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THE UPPER LIFFEY STREET PLAZA -229593-1
The idea for a Northside plaza emerged after the refusal of the College Green plaza project by An Bord Pleanála in 2018.
MORE OR LESS COMPLETE – 12 MARCH 2024 History of Upper Liffey Street Medieval Origins: Liffey Street traces its roots back to Dublin’s medieval period. It formed a significant route connecting the city centre to the River Liffey’s quays, a bustling hub of trade and commerce. Commercial Importance: Over centuries, Liffey Street evolved into a major commercial thoroughfare. It was lined with…
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#Abbry street#Apple#Arnotts car park#Dublin City Centre#Fotonique#ihone 12 Pro Max#Infomatique#Lower Liffey street#North Of The River#Pedestrian Only#Plaza#public space#Redevelopment#Upper Liffey street#William Murphy
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Solid Ground ~ One
A/N: Afternoon all! Here’s the start of Diana and Steve’s journey. As stated before, these won’t be in order - just this one and the last, which are set in Season Six.
“So, you saw her then? Is she alright?”
It was a typical Friday night - for Steve and I, anyway.
After a gruelling day of doing practically nothing, Steve and I found ourselves back at my house. Consuming copious amounts of takeaway. I was slightly tipsy from a bottle of red, whilst Steve was two bottles deep into a pack of six Peroni’s. Both of us curled up on the sofa. Steve always took the left, I the right.
Taking a rather elongated sip, Steve just seemed to huff in response, “She’s fine. Who wouldn’t be? Over at Polk, away from the likes of us.”
“Don’t be bitter Steven.”
“Believe me, I’ve tried not to be but-“ Steve couldn’t finish. Instead, taking another drink of beer. He focused his attention back on the television, where a crappy, and rather uninteresting talk show played.
But I wasn’t done, “Kate wanted a change. There’s nothing wrong with that. We should be thankful that for once, she’s happy.”
It took him a moment, then Steve shifted, his gaze meeting mine. I raised a brow, causing him to chuckle softly and return to watching the television.
On the other hand, I found myself just staring at Steve, unable to tear my eyes away. There were a number of things occurring in my brain. Maybe it was the wine? Surely that wasn’t causing the flutterings. No, that had been there for quite some time.
He’s my best friend. There’s not much more to it than that. Steve Arnott was the waist coated light of my life, and when I say that I couldn’t live without him, that wouldn’t be an exaggeration. He liked beer and football. A hot curry after work. I hated beer, had zero interest in football and couldn’t stand curry. But that didn’t matter. Not to us. That’s what made our friendship so special. If Steve could handle the odd episode of Married at First Sight (the Australian version, not the British,) then I could withstand attending a football match or two. We’re different, but so alike. That’s what made us. I knew that, regardless of if he had a relationship, I was his rock - his one constant, as he had been mine for so long.
But now he wanted to transfer, leaving AC-12 behind, just as Kate had done eighteen months before.
The thought of Steve relocating made my chest hurt. It was selfish of me, but I didn’t want him to go. There was still time. He hadn’t made up his mind just yet. Work had been kicking his arse recently. This was due to unsolved murder of journalist, Gail Vella. It was an incredibly tragic murder and naturally, the handling by DCI. Davidson was starting to botch. Over the last two years, I’d had a few dealings with the DCI in question, majority of them ending with the biting of tongues and keeping my mouth shut. I wasn’t Steve. I couldn’t get myself in trouble, not again. Rather than get caught up in my thoughts, I found myself reaching for my glass of Merlot and settling into Steve’s side. He was warm and luckily, didn’t mind the intrusion; his arm going around me like it was supposed to be there. After all these years he was used to it.
//
Steve tried to focus on the tv. He tried his hardest, his very hardest, but no matter what - he couldn’t. Not with Diana nestled to close to his side. After six years, he’d grown accustomed to seeing her, at AC-12, socially on the weekends and one thing was for certain, that without her, he’d be lost. Unable to properly function. It never mattered what he did - Almost ruined the cases; ended up in hospital after being thrown down stairs (he still hadn’t lived that one down, physically and with Diana); the many failed relationships and after all that happened with Dot, she was there. Still by his side.
Then there was the medication. Diana wasn’t aware of that, Steve had made certain that his friend wouldn’t find out. There would be hell to pay if she did, and would only fuss him, then maybe tell on him to his mother. Not the ideal situation, if he was being honest with himself. No, secrets were better for now.
Things weren’t looking good at AC-12 either. Everybody was consumed with the suspicious murder of Gail Vella. Hastings, Bishop, even Diana, who’s role at AC-12 had been elevated to be the only Forensic Consultant. Seeing Diana everyday made Steve feel warm. To see her smile whenever he managed to crack a stupid joke, or when Hastings quipped something incredibly Irish. It seemed to brighten the room and for that, Steve was glad. As the television grew less interesting, Steve found his mind going to other places, to the secret meeting he’d had with Kate. What a failure that had subsequently been…
—
Steve hated Polk Avenue. He could never quite place why, but he did. Kate leaving had affected him more than he cared to admit. She was his ‘mate.’ Aside from Diana, she was the only other person who he could trust. They both knew everything about him. An unnerving thought indeed. As he parked up and flashed the lights - four times, just to be sure - Steve waited patiently for Kate to approach the car. He spotted her as she began to walk away from the building and near his car, hidden subtly by the front gates. Once she was inside, it was clear Kate wasn’t all that pleased to see him.
Turning to face him, her face incredulous, “What kind of knobby signal was that?”
Typical Kate, he thought.
“First thing that came to mind.”
“Go round the block in case anyone’s watching.” Kate instructed. Pulling her seatbelt over and on, settling into the passenger seat.
Inhaling sharply, Steve simply nodded, putting the car into drive, “No worries.”
Together, they pulled away from the station, turning onto the street and driving away. For a moment, an awkward, unfamiliar silence filled the vehicle. It was Kate who spoke up first. Breaking the peace.
“There’s a nice little balti up the road. But, I’m guessing that’s not why you’re here, though.” She was calm about it all, but Steve could sense the tension in her voice.
“I wish,” He sighed, “Sorry mate.”
Again, Kate fell silent and chewed on her lip, letting out a quiet, “Right.”
“I can’t share any details, but we might be looking into Vella.” Steve started carefully.
Kate couldn’t believe it.
Closing her eyes and sighing deeply, “Oh shit,” Opening them again, she found herself getting angry with the man sat beside her, “Great, so when Buckells and Davidson find out, they’re going to think-“
“They’ll think either you’re our CHIS or you’ve been embedded as a UCO.” He intercepted. Turning, he tried to smile at his friend, “That’s why I’m giving you a heads-up, Kate.”
Kate still wasn’t having it, “Steve, you know what it’s like being ex-anti corruption. I’ve had to work my bollocks off with them lot.”
Of course Steve knew this. Kate was one of the hardest workers in the force, and yet, it all boiled down to loyalty - as it always seemed to do these days.
“Is this the gaffer’s way of getting his own back?” She continued.
Frowning, Steve simply shook his head, “No, of course not.”
“Why am I still calling him “gaffer?”
Steve tried to think of something in kind. He knew why she’d moved, as did Hastings. There was no doubt about that. Sighing, Kate moved onto other subjects, ready to stop talking about her new Bosses.
“How’s Di?” She asked softly, her voice lowering for the first time since getting in.
Kate missed her friends, even though she wouldn’t admit to that out loud. Seeing them both everyday was something she’d missed. The laughter in those off moments. A coffee when it was calm. Her weekly glass of wine with Diana - that was what she missed the most. Sure, they messaged from time to time, but now Diana was a consultant, rather than just an investigator, and with her position at Polk Avenue, time was scarce. Kate observed Steve closely. Noting how the tops of his ears turned a little pink, or how his cheeks had blushed. Internally, she smirked.
Steve let out a harsh cough and nodded, “She’s good, yeah, she’s- Alright.”
“I do miss her,” Then, “You’re so obvious you know.”
“What?” He was confused.
Kate let out a snort, shaking her head amusedly, “Never mind. Forget I said anything about it.”
Steve wanted to enquire about her statement, but left it alone. Not wanting to upset the moment between them. Their conversation about Vella and Hastings continued until they reached Polk Avenue again. Then, as Steve was left alone, his thoughts returned back to Kate and her statement. What was he so obvious about?
Shaking his head, he tried to push the thoughts back and started to make his way back into the city.
—
Collectively, the pair were silent, watching the television. Steve’s fingers brushed over Diana’s shoulder, whilst Diana made his shoulder her pillow. Separately however, their thoughts were racing.
Both recalling the moments that had led them to this.
#steve arnott fanfiction#steve arnott#line of duty fanfiction#line of duty#kate fleming#oc: diana jackson#fanfiction#jo davidson#ac 12
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Line of Duty Timeline: Can This Help To Solve the Jo Davidson DNA Mystery?
https://ift.tt/3s4cUyW
Warning: contains major spoilers for Line of Duty series 1-6.
You could say we’ve taken this too far. You could be right. You could also say that, for a Line of Duty fan attempting to solve the Jo Davidson family mystery, it’s useful to know that Tommy Hunter was 13 years old when Jo Davidson was born, making him more likely to be her brother than her father. Or that John Corbett was born two months after Jo Davidson, making it impossible for his mother Anne-Marie McGillis to also be her mother.
And then there are the real questions, such as: the day before AC-12 raided Hillside Lane Station in series six, it was Kate Fleming’s 35th birthday. Did she bring in doughnuts? Had Kate come in worse for wear from one too many glasses of white in Frederico’s with Jo? The people demand to know.
Taken from police records glimpsed on screen and episode scripts, below are the key dates mentioned in Line of Duty, in chronological order, right from the start. We’ll update as series six continues. Use it to bolster your theories and beat your friends in arguments. Carry the fire, team.
Prior to Series One
16th July 1963 Edward Gerard Hastings is born. Aged 2, sniffs out a ring of corrupt toddlers at his playschool 10th May 1965 Future OCG leader John Thomas ‘Tommy’ Hunter is born in Glasgow 12th April 1976 Lindsay Elizabeth Denton is born. With a fringe 22nd April 1979 Jo Davidson is born. Suspiciously 3rd June 1979 John Corbett is born to Anne-Marie McGillis in Northern Ireland 1982 19-year-old Ted Hastings joins the Royal Ulster Constabulary, one of two Catholic officers in his unit. Befriends a CHIS named Anne-Marie McGillis 18th April 1989 Anne-Marie McGillis is kidnapped by the IRA 23rd September 1985 Steve Arnott is born. Wearing a waistcoat 3rd November 1985 Kate Fleming is born. Crime doesn’t know what’s about to hit it 29th June 1989 Ted Hastings is injured in a pipe bomb explosion that kills a fellow Catholic officer, he suspects a deliberate attack and a cover-up conspiracy. He moves to England. ca.1990 A teenage Matthew ‘Dot’ Cottan starts working as a caddy for Tommy Hunter at the Edge Park Golf Club 1990s A group of 17 men including Tommy Hunter and CS Patrick Fairbank routinely sexually abuse the boys at Sands View children’s home 14th November 1998 Social worker Oliver Stephens-Lloyd is found murdered by the OCG after pursuing the Sands View boys’ abuse allegations. It’s made to look like suicide 21st March 1999 John Corbett joins the police service, aged 19 29th July 1999 Joanne Davidson joins the police service, aged 20 29th November 1999 Ryan Pilkington is born to mother Keely on the Borogrove Estate 2001 Anne-Marie McGillis’ corpse is found with signs of torture by the IRA 9th May 2006 Kate Fleming joins Central Police, aged 20 15th October 2007 Steve Arnott joins Central Police, aged 22 2005 A 15-year-old Lisa McQueen is admitted to a police programme for teen offenders
Series One (Unknown 2012)
– Steve Arnott’s counter-terrorism op is botched and CI Osborne demands a cover-up. Steve refuses and is recruited by Ted Hastings at AC-12 – DCI Tony Gates receives the Officer of the Year award and is investigated by AC-12 for manipulating his unit’s stats – OCG money launderer Jackie Laverty runs over her accountant. Her lover DCI Tony Gates helps to cover it up. She’s murdered by the OCG, who blackmail Gates to cover up a string of drug murders – DCI Gates gets a confession from OCG leader Tommy Hunter, delivers him to AC-12, then kills himself by stepping into traffic so his family receive a ‘line of duty’ pay-out November 2012 Deborah Devereux is arrested for assault against a neighbour, DI Buckells at Kingsgate Station has the charges dropped in exchange for sexual favours
Series Two (September – November 2013)
21st May 2013 DI Lindsay Denton terminates her pregnancy, at lover DCC Dryden’s behest 16th August 2013 DCC Mike Dryden is photographed by the OCG engaging in a sex act with underage victim Carly Kirk, who goes missing that day. To fake an alibi, Dryden takes responsibility for his wife’s speeding ticket issued that evening 5th September 2013 A police convoy transporting former OCG head-turned-witness Tommy Hunter is diverted by DI Lindsay Denton, then ambushed and three officers are killed 14th September 2013 Tommy Hunter and DC Georgia Trotman are murdered in hospital by bent copper DS Jeremy Cole September 2013 – DI Denton is charged with conspiracy to murder, remanded until the 18th of November 2013, released, then rearrested and sentenced to life, serving 585 days inside until her successful appeal.
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Line of Duty Series 5 Recap: Framing Ted Hastings
By Louisa Mellor
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Line Of Duty recap: the story so far
By Louisa Mellor
Series Three (May to July 2015)
13th May 2015 Danny Waldron shoots dead his childhood abuser Ronan Murphy and instigates a police cover-up, later torturing Linus Murphy – another abuser – to death 1st June 2015 Danny Waldron is fatally shot by PC Hari Bains, blackmailed by the OCG 13th July 2015 Danny Waldron’s funeral takes place 17th July 2015 Lindsay Denton is murdered by DI Matthew ‘Dot’ Cottan, who attempts to frame Steve Arnott for the crime 18th July 2015 Dot sends an ‘Urgent exit required’ text to the OCG and is shot out of an AC-12 interview. Kate gives chase and Dot is killed saving her from an OCG bullet. She records his Dying Declaration giving clues to the identity of corrupt officers in league with the OCG
Series Four (March to May 2017)
11th November 2016 The dismembered corpse of sex worker Baswinder Kaur is found 25th January 2017 Leonie Collersdale, also a sex worker, goes missing 9th March 2017 Hana Reznikova is abducted as part of the OCG’s attempt to frame Michael Farmer for the Operation Trapdoor murders 17th March 2017 Roz Huntley hits her head at Tim Ifield’s flat and, thinking her dead, he makes plans to dispose of her corpse. She wakes up and in a struggle, accidentally kills Tim Ifield then attempts to cover it up by cutting off his fingers and disposing of his laptop and phone 4th May 2017 Hastings fatally shoots a ‘Balaclava Man’ attempting to extract and/or kill solicitor Jimmy Lakewell from AC-12 headquarters 5th May 2017 ACC Derek Hilton is found dead, supposedly a shotgun suicide but more likely murdered by the OCG. At a later date, Roz Huntley pleads guilty to the manslaughter of Tim Ifield and is sentenced to 10 years in HMP Brentiss Prison. Jimmy Lakewell pleads guilty to perverting the course of justice and is sentenced to HMP Blackthorn
Series Five (February to July 2019)
Late Dec 2018/Early Jan 2019 -Gill Biggeloe, working for the OCG, lies to John Corbett that Ted Hastings is the corrupt officer responsible for his mother’s death by the IRA. He records the conversation 22nd Jan 2019 Operation Pear Tree officially begins, implanting John Corbett in the OCG 15th Feb 2019 The OCG hijack a heroin shipment Eastfield Depot, murdering 3 corrupt police officers 23rd Feb 2019 PC Maneet Bindra is murdered by the OCG. RIP 27th Feb 2019 The OCG hijack a ballistics transport carrying firearms 4th March 2019 Lisa McQueen meets with DCS Hargreaves, whom she’s been blackmailing over his visits to an OCG-run illegal brothel 5th March 2019 The OCG raid the Eastfield Depot, John Corbett shoots Hargreaves dead 10th March 2019 Steve and Kate question Steph Corbett about John Corbett’s NI connections 12th March 2019 Ted Hastings visits Lee Banks at Blackthorn prison, John Corbett is murdered by Ryan Pilkington 14th March 2019 Patricia Carmichael of AC-3 interviews Ted Hastings over his alleged corruption after he poses as ‘H’ in an unofficial undercover op which results in the arrest of Lisa McQueen and the death of Miroslav Minkowicz. Lisa later makes an immunity deal and gets witness protection. Gill Biggeloe is found to be corrupt, arrested, and also ends up under witness protection Late March 2019 Operation Pear Tree is concluded, finding no link between police corruption and organised crime. God, give me strength! 27th July 2019 Ryan Pilkington officially joins Central Police
Series Six (October 2020 – ?)
10th September 2019 Gail Vella is murdered outside her Moss Heath home October 2019 DCI Jo Davidson is made SIO of the Gail Vella murder investigation 2nd or 3rd October 2019 Gail Vella’s funeral takes place 26th October 2020 CHIS Alistair Oldroyd phones his handler to say he heard ‘Ross Turner’ boasting of killing Gail Vella. Det Supt Buckells delays the operation to pick up the suspect until the next morning. 27th October 2020 1:23am: a burner phone found at PS Jatri’s home makes an outgoing call. Operation Lighthouse is diverted to an armed robbery, causing more than two hours’ delay. Terry Boyle is found at Ross Turner’s address at Beechwood House and arrested on suspicion of murder. The freezer formerly containing Jackie Laverty’s corpse is dumped 29th October 2020 CHIS Alistair Oldroyd is found dead 2nd November 2020 Farida Jatri requests a transfer from MIT. She is replaced by PC Ryan Pilkington. Carl Banks’ corpse is discovered at an industrial site, the prints on the knife match those of Alistair Oldroy 4th November 2020 AC-12 tries to raid Hillside Lane Station but are sent back, then return later to seize the Operation Lighthouse files, some of which are missing and later found in DSU Buckells’ car 8th November 2020 Ryan follows Jo to her home address on Croxton Street 10th November 2020 Kate and Jo go for a drink at Frederico’s Bar, followed by Ryan 11th November 2020 PC Ryan Pilkington attempts to kill Terry Boyle, successfully drowning PC Lisa Patel by forcing the police car into Edge Park Reservoir November 2020 A police convoy carrying witness Jimmy Lakewell comes under fire by the OCG. DI Arnott shoots a sniper. Lakewell is murdered in prison by OCG member Lee Banks. DNA deposits found at Farida Jatri’s home reveal that Jo Davidson is related to a significant nominal from a past investigation End of November 2020 AC-12 is due to be merged with AC-3 and AC-9, and Ted Hastings, mother of God, is due to retire
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Line of Duty continues on Sunday the 18th of April at 9pm on BBC One.
The post Line of Duty Timeline: Can This Help To Solve the Jo Davidson DNA Mystery? appeared first on Den of Geek.
from Den of Geek https://ift.tt/3tjUFG6
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Erosion experts caution N.B. against continued coastal development
For individuals who stay alongside the sandstone shoreline of southeastern New Brunswick, fixed erosion and rising sea ranges are details of life.
As builders push to construct nearer and nearer to the ocean, environmental consultants say it is time for the province to strengthen the foundations that defend the coast.
College of Guelph’s Robin Davidson-Arnott describes New Brunswick’s coastal areas safety coverage as “not very sturdy,” whereas Mount Allison’s Jeff Ollerhead says, “New Brunswick is just not on the progressive finish of the spectrum.”
Each warn it’s taxpayers who will probably be left to pay the long-term prices of disappearing seashores, flood-damaged properties and dangerous rescues for first responders.
I’ve seen a lot of silly issues in my life, however this can be a actually dangerous one.– Robin Davidson-Arnott, College of Guelph
Issues about constructing alongside the coast have been not too long ago raised in Cap Bimet, a 20-minute stroll at low tide from Parlee Seashore, the place a Moncton developer has proposed a five-storey, 92-unit condo constructing with underground parking inside 30 metres of the shoreline.
Individuals who stay within the tiny neighborhood say the comparatively giant constructing will change their quiet lifestyle, however Davidson-Arnott says his considerations come from a scientific viewpoint, not an emotional one.
The proposed new condo constructing, depicted in gray, overlooks the Northumberland Strait and would sit inside 30 metres of the coast. (EIA Registration/Brinkley Investments)
“I’ve seen a lot of silly issues in my life, however this can be a actually dangerous one,” the professor emeritus within the division of geography, atmosphere and geomatics, mentioned of the proposal.
“The hazard of placing up a five-storey constructing [with an] underground car parking zone — it is a actually, actually dangerous place to place one thing with underground parking.”
He worries that disturbing the soil and excavating into the sandstone bedrock so near the shoreline will threat contamination of the wells that offer water to the present 200 cottages and condominiums in the neighborhood.
“You may very well lose a lot of the water and disturb the aquifer that is there,” he mentioned. “And positively in the event you’re placing down a basement, you must be fairly good about not letting nasty issues within the basement seep into your water system as a result of it is simply above sea degree.”
The constructing web site for the proposed condo constructing in Cap Bimet may be seen right here, to the east of the 2 swimming swimming pools on the prime of the photograph, and to the north of the massive constructing which is a condominium. It’s the former web site of Paturel’s fish plant. (EIA Registration/Brinkley Investments)
Davidson-Arnott labored with Ontario’s Ministry of Pure Assets as a part of the crew that wrote the shoreline administration coverage and technical tips for the Nice Lakes.
He mentioned the foundations there would not permit any new development in such an space to have a basement. Actually, he mentioned, all new development on prime of a bluff the place the shoreline is retreating must be moveable.
“If we have been in an space like this, topic to flooding, you’d in all probability be saying no new homes may be constructed with any form of basement,” he mentioned. “All of them need to be constructed on a pad that’s raised above the foreseeable flooding restrict. And thirdly, you may need to have all of them constructed in order that they could possibly be moved off of the realm.”
“That is one of many points that occurs in an space like this with sea degree rise … in the end issues turn into uninhabitable, and then you definately’re left with the duty of eradicating all of the stuff that is there.”
College of Guelph professor emeritus Robin Davidson-Arnott helped to jot down the laws about coastal improvement in Ontario, and mentioned New Brunswick’s guidelines should be stronger. (Sumbitted by Robin Davidson-Arnott)
Extra rock results in much less seashore
New Brunswick’s coastal areas safety coverage, which was final up to date in March 2019, lays out laws for 2 “safety zones.” The primary, often called Zone A, is essentially the most delicate and consists of seashores, dunes and marshes.
In accordance with the coverage, “Because of the excessive sensitivity and the very excessive threat of hazard/injury from storm surges, fewer improvement actions are permissible in Zone A.”
The coverage says “erosion management buildings,” which embrace rock armour alongside the coast, is suitable so long as it is not inside a coastal marsh, and the applicant has “demonstrated that there’s proof of abrasion and a resultant threat to infrastructure.”
Rock has been put in alongside the coast in Cap Bimet in an effort to guard the land from erosion. The proposed five-storey condo constructing would overlook this rock financial institution. (Vanessa Blanch/CBC)
Dominique Bérubé, a coastal geomorphologist with the Division of Pure Assets, mentioned the common cliff recession fee at Cap Bimet has decreased with the set up of rock armouring.
It was 0.20 metres per yr between 1944 and 1971, however simply 0.10 metres per yr between 1971 and 2001.
Bérubé mentioned primarily based on the provincial database, the common cliff recession fee alongside the Northumberland Strait is 0.28 metres per yr below pure circumstances.
Davidson-Arnott cautions in opposition to coming to the conclusion that rock armouring can gradual the recession or erosion fee completely, and mentioned there are long-term, detrimental side-effects.
“If you have not had an enormous storm for 5 or 6 years you suppose, ‘Oh, nicely, the whole lot’s OK,’ however over that interval stuff has been eroded.”
He mentioned piling giant rocks and boulders or constructing retaining partitions alongside the shoreline trigger underwater erosion and the whole coast ultimately “will get undercut.”
“The underwater erosion continues,” he mentioned. “And so it will get deeper, and when it will get deeper, the larger waves can attain the shore.”
Jeff Ollerhead, a professor of atmosphere and geography at Mount Allison College, mentioned rock armouring of the shore is already inflicting the lack of seashores. Alongside a lot of the coast, there isn’t a longer sufficient sand at excessive tide for seashore goers to put out their towels.
Ollerhead mentioned deeper water means larger waves crashing in opposition to boulders and which means extra lack of sand, dunes and wetlands. He worries New Brunswick will find yourself with cement retaining partitions to maintain the ocean again — one thing he refers to as the “New Jersey-fication” of the shoreline.
Jeff Ollerhead, professor of atmosphere and geography at Mount Allison College, says defending the shoreline is within the collective curiosity of all New Brunswickers. The price of future flood injury will probably be paid for by taxpayers. (CBC)
“Yow will discover locations on the New Jersey shoreline the place there’s nothing however a cement wall — that’s the coast now. It is only a cement wall … there isn’t a seashore, there isn’t a sand dunes, there aren’t any creatures that do not take pleasure in residing on a cement wall as a result of that is what you get for a coast.”
Transferring setbacks, larger buffers
The second protected space outlined within the New Brunswick coverage is Zone B, which is a “coastal lands buffer” that runs 30 metres inland from the shoreline.
In Cap Bimet, the brand new condo advanced can be constructed inside this 30-metre buffer zone, one thing Davidson-Arnott mentioned should not be permitted.
Pete LeBlanc and Steve Glidden say a ‘mega mission’ does not belong of their rural neighborhood by the Northumberland Strait and fear it may contaminate nicely water and worsen coastal erosion. 3:18
In Ontario, relatively than a hard and fast line for setbacks, it’s a shifting line. Davidson-Arnott mentioned most builders do not prefer it, however that line is “recalculated by the conservation authorities each 5 to 10 years.”
It is usually recalculated each time somebody applies for a constructing allow primarily based on the speed of abrasion, or recession.
“In Ontario, the laws would say that you’ve the 30-metre setback, after which you have got 100 occasions the annual recession fee. So in the event you’re recession fee is about 0.3 metres a yr, that might be one other 30 metres on prime of that.”
Within the case of the proposed improvement at Cap Bimet, if the laws have been the identical as they’re in Ontario, the condo constructing must be set again roughly 60 metres from the shoreline.
“As a result of we assume a 100-year lifespan. So 100 occasions the common annual recession fee is to can help you have 100-year use of your property.”
Safety of coast in ‘public curiosity’
Ollerhead believes coastal improvement is one thing each New Brunswicker, not simply those that stay alongside the water, ought to care about.
“When giant flooding occasions occur or coastal storms, the federal government is available in with authorities reduction, monetary assist for individuals who suffered injury,” he defined. “So there’s a collective public curiosity on this.”
In Caissie Cape, many seashores now disappear at excessive tide with the continued use of rock armour to guard the coast. (CBC)
Davidson-Arnott understands the strain native governments really feel to extend their tax base, and that it may be arduous to withstand including tax {dollars} to a neighborhood, however he mentioned it’s vital that planning boards and native leaders take a long-term method.
He remembers an enormous storm in 1985 in Longpoint, a 40-kilometre-long spit in Lake Eerie. He compares the street into Longpoint to the street into Cap Bimet and believes it ought to function a warning.
“There have been eight or 9 cottagers who have been nonetheless there throughout the storm, and so they needed to attempt to rescue these folks — the cottages have been being washed into the marsh,” he mentioned. “So it isn’t solely endangering the lives of people who find themselves in there, nevertheless it’s endangering the lives of people that have to return in and rescue them.”
Davidson-Arnott mentioned the underside line is {that a} constructing should be designed to resist the weather that can “come at it” in the long term, and the proposed condo advanced at Cap Bimet is an instance of why coastal laws should evolve.
“It’s important to bear in mind flooding, sea degree rise and coastal erosion, and from my perspective there is no web site on this space right here that might warrant placing up a five-storey constructing.”
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source https://fikiss.net/erosion-experts-caution-n-b-against-continued-coastal-development/ Erosion experts caution N.B. against continued coastal development published first on https://fikiss.net/ from Karin Gudino https://karingudino.blogspot.com/2021/06/erosion-experts-caution-nb-against.html
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100 Things I Love
1. Poetry and beautiful quotes from literature
2. Feeling it start to rain on a hot day or when you’ve been exercising
3. Sitting in a dimly lit room, writing and listening to music
4. Old typewriters and record players
5. Kelly Macdonald/Joanne Davidson
6. People who ship Wolfstar, Flemson, Cazzie etc
7. Watching someone play with children or be affectionate with children
8. Huge open fields
9. Laying in said fields with my girlfriend (hi beth if you’re reading this)
10. Queer women represented in fiction
11. Drinking fanta on a hot day
12. Cities, especially Rome, especially in summer or when it’s raining
13. Watching storms and rain from a window
14. Smiling when I think of old memories
15. Line of Duty (sorry, had to mention it)
16. Listening to music very loud through headphones
17. Looking at people in cities and towns and wondering what their story is
18. Trains, and the feeling of looking out of your window and watching miles fly by
19. Making/finding and giving gifts
20. At concerts when they hold out their mic to the audience and everyone screams back the lyrics
21. Beth’s laugh. And her voice. And pretty much all her mannerisms 😊
22. Cats
23. Hozier, Frank Turner, Dear Evan Hansen, Hamilton, The Head and The Heart, The Strumbrellas, and countless other artists that make me feel at home with their music
24. Pretty flowers and bright green lawns and huge houses with hidden ruins and statues and secrets!
25. Watching someone in love look at their person
26. Road trips and car journeys
27. Theme parks and running from one side to the other so you don’t miss your favourite ride
28. Talking to my friends
29. Talking to people that I don’t often talk to and falling platonically in love with little things about them
30. Coming home after a long day
31. Being accepted after coming out to someone or mentioning that I have a girlfriend
32. Reading all day and being so gripped that I forget anything else exists
33. Texting someone at 1am and getting a reply
34. Being told that I helped someone or made their day a bit better
35. Holding hands (with Beth), hugging (Beth only. Like sorry. But no hugs.), leaning on (Beth’s) shoulders.
36. Sleepovers, and staying up so late talking that the sky starts to lighten outside the window
37. Finally understanding something I’ve been struggling with
38. Walking
39. Packing bags for holidays, school trips and days out
40. When someone sees that you’re upset and doesn’t say anything but helps quietly
41. Lesbians. Girls. Women. Girls that love girls. Literally lesbians.
42. Picnics
43. Stargazing and cloud watching either with someone I love or by myself
44. Beaches early in the morning
45. Running through the shallow waves on a beach with a dog at my heels
46. Finding pretty rocks and shells or cool creatures out in nature, watching other people do this too!
47. Sleeping beside someone you care about and you see their sleepy smile and messed up hair in the morning
48. Willow trees and clear chalk rivers
49. Mountains and tall buildings and anything incomprehensibly huge
50. Casual touches between people who are completely comfortable with one another
51. Writing poetry when I’m alone
52. Being alone, especially on a journey or home alone
53. Fish, and seals, and whales and dolphins and all of those crazy sea creatures that exist
54. The fact that there are so many humans out there that live and create and love and hate and feel things? And we’re all stuck in our one life. I hate it but I also think it’s wonderful
55. Sexual and romantic tension in books. It isn’t necessary but sometimes it’s what makes me fall in love with a book even more
56. Fajitas, burritos, guacamole, street food, dim sum, Vietnamese restaurants
57. Watching plays and musicals
58. How much opportunity there is in the world, and how much we still have left to learn
59. Cliffs
60. Wind in trees, in hair, in clothes
61. Finding beautiful things out about people I love
62. Listening to someone tell me their childhood stories (to an extent haha)
63. Playing guitar especially when I’m alone
64. Figuring out the chords to a song I like on my guitar
65. Vicky McClure/Kate Fleming, Martin Compston/Steve Arnott, Adrian Dunbar/Ted Hastings, Kelly Macdonald (again), Scarlett Johansson, Keeley Hawes, Jennifer Lawrence
66. Being truly alone or being in a crowd with nobody that knows me
67. Black nail polish
68. Jewellery especially rings and earrings
69. Denim jackets, cord jackets and other kinds of jackets like this
70. When people smile at each other across the room
71. When people scrunch their noses as they smile or laugh or something
72. Reading people’s head canons about tv shows and fandoms they’re passionate about, even when I don’t agree
73. Analysing poems in English class (don’t ask why)
74. Watching banter between old friends
75. Rediscovering music I haven’t heard in a while
76. Salt and vinegar crisps
77. Leaving school at the end of term with my friends
78. Singing with my friends
79. The Midnight Library (Matt Haig), Children of Blood and Bone (Tomi Adeyemi), Red White and Royal Blue (Casey McQuinston), A Good Girl’s Guide To Murder (Holly Jackson)
80. Enamel pins
81. Stationery of all kinds, but especially notebooks
82. Antiques shops and old book shops
83. Edinburgh, York, Cambridge, Snowdonia, London, Rome, Palma
84. The sound of people laughing, people shouting, people chatting
85. Acting
86. Having fun and doing stupid things with my friends, my girlfriend, my drama group
87. Wearing nice clothes and then the feeling of being complimented on them
88. Climbing mountains and canoeing
89. The taste of cold water on a hot day
90. Online/window shopping just for fun and not to buy anything just to look
91. Crying at a sad book, film, poem or TV show
92. Finding out a famous person that I look up to or respect is part of the LGBT+ community
93. Researching for a project I care about
94. Frogs, rats, kittens, dinosaurs
95. Pretty ukuleles and guitars
96. Finally understanding something in a maths or chemistry lesson and feeling like I’m not as stupid as I think
97. Huge communities of people coming together
98. Ancient Rome, Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greece, ancient mythology, literature from a very long time ago
99. The film 1917
100. Finishing a good book and never wanting to let it go ever again
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Haast to Hokitika
Day 7 – 5/10/2018
Once again it was a gloomy morning. Cool weather, ten degrees and drizzling. Today we headed to Hokitika, a self-proclaimed cool little town and 'must stay' destination. We'll see if it's cool or not and we are staying there. We'll see.
Flat bottom boats, whitebait nets and fisherman's waders flanked the covered walkway in front of the room just up from us. Outside the door sat the fisherman and his young son. As we headed past, he gave a nod, we gave a hello before scampering through the light rain to the corner café for breakfast. At the Fantail Café, we were served by a couple of local ladies who were both friendly and inquisitive. They dished up a simple and inexpensive breakfast that was plentiful and tasty. After bacon and eggs and pancakes were paid our dues and returned to our rooms to prepare to leave.
Breakfast at the Fantail Café
It was a little after nine when we finally hit the Glacier Highway heading north east but before we had travelled a kilometre, we had our first stop, within one of the passing lanes on the three quarters of a kilometre long Haast River Bridge. It spanned a vast expanse of rocks and occasional streams that punctuated the river bed before crossing the main water body on the other end. When we first got there, we stopped at the road's edge and watched a couple of small trucks parked a ways away at the other end of the bridge, the occupants standing in the middle of the road looking around so we thought that it would be a good idea to do the same. We pulled into one of two passing bays and got out for a look. All was fine until we upset a grey nomad towing his caravan across the river. A toot of his horn and a shake of his head showed his disapproval at what we were doing. We don't know if the people at the other end got the same response but after we took a few photos of the river bed surrounded by mist, we started back on our journey. The people at the next passing lane were local fishermen checking out the conditions to set their whitebait traps up. We doubt that they would have cared what the grey nomad thought, this was their turf. The grey nomads had the last laugh though as within a few kilometres they were in our way cruising along, taking most of the road and well below the speed limit.
Haast River from the passing lane and Mosquito Hill, the snow capped Mataketake Range beyond
After we passed the oldies we encountered flat countryside for a short period. The sea to our left wasn't visible due to cow paddocks immediately adjacent to the road and the dunes and saltbush type vegetation beyond. The snow-capped mountains to our right weren't visible either due to a high canopy close to the road. Soon after the road started to curve upward as the steep escarpments closed in on the coast and interrupted the flat countryside (just near Ship Creek). This in turn lead us to our second stop for the day, a brief period spent looking at the rugged coastline and reading the information boards at Knight's Point which separated Jackson Bay, south of Haast and Bruce Bay further to the north.
Looking south from Knight's Point toward Arnott Point
Early South Westlands Moari traded throughout the areas around here. They built canoes around Bruce Bay (Northern Maitaki) and travelled along the coast and further south to Jackson Bay (Okahu) trading with a settlement which produced fish and jade. The only taste of civilisation that the settlers experienced was when ships rowed their supplies ashore, accompanied by cattle made to swim. By the 1930's they were visited more regularly with Captain Bert Mercer delivering mail, goods and passengers by landing his aircraft on the beaches and paddocks. Otago and Jackson Bay were linked by road via Haast Pass by 1960 but the Haast to Paringa section wasn't completed until five years later, the two roads finally linking just near Knight's Point. The idea was to make the stop a toilet break as well but the toilets were filthy (the womens' anyway) so we spent a bit of time looking at the rugged coastline and kept heading on.
The Haast Highway meandering north
As soon as we hit the road again, we headed down the winding highway and immediately inland. By the time we reached flat land again we were crossing the Whakapohi River, passing the Wilderness Lodge and stopping for a short break at Lake Moeraki. Due to the terrain we started heading south again until we got around Moeraki Hill, from which the road turned back to the north and directly past the beautiful Lake Paringa. Shane and Jo initially missed the campsite turn off and ended up doing an about face at the caravan park. This was a lovely spot and it had a toilet for the women. A quick stop, some photos and a look around and we were at it again, through Paringa, around Ward Hill and over the river flats and cattle country that surrounded the Paringa River (what imagination), and then further on to Bruce Bay.
Lonely bench on the shore of Jamie Beach, Lake Paringa
From the river flats and farmed salmon of the Paringa River we kept on Haast Highway north east, through a green valley bounded by Hunt Hill and the much larger Douglas Ranges until the next open area appeared. We had entered the Mahitahi River flats and were guided to Bruce Bay by the river and a rather small Mount Arthur on one flank (much smaller than the hill that we had just passed), and the other, Pakihi Swamp. A small village soon appeared with only a few houses on either side of the road and the Bruce Bay Hall, advertising the Sunday sports day. Further along, the road ran very close to the coast along Maori Beach, so close in fact that caution signs were erected warning of debris on highway during high seas. It was almost immediately apparent why the warning was necessary, the road was practically built on the sand dunes, protected somewhat by large rocks to quell the sea.
A wild Maori Beach, Bruce Bay
Keen for a look around, we pulled over to check the place out. This place was wild, windy, wet and the seas rough. Driftwood lined the side of the road, washed up during the last storm. Accompanying the debris were curious piles of rounded white rocks strewn along the side of the road. Some piles large, some not so. On these rocks some people felt it necessary to write messages and greetings, maybe to their friends back home or just to make a statement. Others proclaimed that the All Blacks were the best (we already know that) or a profound quote from Ferris Bueller. It was quite interesting.
Itchy head or bewilderment?
Apparently, this pile of rocks is called a Cairn, by tradition a mound of stones at the edge of a river by which travellers in the high country indicate a place of departure and a place to regain the shore. These boulders must have come from the nearby Mahitahi River or maybe they just washed up on the beach.
Cairn
After a few photos we kept moving ahead. The power of the ocean was evident towards the northern end of Maori Beach where a significant part of the road, over a hundred metres had been repaired recently. Apparently ex-Cyclone Fehi caused a bit of havoc last February trapping seven hundred people in Haast and destroying plenty (the locals and the Hard Antler would have been busy), including a local church being washed away when Makawhio (Jacobs) River burst its banks. The storm also washed roads and bridges away and plenty of landslides trapping people everywhere with no way out.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/101144230/birdseye-view-of-stormravaged-west-coast
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11986976
The Makawhio River was in fact the next river we crossed, just north of Maori Beach. Beyond was the Karangarua River with an old suspension bridge. The old bridge was pretty impressive and the river and surrounds lovely. We stopped here in the drizzling rain for a short period before proceeding. It was an hour nonstop between Knight's Point and Franz Joseph so we had to keep moving.
Old suspension bridge
The following river, the Cook, was where the road veered left to skirt around the base of Mount Fox, crossing the Fox River thereafter. We had considered going to the glacier that feeds the river but the maps showed no discernible parking facilities and with Jan more than likely intending to sit out the walk to the glacier, we chose Franz Josef Glacier instead. Crossing the bridge, we drove through the village and kept on ahead, this time along the Fox Glacier Highway. The road rose from here, meandering to and fro to compensate for the mountains on either side until it spat us out on the flat country surrounding the Waiho River and the entry road to Franz Josef Glacier.
Franz Josef Glacier was named by the German geologist and explorer Julius von Haast who was the first to explore the terminal of the glacier in the 1860's. He named the glacier after his Austrian Emperor, Franz Josef I. From high in the Southern Alps, the glacier drops around two and a half thousand metres in eleven kilometres, the gradient and gravity pushing the ice down the slopes at more than a half metre daily. The terminal was located at the car park during the 1920's, almost three kilometres further down than where it is today but its cyclic. When Saint James Church was built in 1931 a panoramic window behind the altar was specifically located to provide a good view of the glacier, by 1954 it had gone. It reappeared again in 1997. The time taken for ice to travel from the neve to the terminal is about five years so there is a considerable lag from when conditions on the snowfield vary and the change of the location of the terminal.
The Maori name for the glacier is Kā Roimata ō Hine Hukatere after a local legend involving a Maori girl, Hine Hukatere, and her love Wawe. She loved climbing the mountains but he came from the coast and wasn't so keen. One day Wawe agreed to accompany Hine Hukatere into the mountains but lagged behind and an avalanche swept him to his death. A distraught Hine Hukatere shed many tears that froze and formed the glacier.
The window in the local church was positioned to view the glacier
The access road to the glacier car park was almost four kilometres from the turn off, some fit looking people were actually walking it, braving the weather. They must have come from the village a further half kilometre back. The car park was very busy, mostly with campervans but they were parked as close as they could to the walks. We done a loop and parked in the near empty return road, still close. There was some discussion as to who would walk to the glacier. Shane, Brett and Justine were in, Jan was definitely out and Jo was not confident that she could keep up so also declined. After some coaxing she agreed and we headed off. "See you mum, we'll be back in an hour or more".
The glacier from the first viewing spot
The track slowly climbed and weaved through the vegetation for a kilometre before we reached the first viewing platform. The walk was about a kilometre and by the time we had arrived, Brett's ankle was playing up and Jo had had enough. She stayed there and worked her way back. Brett battled on. The view from the platform was amazing and the truth be known, the view from the highest view point wasn't much better.
Almost there
The last viewpoint was a couple of kilometres further up. The path was a signposted track that was elevated, although still part of the river bed. Cascades were everywhere as we worked our way along the path, and quite close. Around a half an hour after we left Jo, we climbed a few mounds and a few large rock formations and we were there. Shane and Justine led the way, Brett a little behind and feeling the pain. He wouldn't give up though.
Justine & Kā Roimata o Hine Hukatereustine
Apparently a couple of Indians climbed to the terminal a couple of years ago and were crushed by a hundred tonne of ice
After maybe twenty minutes of looking around and taking photos we turned back for the downhill trip to the cars.
After the glacier we headed back to the Bailey Bridge across the Waiho River. The bridge was supposed to have been lifted last winter due to a continual build up of gravel in the river bed, fed by the Franz Josef Glacier which spills into the Upper Waiho Valley and the three glaciers further south, the Callery, Spencer and Burton Glaciers which spill through the steep Callery Gorge and into the Waiho River just upstream from the bridge. Since the nineteen forties the river bed has risen well over ten metres and still going causing issues with the bridge height and the levee banks providing flood protection for the locals. There is a real problem here as the bridge was raised in 1988, 1996, 1998, 2002 and 2011. The levee has received more attention than the bridge. Since 2011 the river bed has risen between a half and one and a half metres.
The Waiho River Bailey Bridge. Continually being raised
Once across the bridge we veered left, past Saint James Church, semi hidden in the bushes but noticeable by a sign at the gate requesting donations for its renovation, over a slight rise and into the village of Franz Josef Glacier for some lunch. The atmosphere was similar to several other towns that we had driven through, giving the impression that with winter over so were the peak times and they were tapering off approaching summer. The crowds on the street reflected this as few were around. After a look in the Glacier Gift Shop while waiting for Brett and Justine, we all assembled and headed across the road to the Snake Bite Restaurant for a beer and pretty large burger. Mum's shout. Not long after we were on our last leg to Hokitika.
Mum's shout at the Snakebite
The next couple of hours were spent driving through a country side of river flats and undulating landscape from the road up to the base of the escarpments and steep walled valleys, cascades a plenty as we had witnessed the whole day. The road was regularly chequered with culverts channelling water from the frequent scoured and rocky streams, some fed by the cascades. This continued until we crossed the Hokitika River and entered the township. The GPS pointed us straight ahead until we reached the Fitzherbert Hotel on the northern outskirts of the town. While booking in the manager listed a few good eating spots including the Royal Mail Hotel at nearby Woodstock, back over the river and a little up stream. He said the pub put on a good feed and was family orientated so we could have a quiet afternoon after the journey. Advice appreciated, we chose to take it easy and get some takeaway Chinese. We had a quick drive around the town, back over the bridge across the river and back down the main drag to Easteat Country Restaurant. An easy night was ahead.
Tomorrow is the last leg of our journey. We return to Christchurch.
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Dundee > | Man in court over Dundee car park rape
...woman in a car park in Dundee.Mark Arnott, 36, of no fixed abode ... hearing in private at Dundee Sheriff Court.The case was continued... http://ift.tt/2AlgtXz
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The Cleaner
[The Cleaner, by Mark Dawson. 2013. Paperback ISBN 9781492354253. Also in ebook, Unputdownable Ltd]
Loose ends aren’t good, and John Milton exists to tidy them away. Carefully, on a lonely road in France, he shoots two married scientists and - interrupted by a gendarme - shoots him too. But he finds the couple’s child in the back of the car. Milton can’t face killing him. And as The Cleaner he’s supposed to leave things clean.
Control in London notices that Milton - his agent Number One - shakes slightly, looks seedy and seems not to be the A1 elite man he was a decade ago on joining the Group from a distinguished army and SAS career. He’s killed 136 people for Control - his best cleaner. Not any more, says Milton, and walks out - turning himself into a loose end. Control puts conscienceless assassin Number Twelve on his tail to do the necessary.
Deep in thought, but not sufficiently to prevent him rescuing would-be tube suicide Hackney-council-estate black single mother Sharon Warriner from the live rail and approaching locomotive, Milton undertakes to help her and her newly-gang-inducted 15 year-old-son Elija Warriner aka Ja-Ja. Helping strongly-resisting headstrong Elija from the downward path means dealing with drug overlord epic musician, machine-gun and grenade-weilding Risky Bizness; while evading Number Twelve, helping fellow Alcoholics Anoymous member black mentor Dennis Rutherford divert street boys and girls into boxing, and providing Sharon with some needed gentle care.
Much of The Cleaner takes place in the world of gangs, street life, drugs and killing in London’s teenage black community. Obviously there are difficulties for anyone outside this group to know what is actually going on, what language is used, and how people in it think, and there are separate considerations if as here the writer is white. But in the real world of London, lives are daily over in this group, making it an area of great importance to write about. Mark Dawson handles it with integrity, both in his evident understanding of human beings regardless of how they look outside, and delivering a story that feels authentic.
Writers tackle areas outside themselves all the time, and two useful comparisons here may be Graham Greene’s 1938 novel Brighton Rock, and Kevin Sampson’s Awaydays, 2008. The first is the world of white teenage gangsters in Brighton, and their violence, wounding and killing. The second is immersed in football violence - then a mainly white group - near Liverpool. Both novels, and The Cleaner, take place in territory with which the writers perhaps have not had direct experience. What unites them is an empathy for people, whoever they are, and a feel for the kind of language they do or might use. All three books are also about teenage boys, and the authors have been that. But, equally, many women writers have written with great insight into the lives of boys and young men. What they are all able to do is to see beneath the surface of how we all are as people.
The Cleaner is fiction which brings in a couple of real events, much as Jake Arnott did with his adult gangland trilogy The Long Firm (1999), He Kills Coppers (2001), truecrime (2003). John Milton’s assignment in France echoes fictionally the real-life French Alps assassinations on 5 September 2012, and part of the novel is set against the London race riots 6-11 August 2011.
The Cleaner is in series format (popular in the 1800s and now now) and ends on a cliffhanger. The Cleaner story is complete, but John Milton’s life continues and that leads into the next book in the series. Many other writers are writing to this method and it’s popular with readers, particular now that authors and readers are in easier and direct contact.
Mark Dawson writes in that easy-going workmanlike way that takes a devilish amount of work. Apparently Graham Greene could take up to 15 drafts to make it look easy, and Mark Dawson’s writing has a lot in common with Greene and Sampson. They, like PD James and Ruth Rendell, are actually writing literary fiction - but in the guise of genres so as not to frighten Guardian Readers. And it’s the writing that holds us readers - in my case till 3am, reading The Cleaner in one go.
John Park
wordsacrosstime
11 May 2017
#Words Across Time#wordsacrosstime#May 2017#Mark Dawson#John Park#Thriller#John Milton#Spy#Secret Agent#Dirty Tricks#Elimination#Assassination#Drugs#Murder#Racial Tension#Brixton Riots#Black Community#Operation Trident#Stabbings#Gun Control#Gun Crime#Police Corruption#Looting#Marijuana#Cocaine#Crack#Mugging#Suicide#Person Under Train#Alcoholics Anonymous
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Line of Duty Series 6 Episode 3 Review: The End of the Line?
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This Line of Duty review contains spoilers.
If looks could kill, they’d be clearing the corpses from Hillside Lane Station with a forklift right now. That whole hour was a filthy stare-a-palooza. Jo to Steve. Steve to Jo. Kate to Buckells when he announced the death of PC Lisa Patel with the emotion of somebody passing on a change to the office recycling policy, not missing a beat between his ‘sad news…tragically… thoughts with her family’ platitudes and a PR-friendly photo op.
The dirtiest of all stares was a look of such fiery incredulity, it came through the screen and set off my living room smoke alarm. Vicky McClure’s eyes are weapons-grade in most situations, but when Kate questioned Ryan about his reservoir dip, they came close to blasting the little psycho backwards through a wall. Lyin’ Ryan had an answer for everything she put to him. It was a blown tyre that sent the cop car plunging into the reservoir. A gunshot. An unexpected rabbit. A dog did it. He lied like a chief political advisor in a rose garden, knowing that he was protected and could act with impunity. That’s why he tried to off Terry Boyle in a MacGyver stunt instead of something lower key and easier to disguise. After all, why not? The bigger the lie, the more they believe.
Well, Kate didn’t believe. She’s onto him. The moment the camera tracked across to her checking the rear-view mirror and pulling out of that car park, first my heart leapt, and then my stomach clenched. Ryan being on Kate’s team is like weeing with the cubicle door unlocked – you just can’t relax. Only when back-up had arrived and she was standing on that reservoir bank, blue blanket flapping in the wind like a superhero’s cape, was it safe to finally breathe out. For now at least.
The reservoir stunt was timed for maximum surprise, first with Lisa coming up for air, and then, like an old school monster movie, Terry breaking the surface just when you thought it was all over. Terrific stuff. Given that the rest of the episode’s tension came from everybody looking daggers at everybody else and silently adding ‘chinny reckon’ to the ends of their lines (“Wow, that was some good luck for you wasn’t it?”, “Yes ma’am, I thank my lucky stars,”), the sequence added variety.
Where Kate’s concerned, perhaps Ryan isn’t the one to worry about. Davidson might be the real danger. In Terry Boyle’s interview scene, Kate and Jo were a two-headed push-me-pull-you, going in opposite directions. By the end of the episode, Jo seemed to have Kate exactly where she wanted her, i.e. leading away Det Supt Buckells, a turkey Jo had hand-delivered to AC-12, plucked and trussed.
Buckells is a prat, but that man’s no criminal mastermind. If he were, would he really store the stolen Vella files in his service vehicle? All that fiddling with golf clubs was supposed to point us towards “Caddy” and Tommy Hunter, but really pointed towards Buckells being a failing-upwards lightweight who’s in it for the pension and keener on improving his swing than either finding or concealing Gail Vella’s murderer. Ten quid says Jo set him up. Her “All under control now” laptop message to – presumably – H at the episode’s close said as much. The real questions are: does Kate know she’s being used to do Davidson’s dirty work? And with Jo framing more coppers than a photographer at a passing out ceremony, who’ll be next?
It wasn’t all dirty looks being thrown about; there were a couple of lump-in-throat nods exchanged between Kate and Ted when she returned to AC-12 in civvies. To begin with, Hastings couldn’t even meet her eye, but by the time the lift doors closed on Kate’s auburn quiff, the ice between her and the gaffer had begun to thaw.
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That AC-12 lift, incidentally, is a cracking dramatic device. Whatever face a character puts on in public, alone in that metaphorically plummeting glass coffin, it all drops away and we see what’s really going on. Kate was more shaken by being back at the old gaff than she let on, Jo is really not enjoying the complicated chess game she’s been forced into playing – however good at it she’s proving to be. We saw from her anguished reaction to Lisa’s death and the news about Farida’s assault that she’s no ice queen. And Steve? Oh, Steve, Steve, Steve.
As great as Vicky McClure is this episode, Martin Compston’s the one who breaks your heart. Series six has taken Steve down such a bleak path. His addiction, his loneliness, his chronic pain and desperate, failed attempt to kick the pills made for a tough watch. When he hinted jokily to Kate about that takeaway, it was obvious how much he missed their partnership. By the time he admitted to Steph Corbett that he had “no-one at all”, it was almost too much.
Steve’s trapped – not, like most of this show’s trapped officers, because an OCG’s turning the screws on him – but because his job is all he has, and if he were to come clean about his injury, it could be taken away from him. That would a mighty waste, because DI Arnott is a bloodhound. Once he’d picked up the scent of something iffy about Steph’s finances, it led him all the way to her cash in the attic, burgeoning relationship be damned. What will his next move be?
Speaking of screws turning on people, over at HMP Brentiss, poor Farida suffered by the same hand as Lindsay Denton all those years ago. Alison Merchant was one of the security officers who deliberately scalded Denton to stop her from talking in series two, and now she’s done the same to Farida.
That was yet another link to the past from this series, which is weaving together everything that’s gone before in a way that feels valedictory. Vella’s reports have come out swinging for real-world targets (remember that 50,000 nurse promise in the 2019 Tory election manifesto?) with a ferocity that feels uncomfortably like a final push.
Ted in particular has had such a generous quota of enjoyable one-liners this series, he may as well be on a tour of his greatest hits, strutting onto stage and hitting the crowd with the one about bent coppers, the one about the letter of the law, then closing on this week’s t-shirt-worthy line about being the epitome of an old battle. Kate even joined Ted on stage for a back-to-back duet on the one about the preservation of life. It’s all feeling a little too complete for our man, from his rapprochement with Kate to AC’s Wise’s reference to wasting his “last roll of the dice.” With no news as yet on a seventh series commission (though given the chance, the BBC would be mad not to), might the gaffer, the show itself, or both be approaching the end of the line?
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Line of Duty continues next Sunday the 11th of April at 9pm on BBC One.
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The Brand New Flower Market at New Covent Garden Market | Opening April 3rd 2017
On Tuesday, I was thrilled to take my very first look around the brand new Flower Market at New Covent Garden Market on Nine Elms Lane in Vauxhall, London. (You may have seen the photos and videos in my Instagram Story?)
Well, I was completely and utterly blown away! What an absolutely incredible space has been built to house the flower, foliage, plant and sundry wholesalers, plus several florist workshops. The new market is light, bright, modern and airy with a double-height ceiling in the centre of the building. And it looks soooo swish! So ‘up with the times’.
It’s moved down the road from its current site, as you can see in the image below. And you’ll find it located just inside the old main entrance, with the postcode for sat navs being SW8 5EH.
This is the wonderful new logo which greets you on arrival on Nine Elms Lane…
…and below is what you’ll see once you’ve turned off the main road.
Opening for business on Monday 3rd April, the building is laid out on two floors, with the Flower Hall on the ground floor and Florists Workshops on the first floor. Here are some images to give you an idea of the layout.
The Flower Hall, which is shown immediately below, accommodates twenty wholesalers plus a café. Two corridors run down the whole length of the floor space and the main area is open plan and air-conditioned to 14 degrees Celsius. There are also self-contained units with shop fronts for wholesalers who don’t require a chilled environment.
Some wholesalers have a purpose-built office on their stand, as you can see here at Bloomfield…
…whilst others have a custom-built office area.
All the signage is in red…
…with the wholesalers’ names emblazoned above their units, as shown below.
In the Flower Hall, you’ll find:
Flowers A Goodchild, B&D Flower Co, Bloomfield Wholesale Florist, DG Wholesale Flowers, Deanos Flowers, Dennis Edwards, J H Hart & Sons, L Mills, Pratley Flowers & Plants, R French & Sons, SR Allen and Zest Flowers.
Foliage GB Foliage and Porters Foliage.
Plants Arnott & Mason, Evergreen Exteriors and Quality Plants.
Sundries C Best, Evergreen Pots & Soil and Whittingtons.
And this is where they’re all located. If you’d like to see a larger image, please click here.
Outside, there’s the loading bay, which has easy access into the Flower Hall.
On the first floor, eleven resident florists are located. They are:
Elizabeth Marsh Floral Design
Frames for Florists
Pinstripes & Peonies
Stems UK
NB Flowers
Nidal Floral Design
Plant Display Plus
Smith & Green Wholesale Florists
Stems UK
The Flower Bird & Blue Sky Flowers
The Garden Party
With regards to parking at the new Flower Market, if you have a permit, it’ll work just as it does now. If you pay by cash though, you’ll simply pull a ticket from a machine on entering and pay on foot before leaving at one of the pay stations. £5 gives you three hours parking. There are two parking floors, one on each level. On the ground floor, the parking is under cover…
…and on the first floor, it’s in the open air. There are three goods lifts connecting the Flower Hall to the first floor car park.
A special Preview Day for customers is shortly to be announced, if you’d like to come and take a look around before the official opening day on Monday, 3rd April.
I can’t wait to visit the new Flower Market when it’s full of flowers, foliage, plants and sundries. It’s a going to be such a pleasurable shopping experience! If you’d like more information, please visit the Brand New Covent Garden Market website.
* This post is brought to you in collaboration with New Covent Garden Market. All the words are my own.
(Images :New Covent Garden Market & Rona Wheeldon | Flowerona)
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