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#31
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On 2016-07-13 17:05:15 +0000, Roland Perry said:
In Ely the Tesco only has canned/bottled/packaged-dry-goods in the Polish aisle. You would probably have to go to one of the specialist corner shops for fresh produce from Poland. And Aldi has a lot of German-influenced (but still plastic packaged) produce. If you want actual German stuff, Lidl is a better bet - Aldi have Anglicised their range far more than they have. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
#32
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#34
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#35
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In article , (Roland Perry)
wrote: In message , at 11:33:00 on Wed, 13 Jul 2016, remarked: Waitrose, Tesco and Sainsburys have entirely white English staff as far as I can tell. Although the most usual language you'll hear from customers, in Tesco at least, is Polish. In Ely maybe. Tesco Cambridge is more diverse, in staff, customers and goods, than Bar Hill. I don't doubt it. Cambridge is an ever expanding bubble quite divorced from the real world. I was told in Bar Hill when asking for some Polish cooked meats there that "they don't do that demographic". In Ely the Tesco only has canned/bottled/packaged-dry-goods in the Polish aisle. You would probably have to go to one of the specialist corner shops for fresh produce from Poland. And Aldi has a lot of German-influenced (but still plastic packaged) produce. I'm not sure which category you think cooked meat (including sausages) comes in. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#36
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In message , at 09:29:11 on Thu, 14
Jul 2016, Neil Williams remarked: In Ely the Tesco only has canned/bottled/packaged-dry-goods in the Polish aisle. You would probably have to go to one of the specialist corner shops for fresh produce from Poland. And Aldi has a lot of German-influenced (but still plastic packaged) produce. If you want actual German stuff, Lidl is a better bet - Aldi have Anglicised their range far more than they have. I agree. But my nearest one is over 20 miles away, and Aldi is half a mile. -- Roland Perry |
#37
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#38
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#39
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On Tue, 12 Jul 2016 08:28:10 +0000 (UTC), d wrote:
On Mon, 11 Jul 2016 16:37:58 +0100 Someone Somewhere wrote: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-36764417 I assume this means the rear platform doors will now always be closed between stops, obviating one of the (small) benefits of this vehicle? It obviates the only remaining benefit given their hybrid systems seem to be a miserable failure too. Hopefully in 10 years or so they'll be sold on and some standard buses - whether hybrid or pure electric who knows - will be bought instead for considerably less. On that subject I'm not entirely sure why successive mayors have never even considered trolley buses, at least in part like in Boston where its electric part of the way and a diesel engine takes over where the wires stop. Seems to me it would be a perfect solution for central london. I have been to Boston but not recently. Is it still, like most places in the USA,, cluttered with overhead wiring? Guy Gorton |
#40
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