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@CYOA Places like Fowey and possibly Lostwithiel could be worth looking at (depends how small town/village you want to go). They're in Cornwall but close enough to Par train station which is 4 hours to London. Only 40 mins West of Plymouth by car I think too and right next to the Eden Project which is immense at all times are the year.
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This interview with Tom DeLonge has all levels of weirdness in it: http://pca.st/kgD3
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@dicki the close of a tenement is just the steps leading to the flat doors from a main door. So, its all indoors but with stone floors/steps etc it can get cold and sometimes it can be a little dark (if there is no sunshine, which does happen in Glasgow).
The leaves are a much darker brown than that and look less "crispy"!
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I have a cheese plant which I've had for about 3 months. In the last month the leaves have stared to go dark brown and quite "floppy" - its kept out in a close of a tenement so its not super warm, but not freezing cold. It doesn't get direct sunlight and some days it can be quite dark in there - I water it about twice a week when the soil feels dryish.
Does anyone know what it might be and how I can help the thing survive.
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@Drano the bob jackson is mine. I work in that building. The belt driven Trek is pretty cool. I've ridden back to the west end with that guy and he nails that thing
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https://twitter.com/DaphneFlap
motion captured cat action using a raspberry pi on their cat flap and it tweets a picture of the cat coming in and out
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@Tenderloin yeah I have a mate who's using them for his kitchen. Will report back when done to see how good they are.
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Not sure if ply is still a "thing" - but these folks do some quite nice stuff that you can use with your ikea kitchen: https://www.plykea.xyz/
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hey @Spxtz welcome to Glasgow too!
If you're working at the Uni and need a bike shop you've got Gear Bikes on Gibson St. I don't know the Crosshill area but I have heard good things about Willie Bain.
I'm in the West End and am often riding around near the Uni on a red Bob Jackson. Holla if you see me.
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I agree, solid wood is great. it just takes a bit of care and drying surfaces etc after getting water on it. We've had ours in for over a year and they still look brand new.
@motoko we have a ceramic sink like this:

lots of sealant around the edges so water/liquids don't get underneath and its fine.
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@motoko yeah I've installed two worktops through worktop express now, both solid oak and no problems with either. They even give you the offcuts which I am planning to get made in shelving and chopping boards.
The first one I did I opted to do a sink / oven cuts myself. The second one I got them to do it as it was a horrible task (with a shit jigsaw). I measured the space about 10 times and got my wife and anyone I could to double check and put everything through their online system. The only thing I can say is that if you get solid wood it is heavy as f*ck. We're on the second floor of a Glasgow tenement and the delivery guys won't carry things upstairs, just have some burly friends ready to help to lift things as its not fun on your own.
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@aggi I've ordered a few worktops through http://www.worktop-express.co.uk/ (solid oak ones) they are really good at cutting to bespoke requirements and pretty good value. I had some complicated cuts and was really nervous but they were great and it came through perfect.

+1 on what Soul said. Its only fair to let people know what might be left in the property. The shit that got left in a flat I bought a few years back was beyond a joke and it made that "wooo our new home" vibe a lot duller than it should have been.