in spliffs now thats a weird british thing
A practice in the US for sure, from coast to coast. Weeds recreationally legal here in CA. I've been rolling small spliffs to extend the supply and keep the tolerance low.

That said, I'm not sure how much of said tolerance is placebo or not.
 
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IdleRich

IdleRich
Actually, fuck it, I have now been officially sucked into thinking about taps. Here we go....
Firstly, I think that there was an assumption that as a proud Englishman, I would prefer the two tap system, but, let me make it clear, I am NOT arguing that having separate taps is better. I agree that in almost* every imaginable scenario the single version is better for the reasons admirably summarised and lucidly described by @suspended above. In fact, I think that everyone does agree, or at least half agree, cos every house I ever lived in had the single tap thing in the kitchen and the double version in the toilet and bathroom sink, sometimes reverting to the single tap system once more in the bath.
So, I agree that it is perplexing when you are first hit by the apparent discovery that UK tap technology has not yet reached the level at which it can develop the single flow system which allows the continuum of temperatures one desires and expects; and then one is confronted by the almost worse discovery that the builders and plumbers are indeed aware that this can be done and are in fact capable of producing that very system (possessing both the knowledge and the materials), yet, seemingly are also incapable of following the simple - and I believe irrefutable - argument laid out by Gus (and other tap obsessives before him) clearly demonstrating the superiority of one system - with the result that they somehow hedge their bets and make approximately half of the taps in a given house one way, and the other half, the other.
I and I suspect most of the rest of you have seen the reaction of Americans (and people from other countries, in fact probably all countries) over the years to their first meeting with a double-tap sink. Normally there is hilarity, perhaps some photographs shared on their social media for others to laugh with them, but it quickly becomes apparent it is nervous laughter, covering fear, cos normally they continue as though confronted by some kind of diabolical hydraulical conundrum which must be solved before the weary traveller can gain access to the life giving, cleansing fluid....
And it's this that kinda surprises me.... yes, the system that some houses in the UK use on some of their sinks is mildly worse than the system that other countries opt for, there is a possible delay of a few seconds in some situations, perhaps occasionally even some other kind of incredibly miniscule inconvenience that I can't think of off the top of my head, but I'm surprised that there are people who care enough this to talk about it and take pictures of the tap; yes just by statistics and so on I get that there could be one or even two people out there boring enough to do so... but seemingly there are millions and millions of them, constantly being amazed, staggered, blown away by this insanity, feeling the need to document it yet again, to prove that all of their other faucet fucking predecessors were not lying, those other trillions of photos out there, diligently recorded by tap geeks were in fact real and not the product of some kind of gigantic international tap hoax. I suppose that what I am saying is, who cares?



*And I say "almost" here only for the sake (now that I am, after all, giving up a rather large number of seconds which, when you think about it, could have instead been spent smoking heroin while having my dick sucked) of completeness, which I suppose demands that I should point out that one can dream up a number of artificial scenarios in which you might need two streams at different temperatures or something....
 

craner

Beast of Burden
This reminds me of when all the Southern Italians moved to America and became obsessed with fridges.
 
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