logo
#

Latest news with #TrevorHoward

Mandurah's iconic giant has foot amputated after Mandurah Men's Shed discovered termite infestation
Mandurah's iconic giant has foot amputated after Mandurah Men's Shed discovered termite infestation

West Australian

time3 days ago

  • General
  • West Australian

Mandurah's iconic giant has foot amputated after Mandurah Men's Shed discovered termite infestation

One of the iconic Mandurah Giants' feet has been amputated and is under repair due to termite damage. The structural damage was discovered by the Mandurah Men's Shed earlier this year during their regular fortnightly inspection of the giant known as Jyttes Hytte. Mandurah Men's Shed chairman Trevor Howard said the damage grew incrementally until the City of Mandurah made the decision to close the giant from public access until repairs could be made. 'We've had to temporarily amputate her feet to access and inspect the bottom part of her,' Mr Howard said. Mr Howard said the job would require the help of several Men's Shed volunteers and is hopeful repairs will be done by the end of the month. 'It's not very intricate, it's just that he (creator Thomas Dambo) went to a lot of trouble to make it look as realistic as possible, which he did, and we want to try and maintain the sort of perfection he achieved,' he said. The process will involve re-calibrating sizing, making templates and reusing as much of the original material as possible but will ultimately require remaking the individual pieces to fit back together. 'We see this as an opportunity for us to use the range of skills our members have and help restore this fantastic and unique piece of art,' Mr Howard added. Mandurah mayor Caroline Knight is hopeful the Lake Clifton Giant will reopen in two weeks, in time for the school holidays. 'We are incredibly proud of the Thomas Dambo Giants and the joy they bring to our community and visitors,' Mayor Knight said. 'Our beloved Jyttes Hytte Giant is currently being repaired to address the minor termite activity. She'll be back to her full beauty very soon. 'Our partners at the Men's Shed do a fantastic job of regularly checking on the Giants. It was thanks to their diligence that we identified the problem and were able to address it quickly. 'We're committed to maintaining all of our Giants to the highest standard, ensuring they continue to be a unique and cherished part of Mandurah's appeal.'

Mandurah's iconic giant amputated after grim discovery
Mandurah's iconic giant amputated after grim discovery

Perth Now

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Perth Now

Mandurah's iconic giant amputated after grim discovery

One of the iconic Mandurah Giants' feet has been amputated and is under repair due to termite damage. The structural damage was discovered by the Mandurah Men's Shed earlier this year during their regular fortnightly inspection of the giant known as Jyttes Hytte. Mandurah Men's Shed chairman Trevor Howard said the damage grew incrementally until the City of Mandurah made the decision to close the giant from public access until repairs could be made. 'We've had to temporarily amputate her feet to access and inspect the bottom part of her,' Mr Howard said. Mr Howard said the job would require the help of several Men's Shed volunteers and is hopeful repairs will be done by the end of the month. 'It's not very intricate, it's just that he (creator Thomas Dambo) went to a lot of trouble to make it look as realistic as possible, which he did, and we want to try and maintain the sort of perfection he achieved,' he said. The process will involve re-calibrating sizing, making templates and reusing as much of the original material as possible but will ultimately require remaking the individual pieces to fit back together. 'We see this as an opportunity for us to use the range of skills our members have and help restore this fantastic and unique piece of art,' Mr Howard added. Mandurah mayor Caroline Knight is hopeful the Lake Clifton Giant will reopen in two weeks, in time for the school holidays. 'We are incredibly proud of the Thomas Dambo Giants and the joy they bring to our community and visitors,' Mayor Knight said. 'Our beloved Jyttes Hytte Giant is currently being repaired to address the minor termite activity. She'll be back to her full beauty very soon. 'Our partners at the Men's Shed do a fantastic job of regularly checking on the Giants. It was thanks to their diligence that we identified the problem and were able to address it quickly. 'We're committed to maintaining all of our Giants to the highest standard, ensuring they continue to be a unique and cherished part of Mandurah's appeal.'

The death of the formal train announcement is a tragedy
The death of the formal train announcement is a tragedy

Yahoo

time05-02-2025

  • Climate
  • Yahoo

The death of the formal train announcement is a tragedy

One of the remnants of romance in rail travel can be heard at London terminuses during heavy rain. 'Due to the inclement weather,' begins the tannoy announcer in such wonderfully modulated, received pronunciation tones they suggest the lady (or gentleman) speaker may just have returned from having a cuppa in the refreshment room at Carnforth station occupied by a lovelorn Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard. I adore that use of 'inclement', redolent as it is of a lost world where everyone dressed smartly, men wore hats and held the door for women and no one would have dreamt of putting their feet up on the seats. Encounters with such difficult or arcane words are sadly brief. Even inclement's gentle opposite is only heard nowadays when attached to the name Attlee. Blame the ubiquitous dreariness of dumbing down. You just know if it were up to the London Mayor, 'Sir' Sadiq Khan, the announcement of inclement weather would be scrapped and replaced with something more diverse: 'Hey, bruvs, watch yourselves, s'raining innit?' Future historians may well date the beginning of the end of Great Britain to the introduction on the rail network of the ghastly announcement, 'See It. Say It. Sorted.' which has the demotic Cockney brutishness of Phil Mitchell in EastEnders. I don't know about you, but 'See It. Say It. Sorted.' always makes me want to launch a terrorist attack, not report one. In the latest example of bowing down before the twin woke gods of Accessibility and Inclusivity, Network Rail has told staff not to call passengers 'passengers'. They are advised to use the word 'you' instead – a 'neutral term that avoids assumptions about gender', apparently, although that's rubbish because 'passenger' doesn't denote a sex – clearly something they want to avoid at all costs. Henceforth, pregnant women on trains – or should that be trans? – must be called 'pregnant people', while mother and father are replaced with 'parent' in any written or spoken communication. Mankind changes to the monstrosity, 'humankind'. And normal is now 'neurotypical'. Perhaps Liam Halligan and I should switch the name of our podcast to Planet Neurotypical – doesn't have quite the same ring, does it? Other words marked for the axe in Network Rail's new 134-page training manual – ironically entitled 'Speaking Passenger' – include 'purchase', 'obtain' and 'rest assured'. Using 'less formal language' turns out to be a 'bid to reduce customer frustration at train delays and cancellations'. A better way of doing that, of course, would be to make the railways run on time. What the manual reveals is the patronising attitude of executives towards their customers – inferiors and morons who can't be expected to cope with hard words like 'purchase'. (Whatever happened to the public realm setting a standard people could aspire to?) It is also biased against the educated because anyone who speaks well or knows a few harder words is deeply suspect, probably patriotic (eeuw!) and almost certainly 'far-Right'. On GB News on Sunday night, Michael Portillo recalled that a leaked 2023 Home Office report suggested that watching programmes like his much-loved BBC Two series Great British Railway Journeys could be a sign of far-Right activity. With its vast Islamic Network which aims to recruit Muslim staff and 'influence policymakers' to support 'Muslim needs', the Home Office is firmly established as a redoubt of anti-white, anti-British feeling. For RICU (the Research, Information and Communication Unit tasked with spotting terrorist threats), the combination of a former Tory Cabinet minister presenter and a title with both Great and British in it must have excited more fear and loathing than an actual terrorist like Osama bin Laden. Truth is, the only atrocity threatened by Michael Portillo lies in his lurid combos of trousers and jackets. Distinguished authors who were accused of posing a potential 'far-Right' threat in that Home Office report include Douglas Murray for his brilliant and prescient The Strange Death of Europe and Melanie Phillips whose new book, The Builder's Stone: How Jews and Christians Built the West – And Why Only They Can Save It, I can highly recommend to you all. See how their respect for tradition and learning, even correct use of language, appear to minds warped by woke as a threat, not an asset. What else do you imagine the Home Office and Network Rail would find too formal or suspiciously far-Right? Good manners. Steam locomotives. Antiques Roadshow. Patriotism. Pensioners. Country churches. Wellington boots. Punctuation. British history before 1997. Thank-you letters. Garden centre cafés (a well-known hotbed of fascism), the Royal Air Force, a sense of fair play, roast beef and Yorkshire pudding, Union Jacks, University Challenge (even worse if you can answer more than one question – that's elitist!); walking the dog, crafts (especially crochet), John Betjeman, jumble sales. Nostalgia. Labradors (of colour not black), saying you've read Shakespeare, G&T, hanging baskets (see also far-Right garden centres); Inspector Morse, thatched roofs, Just a Minute, paying for things in shops (I mean, honestly!), beach huts, crying at the end of The Great Escape, The Hay Wain, diction. Marmalade. Wiltshire, a full English (racist!). Hang on, I expect some of you must have read that list and thought, blimey, didn't realise I was a Nazi sympathiser. It can happen to the best of us. All I hope is that the railway bods don't cancel 'inclement weather'. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store