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Stumpy Grinder

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Posts posted by Stumpy Grinder

  1. 3 minutes ago, Haironyourchest said:

    I doubt it. Antimalarials are poison, or were, if they're using something different now. I know a guy who got permanent bipolar from a course of antimalarials twenty odd years ago. He says he was normal before the course, and is sure that's what caused it. 

    Doubt what? We took Paludrine daily and Nivaquine weekly. Other stuff was available if you couldn't take those.

    SG

  2. There's a new trap that has just been cleared for use on Squirrels and they are devastating! Designed for use on possums I think? They do not need re-setting and use a scent lure as bait. A gas powered multi-catch which doesn't need to be re-set or baited!:thumbup1:

    Sits in the wood killing squizzer after squizzer with a counter on the side to register kills. Dead bodies get predated - job done!

    Goodnature traps:

    https://goodnaturetraps.co.uk/

    SG

    • Like 2
  3. 2 hours ago, Haironyourchest said:

    Some PTSD is physical as much as mental. Sleep deprivation is a big factor, combined with stimulants and downers, for prolonged time can permenantly derail the neurochemistry, hormones, damage the adrenal glands etc. Chronic stress, basically wares out the nervous system. Combined with too many vaccines confusing the immune response, crap food, etc. 

    This is an interesting point! Although I wouldn't claim to have PTSD. I believe I may have been affected in other ways. Having served in both Gulf wars, I was given a huge cocktail of drugs including such  delights as Anthrax and NAPS (Nerve Agent Pre-treatment Set) plus others! As many as 5 different types in one session as well as antimalarials! Anyway, Gulf war syndrome, (which according to our government doesn't exist), includes such symptoms as Thyroid problems. By strange coincidence my Thyroid gland is not as it should be and I have to take Thyroxine every day for the rest of my life! Maybe just a coincidence?9_9

    SG

    • Like 3
  4. 4 hours ago, Vespasian said:

    See this is what I call a reasonable reply, not a rant that doesn't address any issues I raised..

     

    The real problem isn't PTSD  but the the army not filtering out those individuals who they must know ain't ever gonna be suitable to be sent out on active duty...   would be better all round if they held those men back or didn't let em in in the first place...

     

    wouldn't be hard to thin the applicants down, what was your last job, how long did you do it for..  how many jobs have you had..  whats your level of education...   why do you want to join the army.

     

    Does the army life excite you or is it something to do until you work out what you want to do in life..

     

    Might not have as many volunteers, but it would raise the quality of the common soldiery..

     

    Obviously in times of war the bar might be lowered..  

    This post clearly shows that you have no idea what you are talking about! We are all wired up differently, and you cannot determine how an individual will react in a particular situation until they actually encounter it! The Army is full of supposedly hard blokes that come mainly from broken families and have bags of confidence in everyday life.....

    I remember an occasion in the first gulf war where I had to put a huge black American soldiers face back on which had been severed just in front of one ear and pushed completely across to his other ear. Once back on, I had to poke my finger into the various holes to align them so he could breath and see. I then had to treat his broken femur and other injuries. I expected help from my mates, but most of them couldn't help as they were being physically sick at the sight. The only person that actually helped was my OC, Maj Pat Lawless who was an awesome bloke that went on to become a Brigadier, but then resigned over Gays being allowed in the Army!

    I actually enjoyed being able to help someone that I hope survived that day and have no emotional scars, just a positive memory. However, some of those that were sick may still bear the emotional scars to this day. We are all different!

    Vespasian, you would do well not have such strong opinions on a very emotive subject of which you clearly have no understanding.

    SG

    • Like 5
  5. 15 minutes ago, Boggle4137 said:

    I understand where you are coming from comparing ww1 soldiers to modern day counterparts, however being shot at, blown up or being caught in a situation where lives are being lost, is still traumatic, no matter how you look at it. I'm sure if we knew what we did today, with the services we have now some of those guys would have been looked after.

    Of course it is, and you don't have to be a serving soldier to encounter PTSD. At the end of the day, we no longer have conscription, so it is effectively a lifestyle choice. Much the same as the fire fighters that tackled Grenfell and probably encountered more trauma in one night than most service personnel see in an entire career. What is good, is that it is being recognised in its various forms which is clearly the first requirement before any treatment can take place.

    • Like 3
  6. When you compare the amount of traumatic stress suffered by a modern day soldier, compared to that of a first or second world war soldier, they are a quantum leap apart! Back then, many suffering from true stress were even shot for desertion! I think it is fair to say that our elder generations were hard as nails compared to their modern day counterparts, as life in general was much harder then. It's all too easy nowadays to just give up and blame society which will then provide a solution. Many servicemen and women join up because it is an easy solution to sort their lives out. They then become institutionalised and then face the same problems when they leave. Continual postings and relatively cheap rental married quarters or single accommodation do not encourage house purchase. Many don't learn a trade as such and therefore have no real skill set when they leave. Resettlement training is very good, but you can't just do a course in Plumbing/Electrics/ Tree surgery/etc...... and then miraculously become one the next day after you leave the forces! Unfortunately, most think you can as they don't know any different. They then become unemployed and sometimes homeless where many are adapted to as they are taught to survive.

    Those that serve long enough will have a bloody good pension which they can draw upon on leaving. It is those that serve only a few years that tend to suffer. Retention is a major issue in the armed forces due to relatively poor pay and a very poor quality of life. If you work on those, the forces would be a happier place and less would leave to become unemployed and homeless. It's a job at the end of the day and you are not owed a living at the end of it.

    SG

  7. If I had the perceived powers of God for the day, I would firstly answer the prayers of everyone that prayed to god that day for help. Most of the world's problems would then be sorted that day, but it would then bring into question why god himself didn't bother his arse to sort them out in a single day? Is he just lazy, or maybe he doesn't actually exist?

    I'd end the day with a massive Euro Lottery win as we shut the door on Europe with a solid pro UK Brexit.

    SG

  8. 6 hours ago, nickc said:

    Old graveyards are a nightmare. Lucky if they are 6inch down never mind 6ft. And not all graves are marked or in obvious places. Grave stones sometimes are moved or are lying just below the surface.

    You're not wrong there! The back of this church had been cleared and all the old headstones are now just lined up along a fence.  No way of telling where any of the old graves are. This is the second one I've done now.

    SG

  9. 25 minutes ago, mrstumpy said:

    They are alright.  It's the expensive slab on the surface which needs care!   But I would like to see you take that Rayco to 6ft depth.

    You will find bones just below surface, at some point. ☠️

    Yeah, 6ft may be pushing it a bit! Some of these graves though have coffins on top of coffins, so although the original maybe  6ft down, how deep were the next ones? :/

    Those machines also have an oil level restriction when worked too steep. Apart from starving the upmost cylinder of oil, the engine cuts out when the pump becomes starved of oil. Easily achieved if the oil level is low and you are working it too steep. It pays to level the machine occasionally to get the oil up around both cylinders.

    I don't think I woke the dead, but I did find myself chatting to the occupants in what was a very old and deserted graveyard which seemed like the right thing to do at the time! None of them answered - thankfully!:D

    SG

  10. 3 hours ago, Shooter said:

    Thats some responsibility there!  Wouldn't like the grinder to kick up

    Wouldn't normally use a small machine on a job like that, but I'd been out on a very narrow access job prior to that one.

    That's still a very capable machine though at 20hp. At low revs and with the hand brake applied it is going nowhere I don't want it to. It was actually the better machine for the job as there were little blue bamboo canes marking small stumps (mainly elder) all over the place! Much quicker to whip around with that one than a bigger machine.

  11. 3 hours ago, David Cropper said:

    Bought one of these set ups a fortnight ago, brilliant bit of kit. I've got the knack of it now, even sharpening ones in the scrap bucket I thought were too rounded. It really does get the edge on the teeth, you get a bit of dust but nothing like off the green wheels. Wish I'd bought one years ago, so easy, even for me, a bloke who has difficulty sharpening a pencil!

    Excellent David!  Try and get the steel off the back with the standard carbide wheel and save the diamonds for the Tungsten! Wear a mask too as the dust is not good for you!

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