30-06-2005 2:14 PM
Or we could just mooch around and learn a few things.
Cheers
Paul
19-01-2007 5:32 PM
Yes, you've guessed it. It all fell down!
Heath Robinson springs to mind.
He won't put in an insurance claim for any storm damage we incur, convinced that the Insurance Co. won't pay up.
He used to be a Claims Inspector.
19-01-2007 6:40 PM
19-01-2007 6:52 PM
19-01-2007 7:21 PM
25-01-2007 11:19 AM
Competitors and Officials Guide to Drugs and Sport. Compiled and edited by Jacki Bird and Michele Verroken. ISBN: 095328400x
Thank you - have no idea how to price.
25-01-2007 1:39 PM
25-01-2007 3:23 PM
25-01-2007 4:04 PM
Well done, Bee and good old Mr Google. It is, indeed, a Sports Council publication.
31-01-2007 8:24 PM
01-02-2007 12:13 PM
01-02-2007 7:10 PM
01-02-2007 9:09 PM
I've never actually seen bookworm damage, and would be interested to hear from someone who has.
This is what I found from Wikipedia
Bookworm is a popular generalization for any insect which supposedly bores through books.
Actual book-borers are uncommon. Both the larvae of the Death watch beetle (Xestobium rufovillosum) and the Common Furniture Beetle (Anobium punctatum) will tunnel through wood and if paper is nearby they will pass into that.
A major book-feeding insect is the booklouse (or book louse). A tiny (under 1 mm), soft-bodied wingless psocoptera (usually Trogium pulsatorium), that actually feeds on molds and other organic matter found in ill-maintained works, although they will also attack bindings and other parts. It is not actually a true louse.
Many other insects, like the Silverfish (Lepisma saccharina) or Cockroach (various Blattodea), will consume these molds and also degraded paper or the starch-based binding pastes – warmth and moisture or high humidity are prerequisites, so damage is more common in the tropics. Modern glues and paper are less attractive to insects.
01-02-2007 9:21 PM
01-02-2007 9:49 PM
01-02-2007 9:49 PM
02-02-2007 9:28 AM
02-02-2007 6:36 PM
03-02-2007 10:18 PM
04-02-2007 10:42 AM
Have a copy of 'His Mother's Book' by Evelyn Everett-Green. There are several listed on other sites, but all seem to be published by Pickering & Inglis Ltd., C1938 as part of the Honour series.
The one I have is published by John F. Shaw & Co. 48 Paternoster Row. The frontispiece is black and white, unlike the others which are coloured.
Not expecting any great value, but would like your opinions to further my very limited knowledge.
Many thanks, as usual.
05-02-2007 8:18 PM