nothing is ever quite as easy
As it looks like it ought to be.
I came back from holiday (I'm back!) with several thousand (about 4,500) pictures to transfer from laptop to desktop. But laptop needs an uptodate antivirus prog. Norton (which is currently installed and has run out) is getting a bad press and AVG has been recommended (and Oh Bother it's time to make dinner!). However, AVG doesn't want to play with my computer till all other antivirus programmes have been removed. Simple, press-button uninstall doesn't seem to quite do the trick. (Norton doesn't want to let go so easily).
I'm currently arguing with AVG and Norton and the computer about what has been/should be/can be removed, by increasingly unorthodox and aggressive methods.
Ok, it's done. (with no concessions to AGV's strong recommendations about the removal of previous anti-virus programmes. I removed everything I could).
The laptop was very good, on holiday, except for a sad blip where it swallowed a whole (2gig) card's worth of photos. I loaded six cards onto it though so the loss of a card is going to save me a little photo sorting time.
So now I'm transferring photos via DVD from laptop to desktop and it's taking ages and I can't wait!!!
So, day 1. We all 6 arrived in Sowerby Bridge and parked our cars and loaded our selves and all our bags and the dog onto a mini bus which took us to Ashton-Under-Lyne. Where our boat waited. We transferred ourselves, our bags and the dog onto the boat (not without a certain amount of tripping over the dog, our bags and each other). We set off and the boys (aged fiftyish to fifty-nineish) got well stuck into the winding of lock gates and the steering of the boat while the girls sorted stuff, made tea and wandered around the boat enjoying variously, the views, the floating pleasantly along and the interesting internal arrangements of the boat. We arrived at Stalybridge and some of us went shopping while some of us did important things to the boat's innards. We went out to eat and walked a very long way to the Station Buffet where we were able to eat pies with gravy and mushy peas on the railway platform if we so wished (sadly, the famous black peas were off - we had to make do with the ordinary greenish variety).
The girls headed back to the boat while the boys went to a nearby pub. Later the boys returned to find the girls arranged in a row on John and Linda's bed, sipping wine and giggling a lot.
The boat rocked gently, later, snores were heard and all was pleasant and delightful. The dog seemed quite happy with all the arrangements so far as he had been taken for plentiful walks along the towpath and spent several illicit minutes snuggled up with Linda on the bed. (apparently he told her he was cold).

One tends, on canal holidays to see a lot of bridges







While I was away, floating and virtually incommunicado, I now realise that exciting and alarming things have been going on back here. I must immediately contact my best friends in the real world and check that nothing like that has been happening to them. I thought about you all a lot but I was thinking quite inappropriate thoughts since what you mostly needed was less floaty and more urgently soothing!
Lovely to be back :) got to go to bed now
xxx
Labels: bridges, geese, locks, other water, stationclock, water between factories, water not between factories