Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
You're listening to the Marcus lush Night's podcast from News Talks.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
A'd be.
Speaker 1 (00:13):
Greetings, welcome here till midnight. Madame is Marcus. The number
is oh eight hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine
two nine to If you do on a text, I
hope I've got that right. I hope it's good for you.
I hope you' enjoying the holidays if you are on holiday. Otherwise,
she's all, I'm looking forward to what you've got to say.
Oh eight hundred eighty ten eightyan nine two nine two
to text. I'm sorry about the noises. By the way,
(00:36):
A couple of things are interesting, of interest to me tonight,
and I chuck them out there to see what you think.
There's been a lot of talk online about a pie
at the airport, a bacon nig pie that was twelve dollars.
That's for a bog standard pie, and people are rebelling
and saying we've got to say no and stop buying
these pies. Mind you the airport, especially if you're airsight,
(00:57):
in fact, anywhere in the airport, anything in the airport,
I think its a total ripoff. But the twelve dollars
baconing pie is probably a pie too far. We could
talk about the country's most expensive pies that would be
up there. Just for a standard pie, it's for a
grab and go. This is not one that's served with
some cars, lettuce and some balsamaic. No, this is just
(01:18):
a pie and a bag twelve dollars and bacon eig
pies their touch and go. They can be quite dry.
In fact, bacon eg pies are actually, out of all
the things in life that I found to be a lottery,
bacon eg pies would be the biggest lottery. Sometimes it's
like having a keish inside a pie with chopplin, bits
(01:38):
of asparagus and stuff. Sometimes it's not good. I mean,
the only one I go back to is the one
from a school touch shop, which was just pies and bacon,
and maybe it was just that. Actually the bacon eg
pie was just bacon and egg. I'll dine in the
ditch for that one. But yes, twelve dollars too much.
At the airport, you know, you say, oh what, I'm
going on a holiday and twelve dollars pie is not
(02:00):
gonna be a bad things if it's spent five grand
on a holiday that's what people. That's the psychology. And
there are those replays shops. Fortunately, the one of the
Inva Cargo and the inver Cargol terminal which should be
called the Tim Sherbert Terminal, but never is. Fortunately that
shop went bung because that's a that's an extortion kind
of a thing, the replay shop. It doesn't sound the
(02:21):
post where the twelve dollar pie?
Speaker 3 (02:23):
Is it?
Speaker 1 (02:23):
The airport? If someone knows more about that, text me
where is the twelve dollar pie? Where is the twelve
dollars airport pie? I will google? I reckon, I've probably
sublet my whole memory of not sublet, I've farmed out
my whole memory to google. You don't need to remember
(02:45):
anything anymore, do you? But getting touched you on talk.
The other thing that's of interest to me right is
this soul of farm that's proposed at Naseby, north of
ran fairly and of course everyone's doing the mess of
(03:08):
fearmongering like they did with the wind farms, and we
would have been better off with them. But this wind
farm at Naseby, right, sorry, the solar farm at Naseby,
which is going to generate enough power for seventy thousand homes.
It's going to be on six hundred and sixty hectares
(03:29):
of land with five hundred and sixty thousand solar panels. Yeah,
and I saw an article that I think it's just
got the go ahead. But then I can't find where
I've seen that article. That's the thing about subletting your memory,
isn't it. Now it's got the green light. I mean,
I saw that in the ODT, but I can't see
(03:49):
where it is. I've gone back to the odten. It's
not there. The silly article. It could be me that
it could be my side, or something's gone wrong with that.
But that's a big farm. That's a big, big solar
light farm that many hectores. So you look at that
and you want to tell me something. I don't know
what you'd say about that. But gee, also that thought, Wow,
(04:10):
that's a big film. The trouble is sometimes your stories
they scroll across a You've got three or four stories
and they scroll across. Here we go, Yeah, it's got
the go ahead. The new soul of Farm in central
Otago six hundred and thirty eight hectares. He's had a
good or a bad thing. There's a guy next door
(04:32):
and his business is dogs, the real dog equipment company.
He reckon, it's going to ruin his business because people
be banging in the in the in the poles to
put the solar panels on.
Speaker 4 (04:45):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
So that's that. So that's the anyway, that's the two
things that I want to mention tonight. To begin with
the twelve dollar pie? Have you seen one that's more expensive?
Just a bog standing pie? Because people need to stop
buying them. The trouble is, if you're waiting for a plane,
I guess the pie is a good thing because you
can actually then join the queue, which if you're sitting
down with things on a plate, you think you'd all
be nervous. You'd be like, oh, he hector, what's happening now?
(05:12):
I'll tell you. When there's bacon nig pies, guys go
to the supermarket before duck shooting and they're always making
bacon eg pies. One of the few times in South
and we see a lot of men in the supermarket,
someone says how long is the life span on each panel?
Who am I, Tony Timu? I don't know, I don't know,
(05:32):
I reckon. You wouldn't want a hailstorm, because a hailstorm
could wreck your soul a farm. So there we go.
That's a bit of what's going on for me. Oh,
by the way, today too is International Redhead's Day. Yep,
that's today. If you're a red head, today's your day.
(05:52):
I don't know why it's today, red Head Appreciation Day, appreciation.
I think we've still got some work to do on redheads.
Oliver Cromwell he was a redhead. I've got to admit
even I would probably prone to saying something at all
the weezle's or something which I should really should stop.
(06:14):
I don't quite know why I do it, because you know,
I wouldn't say that about other groups of people. But yeah,
it's and I don't know what it's like. By the way,
I don't know what it's like to be redheaded. I
don't know if if in a day everyone always call
you oh gee, oh yeah, red head. I don't know
how many times a day people would mention your hair color.
It's like being extremely tall, people mention it all the time,
(06:35):
not that I am extremely tall. One percent of people
worldwide have red hair, twelve percent Scotland, ten percent Ireland.
They are sensitive to they are more sensitive to They
are more like to have sense of pain receptors, often
needing more anesthesia for medical or dental procedures.
Speaker 5 (07:00):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
The least common eye color for redheads is blue. A
blue eyed red headed the least common combination. Or didn't
know that? I don't know that makes the quiz or not?
Speaker 6 (07:11):
Dan?
Speaker 1 (07:15):
Yeah, well I learned that on the show. No, it's
not a good question. I don't know how the question,
but there's the lame question. Let's see what's going on there.
So that's what's happening tonight. If you want to be
a part of it. The number is eight hundred and eighty,
ten eighty. If you're a red head? How many days?
How many times a day would people mention it? Eleven
bucks for a sang?
Speaker 3 (07:36):
Is it?
Speaker 1 (07:36):
How we are nowhere near an airport? I refuse. Oh,
they've had a smart growth. The saying is pies. That's
a lot. Eleven dollars is a lot. And now your
red heads? And what about solar What about a solar
farm that big? What would you have rather have next
to you? A solar farm with five hundred thousand panels
(07:58):
or a dairy farm with the cows sloshing around. Be curious.
Are your answer to that? Amongst everything else we are
talking about, lock it in? I would have a night
that'd be redhead only is. But there could be people
pretending in this modern world, you know, hiding behind their
inanimatey of radio and pretend to be a red head,
(08:20):
shuttering a show and pretending to be Hei. Now a
friend of mine, well, Vanessa is providing it support around
to some friends of ours who's got on their Facebook.
Help us can help us confirm its you protecting your account.
Please solve the puzzle so we know you're a real person.
Start puzzle? Is that a scam? I guess I guess
(08:44):
it's probably not a scam unless you If the puzzle is,
could you please into your credit card number? Josh, this
is Marcus. Welcome.
Speaker 7 (08:52):
Oh hi michuess Hi Josh. Yeah, so I just don't
like to I wouldn't normally call in, but I'll congratulate
you on your enlightened view on redheads and some of
the discrimination. I guess you're coming to. You wouldn't do
it to other groups.
Speaker 5 (09:08):
Yep, it's interesting.
Speaker 7 (09:10):
I'm redid and abously got blue eyes, So I guess
someone in that rare group, and you are so many
times people.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
I didn't know that such a rare group. I didn't
know that. Yeah, but anyway, yep, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 7 (09:23):
So yeah, people obviously it's probably one of the first
things they noticed about you, and they do mention it
quite a bit. But yeah, it's mainly that it's interesting
in today's world, how you know, discrimination and all sorts
of things are very front of mine, but that one
seems to by the goalie.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
How many times a day does it happen?
Speaker 8 (09:43):
Well, I don't.
Speaker 7 (09:44):
People don't necessarily do it to your face, but I
guess maybe some of the older generation that's a bit
more common. I'll call you just red or something like that.
And then then there's the nasty tropes that come out
around it, which you know, growing up as a really
it's not that not the easiest thing around school and things.
Speaker 1 (10:05):
So it about is it about being short tempered?
Speaker 7 (10:10):
I don't really care about that. It's it's the it's
the name. I mean, yeah, some of that could be yeah,
things accurate, but it's it's it's all the other words
for ginger or red hair that you know, have been
weaponized against you in school that are just it's amazing
to me that that still exists in days world where
(10:32):
you can't really get away with much else, but that
one seems to be.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
It's almost it's almost acceptable. And yeah, that's a bit
the stag is me. Yeah, I think it'd be a
real tough thing to parent redheads in today's world, because
it seems to be the last thing that's okay to
give them a bit of a ras up, it's like,
and to not you know, and if they don't find
it hilarious, it's sort of almost, oh, you know, we
should send to humor.
Speaker 8 (10:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (10:57):
Yeah, And like there's a few challenges being ginger. You know,
you might you might be scared of the sun because
you burnt lots and fashions bit difficult. So you know,
you've got enough to deal with without without that going on.
But it is just a surprising one that that seems
to be accepted.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
And I don't think Harry Potter and the Weasley's has
helped either, is it because that's because you know, because
it's because you know, the kids are familiar with Harry Potter.
You can see a redhead family. Oh it's the Weasley's,
Wesley's outing and stuff like that, which is a terrible
thing to say, really, but that's what you that's what
you feel.
Speaker 7 (11:30):
Yeah, it's just interesting. Yea refreshing to hear that perspective
for someone on the radio.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Yeah, thanks, Josha. Well, I've asked myself, has been I've
been what what's the I've I've said disparaging things about redheads. Yeah,
and I'm not proud of it. Kathy, it's Marcus. Welcome.
Speaker 9 (11:51):
How are you?
Speaker 10 (11:52):
Marcus?
Speaker 1 (11:53):
Pretty good? Thank you, Kathy.
Speaker 11 (11:55):
Thanks good.
Speaker 9 (11:55):
I've got to redheads it are now in their thirties
and they absolutely embraced it. I brainwashed them as kids
that they were so lucky to have it. They're quite unusual.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
I'm not sure about that embrace you. I'm not sure
about embrace. Okay, keep going.
Speaker 9 (12:11):
Yep, they are quite unusual red heads. That most red
heads have their eyelashes where they had dark black, which
is quite uncommon.
Speaker 8 (12:21):
Wow.
Speaker 9 (12:22):
And they yeah, and they've also got bright blue eyes.
But they only went through a very small time, probably
twelve thirteen, where they wore a hat for a little bit.
And my daughter only died here here once, but it
was when we went to Queenstown or places like their
Asians would just stop them and pet here.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
Wow. I hadn't thought about that. Wow wow, yeah.
Speaker 9 (12:45):
Because they hadn't seen it. But I mean remember years
ago there was hugging hugg a day.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
Yes that's right.
Speaker 9 (12:53):
Yeah, Well my son loved that.
Speaker 1 (12:56):
He embraced it.
Speaker 9 (12:58):
He embraced it.
Speaker 3 (12:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (13:00):
He had a classroom at lunchtime at high school and
he's being anybody else that wasn't a gager and they
went in and celebrated over lunch at high school.
Speaker 1 (13:12):
Good on? Would people now I suppose these days people
stop your Asians and stop you for selfie?
Speaker 8 (13:17):
Would they?
Speaker 1 (13:17):
If you're a readier like that? Would they?
Speaker 9 (13:19):
They did? They did? It was all the time when
we went on holiday.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
Wow, Kathy cheap is twenty four past day? Edit's Marcus
good evening?
Speaker 8 (13:29):
Yeah, get away man cow on good things then? Yeah
good Hey, look, you know it's not something on my roodhead.
But I'm a very hair suit guy and I got
herreh from primary school. And the trouble was that Star
Wars came out and all of a sudden I was
Buddy Tubeca.
Speaker 10 (13:53):
And I've lived with it all my life.
Speaker 1 (13:55):
Well, and it's like that's like Harry Beck and the
whole Burton he Harry heads and stuff.
Speaker 8 (14:01):
Oh yeah, I'm not not the palms.
Speaker 1 (14:03):
No pals, but yeah yeah wow wow, yeah.
Speaker 8 (14:07):
Yeah, and yeah, I mean I think I think that's
almost worse than being a ridd at your point.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
Are you read here and heary?
Speaker 4 (14:16):
No?
Speaker 1 (14:16):
Thanks, okay, i'd say, thankfully it's their day.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
What would yeah?
Speaker 8 (14:21):
No, yeah, that was that was really top it off.
Speaker 1 (14:24):
So what would people say to you on the street?
They say, ge, is it full moon? Or you're a
werewolf for something? Is that what they'd say?
Speaker 8 (14:29):
Yeah, no, no, I've heard that. Yeah yeah, and you know,
I mean, oh yeah, you wouldn't believe that, you know,
you know, I've got here coming out at the top
of the T shirt and stuff like that, and people
really really get into it.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
And they're just people who don't know. We'll just comment
like gee, you're herey will they say things like it?
Speaker 10 (14:49):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (14:49):
Yeah, absolutely, Yeah. No, I think I think I get
more than that than the father read it to be fair.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
Because it'd be all very well and to have a
bit of a bit of an off day and you
don't want the comments. Yeah, I don't think i'd handle
that well.
Speaker 8 (15:03):
Oh no, no, I often say, oh look i' I
take out of me mum, just to laugh.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
Very good end, Thank you, Jewey twenty six past eight. Yeah,
I'm just curious to explore further too, the things that
people always say to you, you know, if you're red
headed or tall, that they think it's okay to say
because it must be uncomfortable that attention. The text of
his says, yeah, six foot two inches tall. Every day
people say to me, wool, you're tall, aren't you. Of course,
(15:33):
no one wants that poor because they know they're tall.
So g am I tall. When I've said that door,
I said, oh gee, they're stacking them high these days
and stuff like that. But you know, I wouldn't do
that now. I think a lot of people want to
be a giant tool. I don't know if that's the answer.
Hold your horse, if you're on on, I get too soon. Marcus,
I'm so furis at trumpeting the world that a set
and minorphin which you kind of pronounce or pana dolars
(15:55):
because orders and I feel the awful guilt some woman
will feel if they believe. And what an idiot he is?
So irresponsible? Yeah, Marcus, I'm a red head and love.
It haven't been teased because I've always totally owned and
loved that I'm a natural redhead. My business is even
called red. It's the winning color every single time. My
mother was red with blue eyes and novice Scottish, Irish heritage,
(16:17):
English with a German grandmother. Leslie.
Speaker 12 (16:20):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (16:22):
She she's been a busy half hour with bacon eg
pies in there also in the discussion, and solar farms
and a twelve dollar pie. That's a lot, Steve, it's Marcus.
Speaker 10 (16:33):
Welcome here he is air twelve dollar pie. Ye, that's
a lot. I get two for five here at one place.
I can go eight o'clock at night. I can get
two baking and eat pies for five bucks. Or I
can go there in the factory. Now sometimes I have
quite a few in my freezer. I can buy them
(16:55):
in bulk. Get twelve for twenty dollars.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
Seems fair? What brand are they?
Speaker 10 (17:01):
There? Cases pies and ten Now argue you buy them
bulk in a frozen that been cooked and frozen. I'll
put them on my freezer. I've had anywhere up to
fifty in freezer at one time. The my freezer is
(17:23):
full at the moment. I wouldn't pay more than two
dollars for a frozen one.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
I don't think you need a lot of pies.
Speaker 10 (17:30):
Oh, I don't know. I suppose looking at what I
really didn't think too much about it till recently, and
I thought, yeah, I probably would eat fifty in three months,
so I even here a bit. But yeah, potato top.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
Fifty in three months.
Speaker 10 (17:51):
Yeah, yeah, I'll get a steak and mushroom.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
Time of the day eating them. Steve.
Speaker 10 (18:01):
Oh, just when I get the monchies, anytime during the day,
I'll get.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
One footed in my I thought you were any and
then I thought the rainbow. I thought you're eat the
rainbow type guy that had the whole was like into vegetables.
Speaker 10 (18:15):
Yeah, I do et a lot of eges. No, you know, yeah,
there's there's quite a lot of egs. But as I say,
I'm going out at eight o'clock at night, as one
place that's still open, I can get two bacon and
eat pies for five bucks.
Speaker 1 (18:30):
Great. Hey, Steve, you know, just talking about people with
this size and stuff, do people comment on your size
often when they see you?
Speaker 10 (18:39):
Yeah, i'most corny. Yeah, four for eight and a half
and I weigh sixty kilos at the moment.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
But you know, so people you haven't met before they
mentioned it.
Speaker 10 (18:50):
No, they just think normal.
Speaker 1 (18:53):
Okay, So no one would even say, gee, you're short.
Speaker 10 (18:58):
Yeah, they do a little bit. So well, it's just
the way a was born.
Speaker 2 (19:01):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (19:02):
So people will bring it up and even and they
don't even know you.
Speaker 10 (19:09):
Occasionally I'll say, oh, you're a little on the shorts.
I will say, well, yeah, okay. But anyway, they say
good things come and small pegnant.
Speaker 1 (19:18):
Yeah, God, that's boy. It must get teens after a while,
that isn't it.
Speaker 10 (19:21):
There's a buddy one here. Yeah. No, I've got I've
also got ones. I've got pies, apple pies. I've got
apple pies. I've got custard pies. Ones.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
Did you say they made in teams, the Casey pies?
Speaker 13 (19:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 10 (19:40):
Yeah, we've got a fair for years half there's and
pies go out of town every night, fall over the
peninsula and prosh out as caddy kid.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
How long they've been around?
Speaker 10 (19:53):
I don't know, forty fifty years.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
Really.
Speaker 10 (19:59):
Yeah. You can get them at the fairs for you
buy by a dozen frozen one for twenty bucks.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
It's is it called GKC.
Speaker 10 (20:10):
GKC.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
Yeah, not KC, but GKC.
Speaker 5 (20:13):
Right.
Speaker 14 (20:14):
Yeah, I'll put the I can.
Speaker 10 (20:16):
Get if I want to. When I'm doing my bread,
sometimes I'll give me a little bit of yeast, the
cake yeast, and I'll run a couple of loaves of
bready out with it. I can't really do it with
the ordinary dry yeast to what.
Speaker 1 (20:32):
They've got to do with the pies. Is it just
a segue?
Speaker 14 (20:36):
Oh?
Speaker 10 (20:37):
All, I do my own baking. I make my own
fruitcakes and loaves of bread and all that sort of thing. Yeah,
but yeah, I wouldn't pay twelve dollars.
Speaker 5 (20:49):
For a prime.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
No'd be crazy too not. We've got your GKC.
Speaker 15 (20:52):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (20:52):
Stave twenty five to nine. Jen Marcus welcome. You're still
with us. Jenny got on the other side.
Speaker 8 (21:02):
If you want.
Speaker 11 (21:06):
Did that man say he was from tens Yes.
Speaker 3 (21:10):
Ah.
Speaker 11 (21:11):
I think a lot of people in that and Titeria
are short. And I wondered why, and I think it's
because the sun doesn't get there until the afternoon on
that side of that mountain.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
Range, beyond the easter sunrise, beyond the west of sea.
You're probably right there. Yeah, I think people there. I
don't think they've been there all in life. I think
they've moved there, which would which would really mean that
short people are moving there because they like the shade. Really,
I don't know. I mean, I'm just going along with
where you're at because it sounds like you've forgotten what
you rang up about.
Speaker 11 (21:47):
I'm getting the sidetracked trying to trim my toenails.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
What don't trim your toenails when you're talking to me?
Is that what you're doing?
Speaker 10 (21:56):
Yeah? What with?
Speaker 11 (22:00):
Well, it's hard to hold onto the phone end.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
I think you're doing extremely well. What are you cutting
them with the clippers?
Speaker 11 (22:08):
It's hard when you can't see what you're doing. It's
all both feel anyway. Now I wish I didn't.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
I wish to hear can you put the fun Can
we hear one of your clicks? But can we hear
one of the clicks? Is one of the nails goes?
Speaker 5 (22:27):
No?
Speaker 11 (22:27):
Put them down?
Speaker 10 (22:28):
Now?
Speaker 1 (22:28):
Okay, I think it's for the best.
Speaker 11 (22:32):
It's a bit dangerous and the dirt anyway.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
Yeah, I think it's a daylight thing. I think that's
gonna be a lot of a lot of teams. People
be hoping you cut one of your toes off.
Speaker 11 (22:42):
Yeah, well I cut the top off one of them
once and thought I better go to the potectress. But
they won't accept me. Don't ask me why.
Speaker 1 (22:51):
I can ask you why.
Speaker 11 (22:54):
Anyway, And that I was going to ask about the
soul panels. Who's buying all that?
Speaker 1 (23:01):
People? People? By the power? Jen Beck to you nails
twenty three to nine. I'm six foot to see when
I get so many comments gets boring as everyone thinks
they are saying something unique, but I've heard it all
hundreds of times. Do you remember when South Park did
an episode about Ginger's not having souls? They've got a
lot of people upset with that episode. My brother has
read here and wasn't a supermarket minding his own business
(23:23):
and just doing a shopping when a group of young
people came up to hug him on Hugger Ging of Day,
he thought they were mentally ill. Marcus of the seventies,
It was a hard time for smaller people. In that
horrid song, short people came out cruel words in it.
Something I know that song that one's passed me by.
Has that got a key change or Randy Human?
Speaker 3 (23:44):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (23:45):
Okay, yeah, wow, it's a very nice song, is it.
I think probably there's some clever bit in it. What
don't we want to hear about people when they ring up?
Sometimes people say they're in bed. That always freaks me
(24:06):
out a little bit because I don't like I don't
like my callers to be horizontal. Well, hang them out.
I'd never talk to someone lying down. I don't like
it when they're in the bath, and I don't like
it when they're doing their nails. Dan's main Dan's majorly
freaked out by that. Yeah, I mean it's your multitasker.
(24:29):
Can imagine doing your nails when you're on talk back?
So first for me, what do you call those things?
And nail things in that? But swings around and they've
got leverage, hasn't it. There's those other ones that have
got the two things like the scissors with the bits,
but there's another thing that flip around. Wonder when they
(24:50):
came out, wouldn't I In the history of nail clippers,
I normally end up using my Swiss army knife, which
is never good. Here to twelve people, I feel I've
almost done four hours with listening to that. Those people, well,
it's red haired day. And twelve. The twelve dollar meat
(25:10):
pie has caused the twelve dollars baker eggpie has caused
quite a lot of feedback on Facebook with people talking
about boycotting airport food and stuff. Have you got any
comments about that? I'll see if I can find the post.
I normally take a screenshot, but then I can't find
the comments. I'm just to see if I can find
(25:35):
the post again. No, I can't. Are we talking about
wind farms? Victor at Nelson Pine Bee Crew has a
workmate who's tongue and ginger.
Speaker 5 (25:57):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (25:59):
Someone said someone said Jan got me, she got you?
Speaker 14 (26:03):
Haha?
Speaker 1 (26:03):
What of that means? Any who? Nineteen to nine. This
is Marcus Dave. Welcome. They are good dive. Thank you.
Speaker 2 (26:15):
I made my own copper bracelet. I heard you someone
talking about the copper bracelet. There's supposed to be good
for your rat around your wrist. So I found an
old electrical cord on an old heater being thrown out.
I snipped off the electrical cord and stripped back the
wires and wrapped it round me wrist. And it seems
I don't know whether it's any good or not, but
I got the idea off your show, either your show
(26:38):
or someone else's about copper on the skin?
Speaker 1 (26:41):
What were you trying? Have you got pain in your joints?
Speaker 16 (26:44):
No?
Speaker 2 (26:45):
Just for the sake of it, probably, I'll give it
a little while before I get sick of it and
snip it off with a P. I don't know, but hey,
baconnig pie, I wouldn't pay twelve bucks. They're easy and
easy enough to make for yourself. I'm a bit of
an eat I'm a bit of an expert on the
old bacon egu pie. Marcus.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
Do you make the pastry yourself or how do you
go about?
Speaker 4 (27:05):
No?
Speaker 2 (27:05):
I get the flake pastry, the sheets of pastry that
fits in a tray, all right, and then cracked the eggs,
chuck them in. And the only thing I do but
different is chicken bacon. I've got a fan of that chicken.
Speaker 1 (27:19):
Bacon because we was anything.
Speaker 2 (27:23):
Oh it has been a thing for with me for
a while. And Peck and Save I like it. It's
very low. No, they're calling it chicken bacon, and it's.
Speaker 1 (27:33):
Coming with strick there. It's come from weird ye.
Speaker 2 (27:37):
Peck and Save mate, and it comes in just it
doesn't come very so many rashes, but it's very good.
And hey, Marcus, if I told you about my that
I got off YouTube cooking like a bacon egg pie
in the air fire. But you don't use the pastry.
You just cracked the eggs, chuck in your bacons, diced
(27:58):
up cheese, a bit of onion and put it on
there for ten minutes with a and it does it fantastic.
But you use the bacon paper, so I do understand.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
Wow, it's got invisible it's got in visible pastry.
Speaker 2 (28:11):
Yeah, in no pastry. So it's got the things Marcus.
You do like a double layer and you peel out
the layer with the bacon and eg and what have
you cheese in it and you can eat it off
it so you don't have any dishes either.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
Easy people people have said, David, I don't know how
well you are taking suggestions. But people say those pie
makers you get from Kmart are quite good. They're like
a they're like tasted sandwich maker, but for pie. And
just put the pastry in there and do that. And
I don't know if that's.
Speaker 2 (28:39):
You, No, it's not me. I'd rather do the rings,
you know, the rings and a no, see I've got
the best thing that's with their fryer. Easy easy, and
I don't touch anything from Camart either anyhow.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
Good on you? No, fair enough, fair enough fourteen to
nine fancy old chicken the chicken bacon Marcus to find
that picture with a towd dollar bacon egg pie or
if you have to seach New Zealand is mean page? Wait,
someone's not. Someone knows that that's really good that you've
told me that, because everyone's got a mean page, now
(29:16):
haven't they? There have been New Zealanders. I just want
to see what outrageous people comments. People have said, I've
got to find the memes page. Yeah, I haven't actually
found it. If you have to go to New Zealander's
(29:38):
meme page, No, I've tried that and it hasn't come
up for me. People, No, I'll find it. Get in
touch with you want talk people. My name is Marcus.
Welcome HITDL twelve New Zealanders. Why hasn't come up for me?
(29:59):
That's all right, pilot error. Do get in touch you
on to talk Marcus till twelve. Marcus, I'm a redhead.
It's not Asian to want to touch your hair, but
Spaniards and South Americans. It seems like different people want
to touch in different parts of the world. Goodness. Now,
(30:22):
oh yep, let's take a break. So I've found the
page with the pie, the twelve dollars bacon egg pie
at the airport Auckland Airport. There's six hundred and seventy
seven comments on that page. So six hundred and seventy
seven people have been on their phone looking at Facebook
seeing that, thought, well, that's fine. I might comment on that.
(30:45):
That's the wild thing, and the general angle is that
it's not value for money and you're better off packing
a lunch before you go to the airport. And then
much debate on whether you can or cannot take your
food on the plane. They say you can as long
as you eat it before your destination. That sounds like
(31:06):
Facebook truth to me. I don't know if it's for.
Speaker 4 (31:08):
Real or not.
Speaker 1 (31:09):
None of the comment to that funny. I'm just looking
to see through are any funny ones. But yeah, it's
not a great website for humor. Most of its stated
in the obvious, like they charge those prices because people
pay those ridiculous prices, or everything is more expensive at
the airport, or go for the duty free ones, which
(31:32):
is verging towards the good comment anyway, hit'le twelve be
a part of it. Redheads and bacon, egg pies and
Soul of Farms amazingly about the soul of farm and
Nazeby that's just been consented. It's going to power seventy
(31:54):
thousand homes and I imagine it's a lot better investment
than a dairy found there, particularly since the land's marginal
and without irrogation's probably not much you can do there.
And I guess irrigation comes to a cost and increasing cost.
We are discussing tonight, Hettel twelve o'clock. You want to
be a part of it. Oh, by the way, I've
got to mention this I meant to be. How is
that fire and napy there's a fire and napier on
(32:16):
the waterfront. Is that still going? Let me know if
you can see that. Also, this tropical cyclone, I said
tropical cyclone. That might be the wrong word to say it.
This typhoon is about to hat Hong Kong. Much about
(32:39):
that on the bee but Dan he's seeing any shots
of anything blown across the room or anything. No, not
much TV coverage of it. So I don't quite know
how drastic it is. Yes, it's It's on CNN's ticker,
so she's a big deal. There's a two meter surge
(33:01):
of water to come and two meters higher. It's already
killed three people. People are sand begging Hong Kong's observatory,
said Typhoon Super Typhoon Regazza was blowing two twenty colors
per hour, so she's not missing. Around six away from nine.
(33:24):
If you want to be a part of it, Marcus
till twelve. It's all on. It's all on, although I
haven't seen any more reports of panic buying people talking
about that last dart. Not seeing any more about that.
So you get in touch. Just coming up to seven
US at seven eight nine o'clock if you want to
be involved with the show, it'd be nice to hear
(33:44):
from you. Oh eight hundred and eighty eight eighty come on,
Oh yes, if you've got there's this fire on the
front of a motil far on Napier's mirroring parade. Looks
like in a maybe it's an older building, the beach
Front motel, So I don't know if you've got an
update on that. Five fire trucks for a tendance. There's
(34:07):
a water canon. There are all side presuments out by now.
Otherwise I would have heard more about that. That would
be my gut feeling there.
Speaker 5 (34:14):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (34:16):
So here we are again as I say the number
is oh wait at taty looking forward to going to
say it's a red head awareness day. I want to know.
I want to know, not just with red headedness, but
the things that you've had that people feel that they
have every right to comment on red headedness or height
and stuff like that, as though you'd be amused to
hear what people say, which of course no one is.
(34:38):
I thought if we discussed it, but people might stop
saying that so often. Guilty of it myself, I mean,
not for a while. But once you realize that people
still hear those comments hundreds of times a day, they
probably you realize that she's probably not much to be
gained by saying it. So yep, that is some of
(34:58):
the stuff wrong about tonight. But you do feel free
to get through, get in touch, he tell twelve Marcus
till midnight and some of the other stuff. I can now,
by the way, there is some there's going to be
a top or outage the network teams are doing some
work on the top or site as a result, news talks.
He'd be in top on ninety six zero off here
(35:20):
between ten pm and midnight? Do they even stay for
the mid doorners listeners can stay with us via iHeartRadio.
I'll go do something else. Oh you'd go do something else,
go for a stiff walk or something, go play some
golf with that island. But yeah, we'll be back on
at midnight. Gav. This is Marcus. Welcome, good Gav.
Speaker 6 (35:47):
Yeah cool, I am more hard, I'm sorry, I re
employer getting it today, rehead. He's there only a young fella.
Speaker 1 (35:57):
Did you mention his hair color to him?
Speaker 17 (36:00):
No?
Speaker 18 (36:02):
What would you?
Speaker 1 (36:03):
Because what.
Speaker 6 (36:07):
They'd be Scottish you might turn on you so but
you got anyway.
Speaker 1 (36:11):
Yeah, So how did the conversation go?
Speaker 6 (36:15):
Well, he showed up again. He's only like sixteen ye
and then he's worked in the school holidays.
Speaker 5 (36:22):
Yees.
Speaker 6 (36:23):
So he fired up again yesterday yep, yeah read yep.
Speaker 15 (36:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (36:29):
He doesn't say much, but he gets some of his job.
Speaker 1 (36:32):
That's what you want.
Speaker 6 (36:34):
Mm hmm, that's what I'd like to say.
Speaker 1 (36:39):
Do you are you the boss?
Speaker 6 (36:40):
GeV?
Speaker 2 (36:41):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (36:42):
What sort of business is it track to reckon. Oh wow,
I would be worth his weight in gold. Is he
a good rica?
Speaker 6 (36:54):
He's a good listener and a watcher. And when he's
not doing anything, I told him to pick up the broom.
You know what it's like yep. So he's in the
learning stages. Good thing to bet him. He's he's you know,
he's well built. Yeah, and he's quiet, and he's looked,
(37:15):
he looks he's looking good.
Speaker 19 (37:17):
Well.
Speaker 1 (37:18):
It sounds like a gift from the gods give. I'd
like to hear that employer Guina day a lot of text.
I will get to those welcome people. Hitdle twelve at Dibi.
It's Marcus. Good evening, Yes, good evening, Marcus.
Speaker 4 (37:31):
Are you this seasoning?
Speaker 1 (37:32):
Good?
Speaker 15 (37:34):
I'm I usuedally call you from the whole spey that
I'm at the Naval Toel Hotel in Auckland. And then
you're talking about hids And I've been all my life
and I think the worst time for me that I
was at school. I mean kids were mean to me.
(37:55):
They called me all all sorts of names. I won't
say them a very there, but they were very nasty.
And but yeah, it's not said they had been ratid.
Speaker 1 (38:06):
It's yeah, afecture.
Speaker 20 (38:13):
It was quite mean.
Speaker 15 (38:16):
I felt intimidated and bullied when I was at school
because some of the names they came up with were
I can't repeat on radio, but yeah I can story him.
I'm sixty three years old and it was back in
primary school days and I can still remember the names.
Speaker 1 (38:33):
M and it's it almost seems to be permissible, doesn't
it that you know litt but I don't understand about it.
Speaker 15 (38:40):
Yeah, but yeah, it was pretty nasty. And you know,
you just said look at it and look at each
year and he's.
Speaker 5 (38:51):
Yeah, so yeah.
Speaker 1 (38:53):
But on the flip side, Sarah Ferguson too, and she's
a piece of work.
Speaker 15 (38:57):
Yeah, oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (39:01):
Did you have you had friends at school and things though,
did you?
Speaker 15 (39:05):
Oh yeah, still sitting a step but you know the
name calling was, you know, pretty hospital for its primary school.
Speaker 1 (39:15):
We're you doing an Auckland divvy up for a conference
or something.
Speaker 15 (39:18):
I'm off on a cruise tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (39:20):
Yeah, go you are the big ships and what's it called?
Something Princess is it?
Speaker 10 (39:25):
Or no?
Speaker 15 (39:25):
No, I'm going to Bachlon. I'm trying to Singapore tomorrow
and then sing in three days in Singapore, then off
to Barcelona and catching the ship in Barcelona and the
eleven days around the Libiterranean.
Speaker 1 (39:40):
Wow, wow, there'll be a lot. That's a trip of
a lifetime. On the sound of things, it is ITAs and.
Speaker 15 (39:46):
I'm going with some lovely friends and it's going to
be great. So thank you anyway, I love listening to
your show and your lovely host.
Speaker 1 (39:54):
Ye know, well you have a good time, Devvy, and
report back when you get back. What do you say
to people when they go on holiday? And do you
say bomvoyes travel well? Gosh, I sound so compassionate. Great
around the med cheapers, oh Marcus On the top of
a comment on people's read here, my general rule is
(40:15):
if they can't fix it in five minutes, it's usually
not appropriate to comment. Let people know if they had
food and the teeth were stained in their pants, but
not weight height body features twelve dollar pies at Havana
Kaffe next to Musgroves and christ Venison and red wine.
Beautiful Mark's addition to bacon an egg, I put onion,
peas cheese in my pies and part boiled potatoes, slice
(40:37):
and land top of pies instead of pastry top. Nice change.
For pastry Marcus. The nineteen fifty randfree shield mirry around
started off on Otargo, then Canderry winded up a boish
South Candory and finished up in North Auckland, as they
were named back then. Because this year it's gone Talanaki Wakatole, Southland, Canterbury, Otago,
(40:59):
and I think South might have another go of it
if North Harbor gets it, but it's unluckly because they're windless.
I don't have a problem with North Harbor being windless
because they did win the shield. Once they had nowhere
for the parade. They went through Milford or something was
a disaster, So where's your center. Clearly it's not a
(41:19):
proper place. It's just a part of Auckland, Marcus. I've
never had any bad comments about my red hair, and
it's always been a winner with the ladies. I was
first called blue by Charlie Ridgeway many years ago. It
sort of wore after a few years, but then I
joined the Navy. Now everyone calls me blue, except for
(41:41):
you fellers at z B. When I signed my test
text off as keV, no sign of any balders. I
get my haircut monthly. Good on your keV or Blue
as we now call you, sign your text blue, delve it,
commit to it, commit to your peace, Get in touch.
(42:03):
It's all about the things that people always comment on
about you, like your height. I guess you did a
good comeback, don't you like? Oh yeah, with a stick
and then high. These days you say, well, I don't
know what you comeback is. And the twelve dollars pile
the airport that's got Facebook comments going through the roof.
(42:24):
Didn't see that out of it to me. I mean,
I've quite often seen expensive things at the airport, but
that might be something you want to mention tonight. Get
in touch here till twelve. If you got to be
a part of it, it's all go. Although everyone's on
a holiday. How's that? What do you reckon about?
Speaker 16 (42:40):
That?
Speaker 1 (42:41):
Cheapers huge stories out of America about Trump and autism
and titlanal It seems to be an incredibly irresponsible and
destructive thing to say, which I'm sure there be families
out there affected by those comments. But yeah, that doubts
(43:03):
if you want to appine on that, if you want
to come from a place of being well informed, I
think they'd be important for that one. But do get
in touch, keep those texts coming through. Marcus. Don't be
so rude about the North Shore, please, I'm not rude
about it as such. I'm just saying it hasn't really
got a heart, and that was proven when they had
(43:23):
where did they have the parade when they got the shield? Nowhere?
Not very passionate about the shore. So that's something you
want to talk about also tonight. Yeah, oh what else?
I was going to mention, Oh, here we go, here
we go, here we go. That was another topic I
hadn't mind. What do you do when your pets die?
(43:46):
Because a lot of you, if you don't own your
own house, it's hard to bury your pets or for
anyone because you're not going to live there forever. So
I did see there's this I don't know why, but
there's this company now that popped up and they make
right get this, they make stones. So what they do
(44:12):
is you give them their ashes and they turn it
into a rock cremation stones. I mean, it freaks me out,
but I imagine i'd be curious enough if you've got
a pet that died, what do you do with it?
I suppose a stone you can hold in your hand.
Would give you some comfort rather than an earn of ashes.
I don't know how they prove that your animal's ashes
(44:33):
are in that stone. I mean, some guy's got inspirations
set up this whole business. Well, you do it with humans,
or you can do it with animals and they get
a stone made out of it. Yes, I do know
what you think about that, but that is a complex thing.
(44:56):
Pet dying. Yeah, and turn them into a stone anyway,
because people forget ashes then don't know what to do
with them, do they. Nineteen sixteen past nine, Laurie, this
is Marcus.
Speaker 10 (45:07):
Welcome Marcus.
Speaker 14 (45:10):
Yeah, I guess there's a stone that's easy to look after.
Speaker 3 (45:14):
You see.
Speaker 14 (45:15):
There was a few funeral home up and was it
up in Wookland on the news for the last couple
of days. They said they had either five or six
hundred uncollected earns.
Speaker 1 (45:26):
Bothered to click on that. What's happened with people just
getting them?
Speaker 14 (45:31):
They're taking them over. They are the businesses that are closed. Somehow,
this particular firm had sort of picked up the residual
of these uncollected urns here.
Speaker 3 (45:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (45:43):
I think they were just checking around to see if
anybody might come find them. But the the item regarding
the solar farm at naisby yes, I see it's it's
not entirely has it been approval? There's some controversy around here.
Speaker 1 (46:03):
Just a just approved today according to the od t okay, because.
Speaker 14 (46:07):
I remember reading a while back that there was opposition
to it because and I mean maybe was in the
news also for just having achieved a is it a dark.
Speaker 1 (46:17):
Sky yell heritage dark dark Sky status the first of
them apparently?
Speaker 14 (46:22):
Yeah, yes, that's pretty if it all go down there.
Speaker 1 (46:27):
I'm not a big fan of days, but it's an
odd place.
Speaker 10 (46:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (46:32):
Yeah, well.
Speaker 14 (46:37):
They still graze and there will still be ship grazing
in and around the soul. You know, it's still farm it.
Speaker 2 (46:43):
Under the panel say yeah, yeah, you can have them.
Speaker 14 (46:47):
Yeah apparently, And as I said, I think it's not irrigated.
But they seem to think that they get enough rain
to clean clean them off. But the actual panels do
track the sun apparently somehow as well, So there's some movement,
not just a point in one direction. It seems like
they must move a certain amount. But no, it's funny.
(47:07):
I last summer I was down flying around looking for that.
Were we looking for down that way, Saint John's Wart.
I think it was around McCrae. I did, I was
engaged to flying around that McCrae. Are you looking for
for for weeds and stuff? But they were particularly interested.
(47:31):
And Saint John's Wart down that's south of there. Have
you heard of a feature down there? It's called Lot's Wife.
It's a rock feature. M l O. T is lots
lots of wife.
Speaker 1 (47:47):
I don't think. I don't think I am aware of it.
Speaker 14 (47:49):
But yeah, it's a biblical reference.
Speaker 21 (47:52):
But yet.
Speaker 1 (47:55):
It looks like lots of wife. I mean normally it's
frog rock or Lot's Wife or anything.
Speaker 5 (48:00):
Isn't that from above?
Speaker 14 (48:02):
I I wasn't getting a particular because.
Speaker 1 (48:06):
Where is it?
Speaker 18 (48:07):
Where is it?
Speaker 1 (48:07):
Out of it? I know I haven't heard of it.
Speaker 14 (48:09):
Okay, So south of McCrae's, let's see if there's no
real little town, say, and then you might come to
a place called stone burn It might be the nearest feature.
It's a bit north stone Burners, a bit northeast of
Lot's Wife. I guess in the Biblican story was a lot.
(48:32):
They were told not to turn around and look in
the back, and I think she turned and and and
got turned into a pillar of salts.
Speaker 1 (48:42):
That's right, that's right. Yeah, I'm not that good on
the scriptures, but I think there might be something.
Speaker 14 (48:46):
To do with that as the story goes. Yeah, Well,
in around not too far from there, there was interest
in They thought there might be some John's wort growing
and I was down there that was flying around to.
Speaker 1 (49:00):
See they see there's a weed or they wanted to
harvest it for its supposed medicinal projects prospects.
Speaker 14 (49:06):
Now, definitely a weed because it's poisonous to stock and
had been virtually eliminated. I think it was back in
the as if I racium. They had another name anyway,
it was Yeah, But yeah, it's what has happened. They
hadn't actually found they become They must clicked insects in
(49:30):
different places around the country, you know, I guess when
they're looking for or just something that the land Kare
folks do, and that found in the collection that an
insect that if it was for that insect to be around,
(49:50):
they thought they had to be St. John's water somewhere
nearby because that's the only thing that survived on here.
So I had the job. Were flying around in photographing
some areas. Yeah, we did find from the year some
of the can look a bit like red Water as well.
When it's on trailer, there's a couple of gullies there
(50:11):
might have been involved.
Speaker 1 (50:14):
But did you did you fly of a butter and
egg road that's one of the more interesting named streets
down that path? Did you find that that's just down
the Moonlight?
Speaker 14 (50:23):
Okay, no, no, I didn't know.
Speaker 1 (50:24):
I we h.
Speaker 14 (50:28):
That wasn't ben the cur on my new area. I
know we did that stuff then, and then I think
I went down or I think I went off downtown
Fagot Long after that and down to down to uh
Steward Island. Yeah, but yeah, but interesting the woods. But mccrazy,
I was quite impressed just the size of it. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
(50:51):
And obviously there's cause a bit of consternation the feature.
I thought it was actually pretty weird free around there.
Generally speaking, it's just sort of at that time, around
the tailings and on the outside of the whole place
sort of generally speaking.
Speaker 1 (51:09):
Nice to talk to you, Larry, Thanks so much for that.
Twenty one past nine. Back soon, oh, Terry. This is Marcus. Welcome, well,
Hi Marcus.
Speaker 22 (51:20):
Over the years I worked with i'd red head over
the over the years, and I'll never forget one in
particular told me that he said he couldn't keep his
pants on in the North Ireland for Mary women. He said,
the mary woman went berserk to read the head men
(51:45):
And I said, is that? What's that like down here?
He said, I haven't encountered in the South Island. Yeah,
that's the fact. And then jokingly he said, if I
was you are die you here red and head north
That's what he said.
Speaker 4 (52:00):
Did you do that, Terry, No, bluddy didn't.
Speaker 1 (52:04):
I guess I did ask about stories about redheads, Terry
than Thank you, riots, Marcus.
Speaker 18 (52:08):
Welcome, Hello Marcus. I just heard a man talking about ashes,
and I just wanted to tell you a story that
happened to me this year. I was researching genealogy of
my grandparents and I was looking for my grandfather's ashes
on my mother's side, I had all the other grandparents.
(52:31):
So I found that he had been cremated at pre Aware,
a cemetery in Auckland. I went there and they said
his ashes were sent to Morrison's funeral home in Henderson.
So I went to Morrison's funeral home and they said, yes,
we've got his ashes here. We've kept them for sixty
five years, and so I picked them up. And I've
(52:57):
now found a place in why committing next to where
I will be buried, So I've given him a good send.
But I was amazed that Morrisons had kept his ashes
for sixty five years.
Speaker 1 (53:12):
So what were the circumstances that meant that happened?
Speaker 23 (53:14):
Right?
Speaker 1 (53:15):
What happened?
Speaker 18 (53:17):
Well, I think my mother's parents either forgot about him
or didn't have the money to do anything about it.
My parents are not around to ask why that happened.
It was just that I followed up and I was
really surprised, and I was really pleased that Morrisons had
(53:40):
kept them for that time. I was very surprised.
Speaker 1 (53:43):
So you discovered that through genealogy, is that right?
Speaker 23 (53:46):
Well?
Speaker 18 (53:46):
Yeah, yeah, I was researching the family and I found
that he had been cremated at Perwera, the other side
of Walkman, and then yeah, Metterbank and then somehow I
think the funeral director may have been Morrison's and they
(54:08):
took his ashes back and when I went there, they said, yep,
and I think they I think they've got a room
full of ashes of people that haven't claimed them, and
so that's a little bit sad that I'm very very
pleased that I found them and have put it.
Speaker 1 (54:25):
And I guess it's not in their interest to try
and track them all down because it would be a
lot of work too. I guess they've just got to
sit there and I guess now with databases and things,
that's probably.
Speaker 5 (54:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 18 (54:37):
It was just a little cardboard box with his ashes
and I wrapped them in a three important scarf to
me and I put them in the ground and then
I made a plaque to go on his his gravesite
and feel contented by it.
Speaker 9 (54:59):
Now.
Speaker 1 (55:00):
Did the people at the home say it was common
for people to pick up ashes after that much of
a gap of time.
Speaker 18 (55:09):
No, I didn't really ask them that much that I
didn't think they would keep them for six.
Speaker 1 (55:17):
I'm very surprised.
Speaker 18 (55:20):
Yeah, but Morrison did a very good job, and I
complimented them mind that, and I thanked them very much
for doing it. But I do think they've got a
few there that you know, probably around that age. And
they went into a special room which sort of was
at a certain temperature, and I do believe they had
a few other people's ashes there.
Speaker 24 (55:42):
But I did.
Speaker 18 (55:44):
The thing that made me think about it was though
I didn't read it. I saw a headline today that
some funeral home was going to have a mass grave
for a whole lot of unclaimed dashes.
Speaker 1 (55:56):
Yes, I saw that too, but just like you, didn't
read the article. But yeah, that's a good story, right.
I appreciate you coming through that. Thank you. We're also
too about pets and burial of peace. It's born and
bred north Shore person. You are correct, no actual heart.
That's from Andy Marcus the North Shares. Great Calm Beach
(56:20):
is the best bakery in Auckland off of Bakery and
Browns by the best pie shop in Auckland min Ay Bakery,
where I'm happy to pay ten to dolls for fab Pire,
great corn restaurants and the famous top top restaurant Tucker Punter.
Come on up and enjoy no heart. There is a
pret a pit Crematorum and Longataha called Pit Piece. We
have three cats cremated there with the ashes and the
(56:40):
metal hearts. They also have a memorial wall. We put
a phot of your pet complete with their name.
Speaker 5 (56:47):
I use.
Speaker 1 (56:47):
The company and Tottong are called Treasured forever to turn
my dog ashes into a lovely ring. Andy, appreciate your
text my mother got her deceased dog's coats made into
a teddy bear was really nice? Really? Wow? Really really?
Speaker 20 (57:12):
Who did that?
Speaker 1 (57:14):
Yeah, Textadermist Cheapers, my mother got her deceased dog coats
made into a teddy beer was really nice?
Speaker 6 (57:22):
Wow?
Speaker 1 (57:24):
Well, expecting that is a text A lot of things
I don't expect in this line of work, people, cheapers,
hit or twelve looking forward to what you've got to say, Oh,
eight hundred and eighty ten eighty nine ninety two to text, Yeah,
good luck with the hailstorm and naseba. I'm not quite
sure the avert hailstorms on solar farms. You might have
(57:46):
something to say about that. But also too, about turning
your pet's ashes into a rock or onto a your
human ashes onto a rock. You want to say something
about that. That's of interest. And red head Awareness Day
or appreciation Day? Why is it that we can still
say things about red hair kids? Yeah, what's going on there?
(58:09):
They still get to tell you, They still get to
and I guess a lot of probably parents die their kids' heads.
Speaker 5 (58:13):
Do they.
Speaker 1 (58:15):
Stop them getting that kind of abuse, that's what I imagine.
Feel free to come through. You want to talk about
this anything else? Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty Hitel twelve.
I've had two dogs cremated one pitch. She was a
local legend found out at Gravity Canyon, and a sixteen
or seventeen year old hunt away that stuck to me
through the last few difficult years. Shouting to Scott he's
(58:37):
a huge fan, Hi, Scott. Never mind a shout out
big typhoon heading into through parts of Asia tonight, winds
of two twenty k's or something extraordinary like that. Just
putting that out there, But do get in touch if
(58:58):
you want to talkbout this or anything else. It'd be
nice to hear from you. Oh eight hundred eighty ten
eighty and nine detects you want to come through? Not
looking good for Fergie. Maybe she's going to lose her
free digs And to do all this on Redhead Appreciation Day. Tricky, tricky, tricky,
(59:23):
jumping Hit'd twelve thwey Away from ten o'clock, Hit til
Midnight ten beverage along from Along from twelve. There's something
else you want to mention tonight. I'm really into it.
I don't know what it is, but she's been old
night with old Terry flip she is anyway, huh, catch
(59:43):
you soon eighteen to ten. Welcome with the International News.
I'll bring that to your attention. The camera and ats
Marcus good evening, Yeah you might good Cameron.
Speaker 12 (59:55):
They just sort of ring up and give you for
the background on those two dogs.
Speaker 1 (59:59):
Yeah, sure, thank you.
Speaker 12 (01:00:01):
Yeah. Do you know what gravity Kenyon was? Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:00:04):
I think that is like a swing? Is it a
swing place and stuff for flying foxes and swings? I
got that kind of right.
Speaker 12 (01:00:12):
Yep, yep, yep. It was an eighty meter bungee and
an eighty meter swing in a bunk clometer long flowing fox.
Speaker 1 (01:00:18):
Where was it.
Speaker 12 (01:00:21):
Just the out easter type?
Speaker 18 (01:00:22):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:00:22):
I drove out the road to it. It was quite remote,
was it? You had a look at that year? I
have been there. It's gone now, has it?
Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 12 (01:00:29):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, it's it's remoteness. Was it tndicap? Because
it was a beautiful and.
Speaker 1 (01:00:34):
I presume they were expecting those buses like Keywi experienced.
I don't see those anymore, but I guess that was
their market?
Speaker 21 (01:00:41):
Was it?
Speaker 12 (01:00:42):
That was going to be the target market? But it
was an accident, I think down Nelson with a key.
We experienced bus okay, and it limited some of the
roads that they could use.
Speaker 1 (01:00:55):
Understand. Yeah, it was quite a lot. It was quite
a drive up there, I.
Speaker 12 (01:00:58):
Remember, yeah, yeah, yeah, it certainly was. But yeah, Liby
and I were working up on the Fox Tail one
day and this tourist couple come up and the girl
she was almost in tears and we just thought she
(01:01:19):
didn't light the ride and she could hardly speak. She says,
there's a puppy down there with the tin cane stuck
on its head. Long story short. Someone then on the
bridge put the Zooe Millings on the camera. Boom, there's
a puppy there there with the tin cane stuck on
its head, working its way down the gradient towards the river.
(01:01:40):
Boy the farm and one of our workers got down
to it. It was day there on the water's edge,
so they picked it up and they had a puppy
food canes stuck on a team that had been scranging
in the rubbish hole and they'd fallen off the bloody cliff.
They'd been missing for eight days. So well, I took
(01:02:01):
it home and it became a sidekick for the teena
or even yis so summer?
Speaker 1 (01:02:06):
Will you say I've been missing for that day? Is
whose was it?
Speaker 24 (01:02:11):
It was.
Speaker 12 (01:02:14):
Born from a litter of pups from the farmhouse across
the bridge, and that guy's mum had been over to
stay with him for a week or so, and when
she was leaving, she took a rubbish bag full of
puppy food cans over to the rubbish hole that she
(01:02:34):
had for her little let dog, and all eight of
trucks pups followed her over to the rubbish hole, but
only seven of them ever came back. And this one
obviously scavenged one of those kens, got it stuck on
its head and rock and rolled its way over to
the edge of the cliff, which would have been not
(01:02:55):
one hundred feet away, I suppose.
Speaker 1 (01:02:59):
And the head was totally in it, so it had
no vision.
Speaker 5 (01:03:01):
Is that right?
Speaker 1 (01:03:02):
Totally obscured?
Speaker 10 (01:03:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 12 (01:03:04):
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was waged on there. Her her
front poles were all rave. Roll was trying to get
the cane off from behavior and she had a bit
of a ring round unique and she spanked the holy
heaven it took two shares to clean her app clean.
Speaker 1 (01:03:20):
Her app was it hard to get the can off.
Speaker 12 (01:03:23):
I just said to give her a squeze that had
obviously been a bit bean for being bested around on
the stuns and behavior the river bed. And so I
took her home and washed her up through her rower
egg and white bits and keeped her in an old
hody and big pecker could zip right up and next
(01:03:46):
to my bed. And I'm just carried around like that.
And she became a sidekick. Well mm hmmm, so I
mean everywhere with me. In the end, she was welcome
at weddings, she went to funerals, parties. The other tourists
when they heard the story, because she come to work
with me every day. That photos of her, Yeah, working,
(01:04:10):
what have you?
Speaker 1 (01:04:12):
Did you say what breed of dog? It was, Cameron.
Speaker 12 (01:04:16):
She was a heading dog cross hunt away. Yeah, yes,
so an I dog cross the hunt away. We'd call
them a handy dog.
Speaker 5 (01:04:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:04:29):
And did you say in the end you had it
crom and the dog creamat Is that right?
Speaker 6 (01:04:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 12 (01:04:36):
Yeah, just because like she thought she was a human.
The way she lived. She lived in the house, The
passenger seat in my car was her seat. She did
everything humans. Did you know if I was on the
if I if I was on the pushboat, she was heady,
(01:04:57):
heat hanging out and put your side pocket of the
bag and what have you. And we walk around the
supermarket and because it's only a small town type, everybody
knew completely got away with it.
Speaker 1 (01:05:10):
What name did you get? How did you come up
with a name for the dog?
Speaker 12 (01:05:15):
Ten?
Speaker 18 (01:05:16):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:05:16):
Yeah, so it's just it was a shaer a he it'
she's called tin.
Speaker 12 (01:05:23):
Yep, And she had a tin ken stuck on your
head and we thought it was pretty tinny that she
was still alive. Good story, Yeah, so yeah, so well
she's on a shelf in a nicely built box.
Speaker 1 (01:05:40):
Now, nice to hear from you, Kevin. Good story, thank you.
Twelve way from ten. The thing about the we are
talking about getting your pets ashes turned into a stone?
You cross all this. One person has said, long time listener,
loved your show. In regards to pet ashes. I faced
(01:06:01):
that dilemma of burial or cremation recently in twenty twenty four,
after our fifteen year old past. I contemplating on getting
a stone made. But had I dropped it, that's be
it into pieces. Yeah, we're gonna check on it. I
don't know that's a thing or not and steered by
veterinarian enlisted a professional to capture his paws intricate detail
(01:06:21):
to create a lasting, permanent tribute. A casting mold was
taken with me present. The mold of his paws was
sent to a company in Germany. Five weeks later, a
bronze statue like keepsake of his paws returned and they
sit alongside his ashes. The paws are quite heavy but
amazing detail. When my time is up earthside of asby
(01:06:42):
femme to scant our ashes at the top of the
sugar Loaf communication tower in christ Church? Is that because
you love radio? From that? Quite interesting? I recently had
my cat cremated. Ashes were placed in a garden rock
with a photo plaque. Pet cremations in Mangadi were so
care and they also put a little bit of ash
inside a special pendant. It's a third pet they have
(01:07:05):
done for me. Gee, someone's text me do I have
a letter box? No, Marcus. Love the show is always.
Can you please give a shout out to my beautiful
wife Emma giving its redhead appreciation day. Love the Show cheers,
nol Hi Emma. Couple of shout We don't want to
(01:07:29):
get a couple of shouts. It's two already tonight, shout
out Tuesday six away from ten o'clock, Marcus till twelve.
If you want to be a part of it, I
presume the fire and napier is out. Let me know
about that. Your last story fold about that was about
seven twenty five. Um, Now what else can I tell you?
Speaker 12 (01:07:54):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:07:54):
Yep, drones shut down airports. I don't know that's an
old story or a current one, but I won't go
there with that. I'm just looking at the cyclone super
typhoon Regaza, strongest typhoon, one of the strongest typh foons
in years. No more from I'll go to a bit
of a new search on that one. I'll see if
(01:08:15):
I can do a Google see if I get any
more information for the last hour, what's happened with the
Regaza stand by people, it's looking for what's been posted
the last hour. No just everyone's saying they're bracing for it.
Four hundred and twenty four flights disrupted. They're calling it
the King of Storms. Could be the strongest typhoon in
(01:08:35):
the city's history. And I'm bring in that city is
Hong Kong. It's to worry hurricane force winds of speeds
of two thirty kilometers per hour, so the weather will
deterearorate rapidly. Later on Tuesday, seven hundred flights canceled. Now
all kindergarten primary secretary school classes have been canceled. Regassa
(01:08:59):
is a Filipino word meaning fast motion or rapid MICUs
love you show my pickle Diye have a statue in
the garden. Say hello to her every time I walk past,
And people are a commending Cameron for his storytelling cheap
as creepers. And the first time tonight heone's done their
(01:09:22):
nails as they speak to me, they're cutting their toenails
on air. That was pretty extraordinary, wasn't it, Hettle Midnight.
By the way, if you're if you're listening in Topol,
you'll be about to go off here because we're going
to work on your frequency. So I don't know why
that is, but yep, oh well it must be must
(01:09:42):
be time. So yep, that's happening, shouty Hector Smith ginger,
but he says he's not great guy. I have two
German shepherds. They have been cremated and are in remoo earned.
When I get cremated, they will get cremated with me.
Mix the ashes together. They were both loyal to the end.
(01:10:05):
People are big on that loyalty, aren't they with dogs
all loyal Jump in marcustall midnight. What's going on for
you people? If you want to talk, be a part
of it. And there's redhead Awareness Day. But also talk
about the things that you have in life that people
always comment on, whether it be a hair color or
(01:10:27):
your heights or something like that. Must be exhausting, so
that's a thing, yep. Now, also talking about bacon egg
pies and the twelve dollars bacon egg pie at Ocal Airports.
It's got a lot of comments online. Does seem a
(01:10:49):
lot for a basic pie, but here for airport. I
mean people say, take your own food to the airport.
We're not that well organized, right, Yes, it might be
something you want to talk about. Also, I think they're
always touch and go there that they vary wildly a
bacon egg pie. That's my impression, yep. But anyway, I'm
(01:11:11):
looking about the new Chinese shipping from Shanghai to go Dance,
the new North Sea route through the Bearing Straight because
of the melt of the polar cap. That's pretty amazing
goodness just to have to go around the Cape of
Good hope. But now they can go right round the
top through immensk greeting welcome. How are you? A lot
(01:11:34):
of people online are trying to sell me fish weights? Yeah,
I don't know what they do. You put on top
of your fish when you cook it. There we go.
Something I didn't know that I need and I don't,
but there we are. It's a thing, a fish weight.
Just saying that because something you might be interested. He
(01:11:55):
we are talking about cremating pets. Oh, I know what
you do with pets? How you can remember them? What's
an efficient way of doing Not a fishing that's the
wrong word, but a way that's permanent. So as this
speak of cremation, I don't trust it. How do you
truly hundred percent? No, you are getting back what you
dropped off? Fun fact, true redheads don't go gray. We
(01:12:18):
just fade to a blonde white. Appreciing updates on super typhoon,
Regarza cheers NICKI thinks, Nikki, I'm just so you know
that the typhoon predicted for Hong Kong has hit my
son in law is living there. I don't know where
the eye of the storm is, so I think were
(01:12:42):
the latest news. I've got China's vacuated four hundred thousand.
I don't know where. I don't know if it is
actually I don't know if it is the Yet I'll
see if I can find some live tracking of it.
(01:13:04):
But yeah, I'm sure the weather is the Yeah, Okay,
here we go. There are stormlits everywhere, updated an hour ago.
I'm seeing where it is. Oh, it's well off hongk
It seems to be Vasnea. Seems about four hundred k's
off Hong Kong for and I can see that's his
(01:13:25):
updated an hour ago. But yet could head right into
Hanoi anyho. Ginger Can Appreciation Day, great show, Tid needs
a book written about her. I put my cat ashes
in a plant pot. Cindy giant Flemish rabbit, dyed dug
(01:13:50):
a big hole in the garden, discovered topsail, went down
two meters winning. And this is the text that I
think probably really has honed. And where we are on
this topic, Marcus, do you put do people like whole
eggs and a bacon egg pie or a scramble mixed
(01:14:10):
filling cheers, Vin, I'm speaking for me. I hate a
scrambled mixed filling tastes like a keish. It's terrible. If
I get one of those, I'm very disappointed. I like
the egg to be separate with the bacon, like they've
cracked a couple of eggs in there and put some
bacon in re important to me, and as we know Dave,
(01:14:35):
Dave likes it with no pastry. Doesn't the air for
an invisible thing. Thing's quite interesting. And the other thing
we're talking about is chicken, which is chicken bacon. Marcus.
I've tried chicken bacon not long ago. I'd never have
it again. It was not that great. What about facon?
(01:14:56):
Fake bacon? Do come through? Just take it over of
that guy's numb two down if you can, so we
can do what we need to do about that. I'll
do pattern. But you get in touch, you want to
(01:15:20):
be in there. All the lines are free, Marcus, till midnight.
Come on. There might be other stuff you want to
talk about. Not what you want is yet. But yeah,
we're talking about pet disposal or no pet remembering pets,
that's right, and anything else you've got let me see
(01:15:40):
what else I can tell you about. No, that's most
of my key topics for today. You might be doing
something interesting and I'm always interested in that. You might
be in Hong Kong. We'd love to hear if you're
in the path of the typhoon. Get in touch about that.
Also tonight and chicken bacon if that shift thing come
(01:16:09):
on Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty nine nine to
text thirteen past ten go on app called Zoom Earth
Search Regaza and it shows the time. I think that's
what I did pretty much. I'll try that for you
too though. That's good to get. I'll do that as
(01:16:32):
I speak, Regaza. Thank you for that information. Yeah, it's
it's as I say, it's it's well off Hong Kong.
At the stage it looks massive, so looking at the key,
it looks like it's about four hundred k's off Hong Kong.
But it's all in that China Sea between Vietnam, No
Noila and Taipei. It's all that. It's bringing air from everywhere.
(01:16:57):
So yep, that's what we're on about. Thanks for that
two people. Marcus, next owner of my property might be
surprised as I've buried a goose, a goat called Graham,
a waller be named any two cats and a sheep.
What did you name the goose? That's my question to you.
(01:17:18):
I'd call a goose greg like a goose never cooked one, Yes,
fourteen plus ten. If you got to be a part
of it, let's go. Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty
hit til twelve. Anything else you want to mention too?
I will keep you up updated on Ragasa if anything
(01:17:39):
happens there. So that's what we're about tonight. Oh eight
hundred eighty ten eighty and nine to nine, two to tix.
Do you want to come through this something else you
want to mention? Love to hear from you? Just check
it on the international news. And then we said there's
anything out there that might pick your fancy.
Speaker 5 (01:18:02):
No no, no, no no.
Speaker 1 (01:18:05):
With here what I was saying, going to get your
on people. Some chefs cooked all those desserts in England
that they say are on the on the endangered puddings list. Yeah,
he gave the jam Roly Polly one, he gave the
(01:18:26):
Sussex pond putting two, he gave the Bread and Butter
pudding three. He gave the cream of puddings A five,
The Treacle Sponge Pudding A five, The Flummery three, the
Spotted Dick two, the Malvin Pudding five, Apples and Custard
(01:18:49):
looks delicious, Cabinet Pudding three, Rice Pudding three worthwhile Project
fifteen past ten, Oh failed to raise the dead tonight
or keep going? They we'll see how we go. I
just want if anyone tried those stone the ashes turned
into stones, if that's all right.
Speaker 2 (01:19:10):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (01:19:10):
The goose was called ducky wucky, as I thought it
was a baby duck. She was a great pet. Though
meet a reader is not so keen, Nicki. It's an
appalling name to call a goose ducky wucky. Marcus. I
remember when mutton was cheap and pork experienced used to
be able to get mutton hams. Not like that, Andy Moore.
I'm glad because I thought they're pretty average, very early
to mention mutton hams. That's a word that increases in
(01:19:31):
frequency towards December. There'll be some nights in December you
won't hear much else but mutton hams. Red and butter
pudding made with hot Cross barns delicious. Adam Papa moa,
come on, don't want to give you a fight, but
needs you for this hour. People, let's go Redhead Appreciation
Day and pet uh pet how to remember your pets
(01:19:59):
when you can't bury them because you're moving from house
to house. Heavy rain for parts of New Zealand watches
and plays over night and into Thursday. It's also Restless
League Awareness Day. What a what that's like to have?
What all that feels like? Seems to be quite a
(01:20:19):
recent thing. No doubt Trump will have something to say
about it wasn't discavetil nineteen forty five. Yeah, a cure
is still being sought. Yep, gentle exercise may help. You've
got your experience with Restless League Day, not restless League.
(01:20:40):
If you've got restless league every day for use, Restless
leg Day I think drives people mad. This day, in
nineteen sixty nine, bus casting The Sun nuts Kid came out,
a Western classic, probably the most famous Western. It's fifty
six years ago.
Speaker 4 (01:20:56):
And this day.
Speaker 1 (01:20:56):
In eighteen forty six, astronomy Johann got to Galley became
the first person to observe the planet Nipune. By the way,
I only found it today that the word b A
L o n g A is pronounced belooney. Never knew that,
and I wonder how many times I've mispronounced that in
(01:21:17):
mixed company. It might be g n A. Actually, as
I think about it, I want to said n g a.
It's blooney but pronounced but spelled b A l O
g n A. So yes, it's been a big learning
curve for all of us tonight. How's your restless leg people?
Up for discussion about that tonight? If that's what you
(01:21:38):
want to go on about, I'm there for you. Some
of the other stuff you can mention, I can mention,
you can mention. Today was the second weddest day of
the sofarro Wellington Nasby is getting a messive soul of
farm and someone nash Burton is trying to set a
(01:22:01):
world record for the world's largest kite. He's got a
big deal, this guy Peterel and he's a famous ash
Burton maker. Unfortunately he has got tuminal cancer, so he's
got seven of the biggest kites of the world. Is
now looking for one more world title. O good on them, Kevin,
(01:22:21):
This is Marcus. Welcome, good evening.
Speaker 25 (01:22:24):
Just a change of topics slightly. Yes, I was watching
the news the other night, and the couple of Russian
jets that flew into NATO space were chased out, and
I was blown away with the speed which they can go. Now,
(01:22:44):
correct me if I'm wrong, I could be. I think
they're called the sixers or something, the Russian jets, and
they can fly at two thousand miles an hour.
Speaker 5 (01:22:55):
Wow. Wow, that.
Speaker 25 (01:22:59):
Bizarre, really truly, that was on the news. Two thousand
miles per.
Speaker 11 (01:23:07):
So this fast.
Speaker 1 (01:23:13):
What's the speed of sound.
Speaker 25 (01:23:16):
To pass on the jury summer?
Speaker 1 (01:23:21):
That's that seven hundred and sixty seven miles per hour,
so they're almost going three times that.
Speaker 25 (01:23:28):
That's what they said on the television. It was one
of the Scenn channels or something. Definitely two thousand miles
per hour. That's what spak me up, because that's very quick.
Speaker 1 (01:23:44):
Yeah, and obviously successful too. They scared them out. I mean,
it must be terrifying just waiting for that to happen.
Speaker 25 (01:23:51):
Oh, imagine sitting in one of those rocket ships and
having to deliver payloads.
Speaker 1 (01:23:58):
Yeah, and they must just all be waiting, don't they were?
The Russians up to what they can They're all be
on a high alert. Wouldn't they just waiting to be
sent up.
Speaker 6 (01:24:07):
Oh, obviously.
Speaker 25 (01:24:09):
And we saw recently with the demonstration of the three
big communist countries having military parades, which was scary and impressive.
But then we came along with our own one with
the English mister Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:24:32):
I couldn't believe that. I couldn't believe that spectacle. I
couldn't believe how much iff it had gone to with that.
That was unbelievable.
Speaker 25 (01:24:38):
I think it might have been just a lot more
of a how you comrades, we're not sitting here, you know,
knitting scarves, were ready for action, it's needed.
Speaker 1 (01:24:49):
I think it was all about keeping our terriffs down.
But I didn't hear any if he'd done that yet
or anything, Kevin, but yet nice to hear from you.
Thank you, Marcus. My husband has restless league. Cinnamon's annoying
for me, but must be frustrating for him. Restless league
is horrible. It's like it starts hurting holding your legs
still to have to move them, even the sheet hitting
(01:25:10):
the skin hurts.
Speaker 8 (01:25:12):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (01:25:13):
So restless legs a topic for tonight also as well
as speed jets and redheredness. Yep, come on, come on,
be a part of it. If you want to talk,
we are going on. We're probably off here already in
topor so just so you know they're working on that frequency.
Let's go to break twenty five past ten. Would love
(01:25:35):
to hear from you with your restless legs and your
red hair, and you bake your egg pies or anything
else tonight. There might be you might want to set
your own agenda, and you are more than welcome with that.
I'm not died in the war with any particular topics tonight.
I'm up for it all people, So yes, do jump
in if there's something that you want to mention, If
there's something different you want to mention, that's got I
(01:25:56):
can work with that can work with it all tonight,
particularly if you're in Hong Kong. Three thousand k's per
hour top speed here is right mid thirty one jet.
Thank you for that. It's pretty quick. I don't know.
I presume the Russian I don't know what Russian. I
don't know much about planes. I don't know what the
(01:26:17):
Russian I don't know if the Russian fleet has been
superseded by the NATO fleet. I presumer is. But yeah,
I don't know much about the earpower about the the
firepower war in the skies. Who's winning that one? Holicopters
them war my thing. I don't even know much about them,
but I like them. Now, be in touch if you
(01:26:43):
want to be on the show tonight. But yeah, And
that person asked about bacon eik pies, whether you like
the egg scrambled or straight straight? For me, I think
a bad baconing pie is a terrible disappointment. It's probably
one of the most disappointing things you can have in
life because you don't know what it's like until you
buy it. If it's scrambled, it's just like a kisha.
It's just not nice at all, like an omelet or
(01:27:03):
something which is always just a little bit iggy. There
you go said it. So that's what we're on about.
If you want to come through good, there's something different good.
And also to that typhoon, if you've got any news
about that with your family or friends in Hong Kong,
let us know. I think it's still several hours away
from lending there. It amazingly about typhoons, the winds a
(01:27:27):
very fast, but the eye moves very slowly across the ocean.
They take days to arrive. Hello, Scotty, this is Marcus.
Speaker 24 (01:27:35):
Welcome, good a Marcus.
Speaker 1 (01:27:38):
Here you go mate, good Scotty.
Speaker 15 (01:27:39):
What do you go?
Speaker 10 (01:27:40):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:27:41):
I was a screen.
Speaker 26 (01:27:42):
I love a good pie. I mean, how good is
a decent bacon eat pine? I think you're right, you
can get good ones. You can get there one. But
I'll probably even baking eat ivory probably two to three weeks,
won't two to three weeks something like that.
Speaker 1 (01:27:54):
How do you how do you know how good they're
going to be?
Speaker 26 (01:27:57):
Well, there's a couple of things you can do, right,
So like you know the old Coopland Bakery, Yes, you
can go there, and they have them already creak, so
you know they can are wed so you can see
so I think, but they aren't. I don't think they
are to go to. I think they are. They are cockies.
You snack if you're on the run and you want
(01:28:19):
something and you know, but you're right, you don't really
know until you so you bite into one. So that
I think once you find your find your bakery with
your decent fluffy pastry, nice whole eggs or eggs cut
you know, full not scrambled, and you know, maybe the
odd potato in there or maybe the odd peas or
you know, for the mixed vegetables. I don't know if
(01:28:41):
you like that, but you know, I think that's kind
of cool. But yeah, I think a good baking pie
you can't you can't beat it.
Speaker 1 (01:28:48):
Actually, I think tomatoes permissive, but you don't want too
much in there.
Speaker 16 (01:28:53):
I see.
Speaker 26 (01:28:53):
So tomatoes is a couple of things they don't eat
in life, and tomatoes is one of them. I don't
know what I can't. I can't do tomatoes, whether it's cold,
I can do tomatoes and a yea like a pasta dish,
you cook up your tomato, chop tomatoes, you eat them
up and have it with pasta, no problem at all.
But in a pie or on toast, people wave over
the tomatoes on toasting, and you know, in some people,
(01:29:17):
I just can't do it. I can't do tomatoes and
burgers either. Wow, I'm not sure why. Yeah, I'm not
sure why. I don't like it's a bit of siddity
for me. I think acidic and the pips in it.
And yeah, I'm not.
Speaker 17 (01:29:31):
Sure what people.
Speaker 1 (01:29:32):
I think people have had bad experiences with sandwiches tomato
sandwiches at school because it all leaked and was never
a good experience. But yeah, because because I'm the thing
of joys. Yeah, okay, I guess it's not for you.
Speaker 26 (01:29:44):
No, I don't know why, mate, I just I don't
like tomatoes, but pretty much everything else I like. But yeah,
I definitely have a good packing by And I guess
on you're talking about playing day we do about plain
speeding or something?
Speaker 1 (01:29:59):
Yes, yes, So, I don't know.
Speaker 26 (01:30:02):
I love a good top Gun movie and that latest
Top Gun Mavericky Drive flies that black one or whatever
it is, I don't know what it seems to go
sit a sonic or you know whatever it was, like
the old I'm trying to think what it was called,
like the old black Hornet or the black something that
they used to fly in America, those stealth.
Speaker 1 (01:30:22):
Oh yeah, amazing looking plains, weren't they.
Speaker 26 (01:30:25):
Yeah, held the world record for quite a while. So yeah,
it's pretty it's pretty amazing, pretty amazing. But yeah, so
where did where?
Speaker 1 (01:30:33):
Did you say were your best baker egg pies?
Speaker 10 (01:30:37):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:30:38):
So, I and christ.
Speaker 26 (01:30:41):
There's a couple of really good bakeries. So I would
say Sydenham Selwyn Street Bakery. It's a little bit unknown.
Not too many people know about it, but it's absolutely
stunning pies in there. And there's another one called Sydonym
Bakery which is actually in Sindham as well. Ironically Sydhem
Bakery and Town and Columbo Street they do really really
(01:31:04):
good pies are pretty synonymous. And then then the third
one would be bottom of Cashmere Columbo Street. By the
hell there's a bakery down there that does you know,
they're probably the top three piles. But it's you know,
it's arguably because there's a guy that goes around TikTok
and Facebook and tries all these pies from different places,
and everyone tells them where to go, and he rates
(01:31:25):
them for you know, picture density, heat and meet how
much meats in them. And he always gets a steak
and mushroom bire and he rates them for everybody. So
you know, he'd argue the other places to go.
Speaker 1 (01:31:36):
But are you are you in agreement with him or not? Really?
Speaker 26 (01:31:40):
Oh no, different, Like he's named a couple of really
really good ones, and he also named some other ones
that I don't really know, you know, my local and
Bullsville actually seems to have a really good pie and
I have had a couple from there. I wouldn't say
to this, but he seemed to rade over it. A
couple out in North Canterbury. There's a place out it's
kive boy he rated. There's a place out of rangurity rated.
(01:32:00):
I think am believe might have had a good one.
So there's quite a few around. I mean, we love
our pies, don't we love it? I don't know how
many week.
Speaker 1 (01:32:11):
Nice to hear from it, Scotty, I appreciate you enthusias
pretty five away from eleven restless league. Also, doing the
rounds tonight too is something you can talk about. Let
me sit up and I enjoined Scotti. He gave me
much required energy for tonight. Marcus, I mon't think I
(01:32:32):
might be weird. I can eat any carrot cook Julian
rat Center, but I can't eat grated carrot. Also, the
one guy is called curls. What does that mean? What
one guy? Sindingham Bakery also make it double Happy, which
is a sausage with meshed potato added. Culinary delight ses
as sausage. This is a sausage well, which might mean
(01:32:58):
sausage roll. I don't know if that's right. Jumpin' you
gotta talk about pies or cats and oh the pie
guys called curls are cats and pet cremations. We get
your ashes made into a rock. Is that a good thing?
Have you tried that? I've got no pet I wants.
(01:33:22):
It's just something that I thought, well, I want if
that's a good thing to do. Have I got high, Marcus?
Have I got restless leggs? I can't sit still. I
always have to have something moving. Is you an ankle?
But if that's on n show? Have to twitch my
fings or twitdle my thumbs or flix my toes anything.
If I sit still, I get tench and building up
higher and higher in me, and I get really stressed.
(01:33:45):
It's been like this most of my life. It doesn't hurt.
Is that restless legs? Cheers Sarah. I don't know if
that is restless legs. We need someone to describe it fulsomely,
but they as they say about it's pretty serious. It's
hard for me to work out house. I mean, I'm
not saying that I'm mentioning it, but yeah, it's hard
for me to what it's like when people do talk
(01:34:07):
about it. If you're a restless leger, jump in here,
Tel twelve Marcus is the name eight hundred and eighty
today twenty three to eleven, Restless League and ashes. That's
what we're on about tonight, Glennus, it's Marcus. Good evening, Oh.
Speaker 24 (01:34:24):
Marcus, how are you good?
Speaker 1 (01:34:25):
Glennas God Marcus.
Speaker 27 (01:34:28):
I just want to know what happened if you hadn't
have had no will and no money?
Speaker 11 (01:34:40):
Who who pays for your funeral?
Speaker 1 (01:34:43):
Okay? Is this is this your own situation?
Speaker 13 (01:34:48):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:34:49):
Okay, I think if you've got no will, no will
and no money, I think the government will pay for it.
I don't know that, but that's what That's what I
believe in the recess of my mind. I've heard.
Speaker 27 (01:35:04):
Yeah, yeah, I have two Yeah, yeah, that's more the name,
because that's all these people that die and they've.
Speaker 3 (01:35:14):
Got no.
Speaker 27 (01:35:18):
Death insurance or wherever.
Speaker 3 (01:35:25):
Nothing.
Speaker 1 (01:35:26):
You've just cut out there a little bit. But yes,
I'm still with you.
Speaker 14 (01:35:29):
Huh.
Speaker 3 (01:35:30):
So they.
Speaker 1 (01:35:34):
Are you doing something funny with your phone because you're
cutting You've gone now you've disappeared. Oh oh no, no,
I don't think so now Yeah yeah, yep, let's let's
go again.
Speaker 27 (01:35:45):
Yeah no, I'm just wondering what happens to them if
they can't afford to do a funeral, and they've got
no family, so the state must look after them, surely.
Speaker 1 (01:36:01):
Well, I think they're always called a pauper's grave. I
don't know where the pauper's graves are in New Zealand.
Mm hmm, it says in the article here, at least
once a month in christ Church someone is buried in
an unmarked pauper's grave.
Speaker 11 (01:36:20):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 1 (01:36:21):
Yep, So that seems to be happening, happening, So there's
there is a lot.
Speaker 27 (01:36:29):
Of people in that positionion.
Speaker 24 (01:36:30):
I know that.
Speaker 27 (01:36:34):
Because I look at the hospital as a cure sootion.
Speaker 2 (01:36:37):
And I know.
Speaker 27 (01:36:39):
The people will look after they have no journal cover.
Speaker 2 (01:36:45):
And I think.
Speaker 11 (01:36:47):
I just can't.
Speaker 1 (01:36:50):
Yeah, that's sad, it says in this article. The Burial
in Cremation Act nineteen sixty four, this is from christ Church,
requires the christ Church City Council to bury the bodies
of poor persons and persons from any hospital, prison or
other institution on the request of the person in charge
of such institutions. Sentimental items left on a porpose graver
are moved by the council. Someone buried a pauper's grave
(01:37:13):
is not allowed a monument or cross under council rules.
As the exclusive right of burial has not been purchased,
fees are not waived until sixty years after burial, so
monument may not be placed on the grave until then.
Speaker 27 (01:37:28):
Oh that's a long time.
Speaker 1 (01:37:30):
A wait, sixty years.
Speaker 27 (01:37:32):
Yeah, let's pretty sad.
Speaker 1 (01:37:36):
And this funeral company to talk about have dealt with
about fifty paupers funerals in christ Church in their time. Yeah,
you're gone again.
Speaker 27 (01:37:49):
Very sad.
Speaker 1 (01:37:50):
Yeah you said that. Yeah, that's terrible. Yeah, but at
least they're buried. At least the government's paying that, the council,
as I say, Yeah, and.
Speaker 27 (01:38:02):
I wonder about always timeless people. What happens to them?
Would they die?
Speaker 1 (01:38:10):
Well, that's the situation. I guess it's a pauper's grave
like that.
Speaker 27 (01:38:14):
Oh yeah, oh god. I was just very cureous about that.
Speaker 1 (01:38:23):
Someone else will have more information, liiness, and I'll see
where I can find out. It's restless leg Day two.
I've just been through this with a neighbor who had
no assets or will the funeral home covered the cremation.
I may paid interment costs at the cemetery for him.
If you have no money or family to pay for
(01:38:44):
the funeral, the funeral home includes the cost and bury
you no service. Though someone said restless league symptoms can
be true with Pakinsonian medication e g. Rope pinarole. Have
I got that right? I think it's a word I
know for a pinarole. Rope parole. Come on, be in touch.
(01:39:05):
My name is Marcus. Welcome A bit of a down
topic of that one, isn't it? I can cope. Let's
be hearing from. Your name is Marcus hddled twelve oh
eight hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine two nine
two to text fifteen to eleven thirteen to eleven hol A,
(01:39:25):
Sandy H.
Speaker 12 (01:39:27):
I marchus.
Speaker 20 (01:39:29):
Just calling about the restless leg syndrome.
Speaker 1 (01:39:32):
Yes, thank you for calling.
Speaker 20 (01:39:34):
I've probably been a.
Speaker 24 (01:39:36):
Good ten years or so with it.
Speaker 11 (01:39:39):
Yeah, not all the time.
Speaker 20 (01:39:41):
It comes and goes.
Speaker 9 (01:39:42):
It can come and have.
Speaker 20 (01:39:46):
Each night for a week or so, and then it
might go away for a couple of weeks. You never
know what you're going to get it or what triggers it.
And it's something that the doctors really don't have proper
answers for. Is still lots more research needed.
Speaker 16 (01:40:03):
To be done in it with it?
Speaker 27 (01:40:06):
Yes, the.
Speaker 20 (01:40:08):
Treatment for it is the one that you just mentioned
that is used, and also another one called so as
a pen which is a similar one.
Speaker 10 (01:40:21):
And also.
Speaker 20 (01:40:24):
Doctors will prescribe the likes of diazepin as well, which
is a muscle relaxant, or it's also used for anxiety.
Often it's start It will start off with, for example,
the soles of your feature burning and on fire, and
(01:40:44):
with me, I know that if that happens, then that's
going to trigger the restless legs. In some nights, I
can be like your legs just you cannot stop them moving.
They just involuntary jerking moving around.
Speaker 8 (01:41:01):
They just go and go and go.
Speaker 20 (01:41:04):
And often I can be having to walk around the
house two or three o'clock in the morning just to
get some relief from it. And they say, if you
can do something that completely takes your mind off it,
you can get through it. But often I will. I'll
(01:41:25):
take two or three lots of the medications, I'll take
some zoplica, and I'll take all sorts of things just
to try and virtually knock myself out to get through
the night. It's just it is absolutely horrendous. And then
of course the next day you're just like a zombie
because they've had such a bad.
Speaker 1 (01:41:44):
Night, Sidney, how often has it happened for you?
Speaker 20 (01:41:49):
So three or four times a week and then and
then it might not happen for a couple of weeks.
And I've tried things like going and going for walk
later in the evening to try and get my muscles working.
(01:42:15):
I'm a little bit different though, because I'm permanently also
on cratches from injuries that I've got, so I'm not
very active through the day anyway.
Speaker 24 (01:42:29):
But it's not.
Speaker 20 (01:42:31):
Apparently it's not really related to muscle it's a neurological
disorder and it's much more common in women than in men.
But it is also apparently a hereditary thing as well.
Speaker 1 (01:42:51):
So with your medical management and the doctors that you
see or the medical advice you get, it's still not
it's getting it's not getting progressively better. It's just you
can manage the worst days slightly better.
Speaker 18 (01:43:02):
Is that right?
Speaker 20 (01:43:04):
It's all about managing it. Of late, I have actually
taken myself to a new doctor in Auckland. I'm in
the central North Island and I've gone to Auckland to
see a lady, a doctor, and she put me on
to vitamin B five and I no longer get burning
(01:43:28):
on the soles on my feet, and that's only been
in the last four months.
Speaker 1 (01:43:34):
Are they doctors specialized in it?
Speaker 20 (01:43:38):
Yes, there are, and there's also I don't know, I
can't remember his name, but he specializes in sleep disorder,
and yes, he specializes in it. The doctor I saw
she specializes in She's a GP, but she's also specialized
(01:43:58):
in holistic medicine, and she'll send here for blood teste.
The normal GP will sort of do the average range
of blood tests, but this particular doctor, she takes those
blood tests a step or two further. And the results
(01:44:19):
that she gets I've found are just been amazing, really nice.
Speaker 1 (01:44:24):
To hear from your Sandy. Thanks for explaining that so clearly.
Someone says, is that no cell phone service or no
funeral service, it will be no funeral service. Someone said,
work and income have a funeral grant which covers part
of the funeral costants to mean tested and can up
for about two thousand dollars. Hello John Marcus, welcome.
Speaker 5 (01:44:46):
Me and you're talking to John here. Marcus h John
restless legs. Sorry, I just want to say thank you
to Sandy. She summarized everything pretty well. The only thing
I'd say I contrast as Sidy is that I've had
just about life long, you know, twenty years plus, restlessly
(01:45:07):
of I don't go to see doctors specifically for it anymore.
I've kind of given up, you know, which is a
sad thing to say that every now and again one
might be able to pull something out of a hat
that you know, I'd be willing to at one point.
I'm getting on now, I'm seventy five, so you've kind
of run out of energy. But at one stage of
(01:45:29):
life I would. I was a professional, you know, so
I shouldn't have better. I'd be willing to go to
these the earth to see somebody who had something, even
it was, you know, rhubarb leaves or something, but some
sort of you know, alternative type medicine. But she summarized everything.
I mean, it goes to the soles of the feet.
I've had burning legs, burning feet, burning every bloody thing.
(01:45:51):
It's neurological, as a Sandy said, and yeah, what do
you do? I take I take cinnamat, cinnamet and intacapone
is a basic thing.
Speaker 2 (01:46:01):
Cinnamet.
Speaker 5 (01:46:02):
I take it as a little yellow, little dusty little
pill you can chew. It's dry tack of phones and
booster that. I could run through a variety of things
I take, and they all they will help to quell
quell the pain. They take. Sometimes take forty minutes to
kick in, sometimes longer, Sandy said, yes, sometimes take two
or three times the dose, just to get some respite,
(01:46:23):
go to sleep. I've started to do that, but it's
a bit dangerous. I suppose you want to get zomkeed,
you know, I just want the exhausteds. You want to
get some sleep. So it does play havoc with the
professional life, you know, getting up doing nine to five.
And I imagine it didn't help with the kids. So
that's there's no hope. There's no specific thing I can
(01:46:43):
talk about except the medicine. There's one more one, A
couple of things I don't I'm not in near my
medicine chest, and I lose transmission if I walked around
the flagging of it. You know, I've stumbled on things recently,
But yeah, you can't one one when you want to
try and get a hold of a good neurologist. That's
(01:47:05):
the thing. It's a neural neurological things. They needed decent
sympathetic neurologists. I go with the son and daughter because
they're better at absorbing all the technological technical details. It
just goes in one and out the other of me.
Speaker 9 (01:47:17):
So there we are.
Speaker 1 (01:47:20):
Yeah, when you tried looking for solutions twenty years ago,
are they are? People a lot more aware of it
than they were twenty years ago.
Speaker 5 (01:47:27):
Oh, I think, as I say, GP specialists certainly are. Yeah.
I think I think earlier on it was in the
realm of the voodoo. You know that people didn't really believe.
But as you say, and you're doing a broadcast tonight,
and I'm sure you know it's the Ring of truth,
people will hear. So thank you, Handy. I'm sorry I'm
(01:47:48):
cracking up with Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:47:50):
No, nice to hear from you.
Speaker 27 (01:47:51):
Ron.
Speaker 1 (01:47:51):
Think it's kind that you've come through Wow and no respite.
It just seems to haunt people, doesn't it. This is
Facebook pages, but you there or talk to you after
the Newspeople. There are two lines. They're free throughout the
(01:48:13):
leg of the rest the Restless League. Hittel twelve are
on Restless League and petishes tonight. I've got some texts
I've read before too long. At seven past eleven, Hello, Susie,
It's Marcus. Welcome.
Speaker 21 (01:48:24):
Hi Marcus.
Speaker 5 (01:48:25):
How are you good?
Speaker 1 (01:48:26):
SUSI thank you, Marcus.
Speaker 28 (01:48:28):
I've got my Little Mischief, which was my cat. I've
got his ashes in the Wii box on my China
cabinet up the top. And I've also got his wee
toy in there that they used to like inside sitting
in the box. And a friend paid for him to
get from because I worked with a girl at Acting
Jay Smith and she worked there part of time. She
(01:48:49):
paid for that for me.
Speaker 14 (01:48:51):
Oh wow.
Speaker 28 (01:48:53):
And I've got a photo album. I had another cat too.
I don't know what happened to him. I've got a
whole photo album of both my cats, and even the
cards of condolence at the vetsay that they were sorry
to hear about my Little Mischief, and and the whole
album is just filled with the cats that I had,
the two cats that I had. So I've got his
ages in here.
Speaker 1 (01:49:13):
And what will you ultimately do with the eshes, Susie?
Will they be cremated with you or something like that?
Speaker 10 (01:49:19):
I don't know.
Speaker 28 (01:49:19):
I haven't fallen a bit. I have really got to
I have really got to think about that.
Speaker 1 (01:49:23):
But no or not, but some just that some people
had said things about that.
Speaker 28 (01:49:28):
Yeah, yeah for sure. Yeah, but I just sort of
ring and tell.
Speaker 1 (01:49:32):
You that nice name. I like the name for a cat.
It's a beautiful name for a cat. Two is it mischief?
Speaker 8 (01:49:37):
Yeap.
Speaker 1 (01:49:38):
Nice to hear from you. Thank you, Susie David. It's Marcus. Welcome.
Speaker 4 (01:49:42):
Hi Marcus. I was just having all that. How are
you You're good?
Speaker 5 (01:49:47):
Good?
Speaker 1 (01:49:47):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:49:47):
Good?
Speaker 1 (01:49:47):
Yeah, oh you're all good to hear.
Speaker 3 (01:49:49):
It was just.
Speaker 4 (01:49:51):
It's not what I wanted to talk about. But I
thought when you get irritation of the limbs and that
that it's from an alcohol or drug, you know, withdrawal.
Speaker 1 (01:50:05):
Oh yeah, we wouldn't be with drawing for twenty years, though,
would you.
Speaker 4 (01:50:09):
Well, yeah, you might be withdrawing from something, you know.
But what I would like to know if you'd know
when an animal gets hurt and they might need a
blood transfusion, where do they get the blood? You never
hear them advertising to take your dog and to give blood,
or your bird or your rabbit to give blood. Do
(01:50:31):
you know what happens then if an animal needs blood.
Speaker 1 (01:50:35):
It's a really good question. I hope they're not taking
blood from dogs at like and pounds or stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:50:44):
No, I do with a pig hunting, and I've often wondered,
you know, if they need blood, you know, because you
never see it advertised or you know, do they never
asked for you to take your pit them?
Speaker 1 (01:50:55):
And they do do transfusions for dogs?
Speaker 6 (01:50:57):
Do they?
Speaker 4 (01:50:58):
I'm sure they do if they need blood if they
get run over or even you know a catper gets
run over, I'm sure if they lose lose blood, do
they get blood from somewhere?
Speaker 1 (01:51:09):
I guess they would. I just don't know where. I
couldn't even imagine where it would be from.
Speaker 4 (01:51:14):
No, and you never hear them asking.
Speaker 1 (01:51:16):
No, you neither hear how we're in town today. Anyone
got any dogs? We're all yeah. And I think pets,
I think owners. Pet owners would probably be reluctant to
take pitts to today blood, wouldn't they.
Speaker 4 (01:51:28):
Wow, Well I was, I'd take my pet and if
they needed blood if they asked, But you never hear it.
I'm just wondering what, you know, how they get on
or what happened.
Speaker 1 (01:51:39):
It's not like they bank their own blood because you're
not going to know when they have an acident, will
they no?
Speaker 4 (01:51:44):
And are they are they all that negative?
Speaker 8 (01:51:46):
You know?
Speaker 4 (01:51:47):
Types of blood? Are they all different?
Speaker 10 (01:51:49):
You know?
Speaker 4 (01:51:49):
And I'm sure they are. And you know and dogs
but you know, like a dog, are they all the
same blood?
Speaker 24 (01:51:54):
Or a cat?
Speaker 4 (01:51:56):
Are they all the same blood? Or are they like
you know, different like we are?
Speaker 1 (01:52:00):
If we're good questions, I'll try and find out. Eh,
you keep listening, David, that'd be great. But someone answered, David, please,
I'd like to hear from you. Yeah, So if you've
got that, let me know. Marcus. I also suffered from
restless leg when I was twenty nine I'm now sixty.
(01:52:22):
In urologs wanted to put me on Parkinson's medfred I
wasn't having a bar of that. Instead, I did two
months of intensive acupuncture as well as taking an antidepressant
ss r I for six months. Somehow, the needles going
to my muscles was just what I felt I needed.
I had a session three times a week for two months.
Anyway at work can recommend acupacture. Restless seak is horrible
(01:52:42):
and constant and irritating and painful. So grateful that the
combination of things worked for me. That's from Kate. I've
had restless eggs for sixty years and now I get
great really for the elastic tugular bandages which fit firm
on the legs but not overtight. Another Sandy Marcus. Whenever
I feet were burnt or my restless leag kicks and
I rub moisturizer on my feet and legs while I
(01:53:03):
go to bed. It helps cool and relieve them. Merry Hi.
Just as to Sandy, can you please pass my number? Honors?
I do stuff from restless leg and burn feet. I
won't pass numbers on to people, just in case someone's
trying to scam them with some phantom cure. So who
are the donor dogs? I would like to know a
bit more about that. Or is this some universal blood
(01:53:26):
or do they breed dogs just for donors? I hope
they don't. I'd find that creepy Marcus. I had a
German shepherd dog named Zeke. I'd originally put him from Germany.
He was nine months old by the time he arrived,
cost three five hundred lived and he was twelve. Had
him cremated in my will. He will be put with me.
Miss him so much. He was my best friend. Davo
(01:53:49):
when I passed my two dogs, my cat, my pet
bird are going to be buried with me. That's from Beverly. Hello, Jane,
Hi Marcus.
Speaker 13 (01:53:58):
About a dog's transfusion, I know that all dogs have
the same blood type on that team, so all any
dog can give blood to any other dog, which is
quite interesting.
Speaker 21 (01:54:12):
Isn't it.
Speaker 1 (01:54:13):
And where do they get from?
Speaker 13 (01:54:16):
Well, my family had a farm and they had dogs
on the farm, and they knew the vet quite well,
and he would say, you know, can I use your
dogs to give this dog at the clinic a transfusion?
And yeah, they they must have their donor dogs around
(01:54:36):
the district, you know, as long as they're healthy and
and the they have a list.
Speaker 1 (01:54:41):
Of donor dogs that would be clients that they'd go to.
Speaker 13 (01:54:44):
Would they yes, And they'd phone up and say can
you bring your dog? And I need a transfusion for
an engine animal. So that's that's what I know.
Speaker 5 (01:54:54):
About that.
Speaker 1 (01:54:55):
So I just thought, I let you know, would they
do the same for cats.
Speaker 13 (01:54:59):
I don't know about cats, don't know at all. I
don't know whether they have the same blood type or not.
I'm I don't know. I can't help you in that one.
Speaker 1 (01:55:08):
Thank you Jane that vitually be listening. No doubt they'll
be able to tell us. Da da da Da da
da da. Restless leg and pet burials. Friend of mine
the dog got into rat bait. The other dog was
different blood type but could still be used for transfusion,
but only once they get blood from greyhounds and it
(01:55:29):
does not hurt them. The greyhounds have the most common
blood type. Regarding the restless leg It's an awful condition.
Burning feet. I used B five did help with that.
Don't get that now, restless legs. I now make sure
my legs are moisturized on a regular basis I have
Afreid was a vetnurse. Occasionally the vets call out for
(01:55:52):
cats and dog blood donors. Years ago my cat said
he got ill and died, but before he died, the
vet used their own personal cat for a transfusion if
I had a suitable dog and offer blood for the vets. Kirsty,
I've had restless league for thirty plus years, but now
worse in the past few years. I'm seventy five. Take
medication which works, but still suffer nighttime awake, can't lie
(01:56:14):
down no matter how tired. Till the meat to kick
an awful condition. Hello, Sindy, I'm hi.
Speaker 5 (01:56:22):
How are you good?
Speaker 1 (01:56:23):
Thank you?
Speaker 5 (01:56:27):
Hey?
Speaker 1 (01:56:27):
Are you are you going all right?
Speaker 15 (01:56:29):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:56:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 21 (01:56:31):
My bar knee? And now is you are?
Speaker 1 (01:56:33):
It's Marcus welcome, okay, Fi Matt.
Speaker 21 (01:56:37):
Yeah, I was just I was quite interested listening to
what Sandy was having to say. I actually have that
problem myself. Yeah, I can't and sometimes my legs just
won't relax. I'm bed, so I get out and walk
around for quite a while. I had to put my
(01:56:58):
feet in cold water to calm my feet down. My
my mother it had new officey in her feet in leagues,
so it could be hereditary. I'm just not sure. So, yeah,
that's annoying.
Speaker 1 (01:57:17):
Are things getting better for you or you kind of
just plateaued with the treatment.
Speaker 28 (01:57:23):
I'm just going with the treatment.
Speaker 13 (01:57:26):
Really.
Speaker 1 (01:57:27):
Yeah, it sounds it sounds like there's no It sounds
like it's just maintenance, doesn't it. You just got to
go on with it.
Speaker 3 (01:57:35):
Yeah, it's not nice.
Speaker 27 (01:57:37):
It's horrible.
Speaker 1 (01:57:38):
Yeah, well, yeah, thanks for ring, Cyndya appreciate it. At
fifteen seventeen past eleven or eleven twenty twenty past eleven,
how are you what's happening redhead of wednessday and also
restless legue a wearness day, if you want to talk
about this good and also interesting things to do with
pets ashes. I don't mean that risk disrespective, disrespectfully. I
(01:58:03):
know people too. They might be in permanent house, they
might get a move someone else. They can't bury their animals.
What do you do with them? Is there a better
way than just having the ashes? If you get them
to a little rock that you can hold in your hand.
Is that a good thing? Someone said it might break
if they dropped it. Well, the urn would break too,
(01:58:23):
wouldn't it. But yeah, that's something we can talk about tonight.
If you are in a hong Kin, I'll be interested
to know about this typhoon that's hitting your way. But
anything goes tonight. It's twenty past eleven. That's what we're
working on. These other topics we might be off here
in topol but you should know. But mainly it's about
(01:58:45):
restless leg My solution for burning feet is to fill
a hotty with cold water, Chrissy Marcus. Dogs can't read
an MRI, but cats can.
Speaker 5 (01:58:55):
Very good.
Speaker 1 (01:58:58):
And also transfusions for animals when they get the blood
seems to be just vets calling and favors. I don't
know how I feel about that, but I guess you
should be a little bit on it. If you had
the call for the vet, I think you've got a
good pet. Might be something where you say twenty two
(01:59:20):
past eleven eleven twenty two hittl twelve if you want
to be a part of it. Marcus till midnight, day
two of the school holidays, hope they're going well for you.
Fortune had very very good weather down south, two perfect days,
so we've managed to attribute, We have managed to achieve
(01:59:40):
and do a lot long way that continue. I don't
know what the weather's looking at tomorrow, but there we go.
So anyway, our restless leg it's funny that it's not funny,
but it's surprising that it's neurological. But a fixt your
legs so badly, Yeah, that must make it doubly frustrating.
I would think if there is something you want to
(02:00:01):
say about that, then that's kind of what we're about tonight.
I'd like to hear from you. Let me just check
out the weather for tomorrow for the holidays. What's a
cold night? All good time? A bit of the rain
in the evening five pm. That can handle that. I
like that for sunny in the day, wet at night.
Speaker 5 (02:00:20):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (02:00:20):
Eleven twenty three. I'd like to hear from you about
restless legs or pets, or being ginger or bacon. It's
been a four topic nights. Who got bacon eggpies there too, Marcus.
I know this might sound strange, but my friend's mother
swears by this. People place corks in their beads is
the remedy to prevent her leg cramps. While there's no
signs of explanation, some believe a beneficial substance of the
(02:00:43):
corks bark some of the quaneine may help relax muscles.
I think restless egg and cramp are different. Good evening
hell And this is Marcus welcome.
Speaker 3 (02:00:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 19 (02:00:57):
Hi, I get legs, but not all the time. And
I'm wondering if sometimes it could be caused by cam vehicles,
you know, hidden chemicals in food. I know that red
white wine triggers it off for me. I think to
the soul for or something, and there could be whole
(02:01:20):
range of hidden things that are actually triggering it off,
like even maybe washing powder in your clothes. I just
think that might be worth looking at.
Speaker 1 (02:01:31):
I would imagine if that was a thing that they
would have isolated by that by now, that would be
my thoughts. Just I don't want people to go down
some long journey of worrying about kind of different things
they're eating. That would be. That could be tricky, couldn't it.
Speaker 19 (02:01:44):
Well, you know, there could be you know, all these
chemicals in our food, you know, preservatives and this, that
and the other thing. I mean that I'm not saying
it is that, but it could be that, especially if
you're not getting it all the time. So I think
it's worth considering that we have a look at that
at least.
Speaker 1 (02:02:03):
Yeah, but you would imagine the medical people have already
looked at that though, wuldn't douring they've eliminated that as
a cause, No, you wouldn't think so.
Speaker 17 (02:02:11):
No.
Speaker 19 (02:02:12):
I think there's a whole lot of stuff the medical
people just don't know about it at all, haven't even
started looking at it. But not everybody. Not everybody's going
to be reactive to it. Like I mean, I know,
for instance, there was a woman somebody I knew years ago,
and she was getting parisis, and she was you know,
seeing doctors and everything. It turned out it was that
(02:02:34):
she changed her washing powder, but the doctors never suggested
that to her. You know, I just think it's worth considering.
Speaker 1 (02:02:44):
Yeah, I don't, but yeah, I appreciate you coming through, Helen.
Thank you. I guess that almost sort of. I think
it's someoney that minimizes what people are going through. And
they would have done tests. They would have had people
that had changed diets and stuff like that and moved
around and moved to quite different situations that remained the same.
It would be it would be there in the diet
(02:03:06):
diagnosis that you know that no matter where you go,
what you you're still getting it. There would be my
thoughts on that.
Speaker 17 (02:03:12):
Hello Phil, Yeah, hey you Mark, I said, I just
want to talk about the Track and Foot World Track
and Field Champs and take it. That just finished me
in New Zealand had one of the you know, for
such a small nation to be in the top ten.
Speaker 8 (02:03:26):
I don't know where we finished.
Speaker 17 (02:03:27):
I think a couple of days ago with like for equal.
Speaker 1 (02:03:30):
Oh, I didn't know. I didn't know there was a letter,
a middle letter.
Speaker 17 (02:03:34):
Oh, there's a middle letter. We've got two golds Bronze
where are like first from the world. You know there
was he's got no golds, the Brick's got no gold.
Speaker 1 (02:03:43):
Really okay, okay, look I'll bring it up now. Yeah,
because she was with that last day, wasn't it.
Speaker 17 (02:03:52):
I missed Stay nine and you can go online and
I went online and watched a lot of the because
I love watching the one hundred two undred, but obviously
I watched for me, the big heartlight was Jeordy Beamish
Wren that three thousand Steve. I don't know if agreed
you saw the finish, but I mean, here was nowhere
with a lap to go, He's like twenty meters behind,
and even coming into the last spend the contoes of
(02:04:12):
Bell mentioned him, he's still like fifteen meters back. And
then I mean, it's the greatest kick finish of all time.
And then he put the two time Olympian chet Olympic
champion I think from Rockery right on the post. It
was just a thrilling finish.
Speaker 1 (02:04:30):
Yeah, and hopefully at the Olympics.
Speaker 17 (02:04:33):
Yeah, well, he won the fifteen hundred indoor World Champs
the year before, and then of course our great high
jumper who got gold again after the Olympics I mean
Hamish Kurr and then Maddie Wish Wish she got the bronze,
and I mean she threw her personal best. But the
Olympics last year and in the squool Champs she's leading
(02:04:56):
the comp with the final throat like she had the
gold medal and almost to her hand after the fifth
round last year and the Olympics and then this same
thing happened. She's leaving the comp gold medal position, and
then she just gets tipped in the last throw, which
is you know, fair enough, it happens. But but both
of them, she threw a personal best. She threw a
(02:05:17):
personal beast in Tokyo twenty meters and six centimeters, and
so you can't fold her. I mean, good on her
for doing that.
Speaker 1 (02:05:22):
And then and then just to be I mean, I
just want to say we're fifth of the middle table.
It goes United States, Kenya, Canada, Netherlands and then Botswana, Spain,
New Zealand and Sweden are all equal on two gold
and one bronze.
Speaker 26 (02:05:37):
Well, I mean, exactly brilliant.
Speaker 1 (02:05:40):
I should have had TV reporters there and I felt
it was really I thought it was appalling the coverage
we had here in the profile.
Speaker 17 (02:05:48):
Well yeah, like like I said, you can even now
go and watch it. You go online and you get
the link from the Athletics New Zealand. But yeah, so
if someone says I haven't got sky TV or you
don't need sky TV, just as long as you're on
internet connection, you can watch all nine days and they
replay the whole session. You can sit there for four
hours and watch it.
Speaker 8 (02:06:08):
You know, watch it.
Speaker 17 (02:06:09):
If you don't sprints like one hundred hundred meters or
whatever you want, you can watch it.
Speaker 1 (02:06:14):
Okay, yeah I saw it, but I saw it. But
last night of the of the relays, the women's relays, man,
there was some bad bet and changes theys the disaster
that isn't it. I don't know why you got to
practice it so much? And boy can they make a
mess of it.
Speaker 17 (02:06:31):
Well yeah, maybe I don't know. They're just under pressure.
Speaker 8 (02:06:36):
It's that middle thing.
Speaker 17 (02:06:37):
Remember at school, it was always we had wooden ones
at school.
Speaker 14 (02:06:40):
But the rain.
Speaker 8 (02:06:43):
Yeah, yeah, i'd aice.
Speaker 1 (02:06:45):
To hear from you, Phil, Thank you, Leslie Marcus, good evening.
Speaker 18 (02:06:48):
Hi.
Speaker 3 (02:06:48):
I just wanted to say about rethless legs. It can't
be food because I'm ninety now and I've had it
since I was twenty and food was different. All those
years ago, we got from scratched. We didn't eat food
like you know, it's changed and that so I don't.
It's it's just something that happens, and you've got to
(02:07:09):
go whether I usually go to bed, but sometimes you
get it when you're in bed, you're sleeping. The next
minute you've got reasonless legs. That's horrible. That's all I
can say. But it's getting lesse.
Speaker 1 (02:07:22):
Now you've had it for seventy years, is that correct?
Speaker 15 (02:07:26):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (02:07:27):
Wow, Yeah, that's how long I've had it.
Speaker 1 (02:07:30):
How long?
Speaker 3 (02:07:31):
But it's not constant, Lizzie.
Speaker 1 (02:07:33):
How long has it been since people took it seriously
and talked about it?
Speaker 3 (02:07:38):
Well, I think I heard people talking about it on
the radio about twenty years ago. Okay, before that, it
was hardly. It was so bad when I was young
when it first started that I couldn't go to the
movies because I felt like I'd annoy everybody because you
can't keep your legs still, I just keep going, and
(02:07:59):
I thought, well, I can't, I can't go. And in
those days you went about three times a week because
you've got the news and what behavior, and I just
like going anyway. Yeah, that's all. That's all I wanted
to say. Who that lady.
Speaker 1 (02:08:15):
Yeah, I appreciate you coming through too, because I think, yeah,
I think that's a I think that's probably a thoughtless
and stupid thing to say that you blame everything on food.
I mean, that's that darref k Junior's game, Isn't it
very simplistic? Yeah, Pete Marcus, welcome you, Marcus.
Speaker 23 (02:08:33):
Bit of a change the top of it. Uh yeah,
I'm just writing you're going for the local elections too.
Speaker 2 (02:08:38):
Ah.
Speaker 1 (02:08:39):
Yeah, but I obviously can't talk about it because we
have to give everyone equal coverage.
Speaker 23 (02:08:44):
Yeah, I realize that there do you find if the
meetings are you finding most not many young ones are
going out there.
Speaker 1 (02:08:53):
I did three meetings, I think two or three, and
I think there were more candidates than there were people.
Speaker 23 (02:08:59):
Yeah, it's sort of far. It's not that bad here.
He's sort of getting the old age group, like i'd say,
sort of over fifty plus, you know, and you get
the same one sort of going to the meetings. I'm
just wondering how can we get the young ones, you know,
for the next elections and that as well. I think
we have to go away from the paper. One on
(02:09:19):
the letterbox sort of thinkers like you say, you don't
even have a letter box, do you?
Speaker 1 (02:09:23):
No, Yeah, they're not interesting. A lot of there's a
lot of a lot of it's ever. A lot of
people think you need to own a house to vote,
which is crazy. Uh So, a lot of yeah, I
know you don't. But a lot of people I've spoken
to him said I would vote for you, but I
don't own a house. Well, actually you can still vote
for me.
Speaker 23 (02:09:46):
These people don't realize it all facts. Then the rent,
the rate, if you're renting, your rates go up. Yeah,
your rent goes up for the lendal's got to recover
the know, the rates go up. So it's official circle
really But somehow, I don't know how. Someone don't know
how we can do somehow we can get the young
ones to vote with the government's got to push it
more the maybe you're going to pay but more, or
the spend a little bit on the rate payers money.
(02:10:09):
They don't want to spend rate payers money. But somehow
to get the young ones to vote. It's a hard
one to do.
Speaker 1 (02:10:14):
How many people have been turning up to your meetings.
Their pete.
Speaker 14 (02:10:18):
Ah probably be.
Speaker 23 (02:10:23):
Eighty two.
Speaker 25 (02:10:24):
Nd.
Speaker 1 (02:10:24):
Oh, let's go and what's the major topic, what's the
major what's the major area of concern? Is there a
rates cap?
Speaker 14 (02:10:31):
Is it?
Speaker 3 (02:10:33):
Yeah?
Speaker 23 (02:10:34):
I think like people want to go that way because
basically what we've done here in New Plymouth, we've had
too many nicety things that, you know, instead of doing
one project at a time, like a stadium or whatever,
they're doing too much. It's almost like a horse race,
you know, how many projects and we get over one hit. Well,
we've got to pay for all those instead of going
back to the old days one at a time like
(02:10:55):
we used to do charity fundraisers for like the TSB stadium,
like go back to those sort of ways. We're basically
what happening in you Plymouth. I shouldn't say it, but
the counts have been overspending and the have just gone
up too much. So we've got to My aim is
to put the handbrake on and stop that and just
keep the basics what we have, like you know, the
basic services like roads and stuff like that, selves and that,
(02:11:17):
and just put the niceties on a hold and too
we can for them.
Speaker 1 (02:11:20):
Have you got a slogan peepe.
Speaker 23 (02:11:23):
No, I don't worry about it. I got mine up.
And then you come up district council website, the profile,
that's all you need.
Speaker 24 (02:11:28):
You know.
Speaker 23 (02:11:29):
A lot of people say, I know the cuidly there's
not many billboards going. We don't have to because basically
your your website doesn't fool you. Well, it's spend all
that money and put up billboards and stuff and you
can take them down again to stupid.
Speaker 3 (02:11:40):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:11:40):
Do they our specific questions to you? Did you get
any good zingers in your meeting? Did you say anything?
They've got to laugh?
Speaker 23 (02:11:48):
Ah, yeah, I think I'm just straight to the point,
don't you know. I'll just say it as it is,
you know. And in the day there's a lot of
people don't like it too, And you stop when you
don't want to build the new projects? Who put them
on hold? They say, oh, we want the place to
go forward, But I said I do too. We all
want that to happen, but as we can afford them,
(02:12:09):
not all, not all, not all the one hit.
Speaker 1 (02:12:11):
Yeah, okay, have you voted? Did you vote for yourself pete?
Speaker 3 (02:12:16):
Wow?
Speaker 23 (02:12:17):
Yeah, of course.
Speaker 1 (02:12:19):
Did you vote for did you vote for any other
candidates or.
Speaker 5 (02:12:21):
Just you.
Speaker 23 (02:12:23):
No, yeah, we've got to get more chart you yeah.
Speaker 19 (02:12:26):
You.
Speaker 23 (02:12:26):
Basically what we were trying to do here new plymbus
basically get a whole new see of the counts around
the table because some of the things that have happened
here besides like that. So we're just trying to hopefully
we'll get a pretty much a new counts. We get
a new meal, which is good, so we're just hoping
that we can get also a lot of new counsels
around there, a few ideas and basically see if you've
(02:12:46):
put the handbrake on, so we're not getting these high
rate fills.
Speaker 1 (02:12:49):
Is your current leaving?
Speaker 23 (02:12:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (02:12:54):
Yeah, who's much who's the leader for, Who's who's in charge,
who's the who's leading the new ones?
Speaker 23 (02:13:02):
Should I you don't mind if I say it? I
think I think think Max Bruff has got a good
I'm thinking that we're hoping that he might become the
next mayor.
Speaker 1 (02:13:12):
What's his big what's his background?
Speaker 23 (02:13:18):
He's got business sense and he's down.
Speaker 1 (02:13:19):
To earth, down to earth that I mean down to
down to even says they got common center, down to Earth.
It's crazy because.
Speaker 23 (02:13:29):
He's there to budget the books to just say one project,
and I said before, one project at a time. What
does that's what's his name, Max Rouff? Oh, yeah, yes,
he's I'm hoping that's me. He's got the different opinions
here they want to elect of course that you know,
but I'm hoping that he will get in. I think
it will be good for the new Plymouth as everybody.
(02:13:52):
He's into a bit of free car parking and stuff
like that, so so he make all of the retailers
have a chance also, so their business can survive to
this have all these big, you know, shopping complexes out
from the city. It's all about They're all about private developers.
They don't care about the local retailers. It's all about
(02:14:12):
building the little Yeah, I just thought.
Speaker 1 (02:14:15):
You might go there's a bit of a background about
what the meural candidates, what the backgrounds are, but it's
pretty hard to see. For the website, there's not much
information there.
Speaker 11 (02:14:22):
Eh oh, I just got a.
Speaker 23 (02:14:24):
New Plymouth for district Council. The profile it's all up there.
Speaker 1 (02:14:29):
Couldn't say it, Pete, thank you. Twenty four away from
twelve evening Carol, Welcome.
Speaker 14 (02:14:36):
Hello Marcus.
Speaker 16 (02:14:38):
Yes, I have restless legs and I've had for a
few years, but I'm surprised nobody's found up because you
can buy in the chemist something cold restless legs and
you spray it under your tongue and usually you're usia
put this way, let's sleep and narrow theatre, wake up
for the restless legs. Now, I just do the squirt
and it goes away with it about ten minutes and
(02:15:00):
sometimes it'll do it once more during the night. And
the other thing you can get is something called cramps Up.
If you're looking the bottle, even though it says cramp
stuff on the directions, it says it also does restless slaves.
Speaker 1 (02:15:13):
Okay, And with the first one with the Restless League
one is that a magnesium product? Is that what it is?
Speaker 16 (02:15:19):
I think they both well they have magnesium ins the
herbal things in them, so they're not not going to
harm anything for it that way.
Speaker 1 (02:15:27):
Yeah, okay, Look, I appreciate you coming through that. That
would be interesting. You want to talk about dogs and
blood donations for dogs to the dogs.
Speaker 16 (02:15:34):
I work worked for a vet for ten years back
in the seventies and eighties, and when we had took
my pet dog in myself a couple of times. You know,
you don't get a lot of calls for blood for dogs.
You didn't then anyway, So we used to bring our
pets in for it, but we never even checked them,
bud to see what kind of blood it was. We
(02:15:54):
never charged the customer for the blood. You only charge
them for the administration.
Speaker 1 (02:15:58):
Okay. And why don't they use blood? Do they not
need blood for their operations?
Speaker 16 (02:16:04):
No, it's mainly when they a dog weeding, Betty, I
can get what's bitten by a pig dog the one
that the first one that I took my dog infore
so accept me. But they might do it more now
because it's years ago and I think they've changed a lot,
they might do it more.
Speaker 1 (02:16:19):
Okay, we'll find out. Thank you, Carol, Hello Tracy, Hello.
Speaker 24 (02:16:24):
Hi Marcus. So receless legs. I've suffered for a few years.
It can come off other conditions like I have a mess.
But you don't have to have a condition to get
it either. It's quite a common thing. It's more of
annoying thing. Then you know, you can't die of it
or anything. The other word for it is night walker.
(02:16:47):
So I was up like if a period over quite
a few years walking around, because you know, my legs
would pull and take as soon as I elevated them,
Like if I put my legs up on a lady boy,
or if I went to bed way, they'd start the
end you couldn't get you just put it and get
(02:17:08):
rid of that pulling and tagging feeling keep you up
for blooming night and you'd have to get up and
start walking around.
Speaker 1 (02:17:15):
Must be walking around the house. That must be very boring.
Speaker 24 (02:17:18):
How frustrating, wasn't It wasn't actually because I had you
guys to listen to. I cooked, I got organized in
the freezer, I'd done tomorrow's house work, and I was
up all night. And my girlfriend got up the next
day to go to work to the freezing works quite early,
and you know, I had a lunch made and everything,
(02:17:39):
and she goes, oh my god, how do you do it?
And I said, I've got blooming use to it. And
so then one day I went to the doctor over
something else and I mentioned and this time he actually,
because they get very busy, he actually said, oh my god,
you've got reastless legs. Now that crampstop. It won't work
for everybody. No, I didn't think so yeah, it certainly
(02:18:03):
didn't work for me. But one poll I've given pentant
and it worked for me. And give her penance and
safe medication prescribed by your doctor.
Speaker 8 (02:18:13):
You can take it.
Speaker 1 (02:18:15):
You take it every day or just it was once
and it was gone.
Speaker 24 (02:18:19):
You take it every night before bed, and you might
need three of them. I might need five of them.
That's a safe medication. So you start on one and
then that doesn't get rid of it the next night
you'd have too. But I take three every night. I
have for years now. But those six or seven years
are six or seven years that weren't dinosed.
Speaker 6 (02:18:41):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 24 (02:18:43):
I'll bring the radio station. And I had this going
on and that going on, and I was cooking this
and that, and thank God for the radio station, I
tell you, because it's annoying things.
Speaker 1 (02:18:55):
Will your flipmate will be disappointed. She's only getting her
lunch made for her.
Speaker 24 (02:19:00):
Yeah, lunch made you know that kap are ready for her.
And she liked to be before works.
Speaker 1 (02:19:09):
It's like what before work?
Speaker 6 (02:19:11):
You know we yearned?
Speaker 1 (02:19:12):
Was she was okay? Yeah, chat yep, yeah, yes.
Speaker 24 (02:19:18):
They are off for the day. You have a good day.
See you have to work.
Speaker 1 (02:19:20):
Yeah, you're we're really very happy that you found a solution,
because a lot of people aren't that lucky.
Speaker 24 (02:19:27):
Very very happy, because you know, I've got other conditions
and it was just one that was actually could be
fixed quite easily without surgery or anything, and it's just
very annoying for people, and some people don't know. It's
amazing how many people I've spoken to you that I've
actually known and whether they've told me, I, you've got
the doctor. You've got restlessly you.
Speaker 1 (02:19:49):
Could be a restless league ambassador.
Speaker 24 (02:19:51):
Oh look, I could be a doctor ta. I've got
a lot of conditions, markers. I don't know if one
person can get so many illnesses, but I keep smiling,
just just going to get through it. They needs to be.
So sometimes you know, you wonder if you're going to
get a breath.
Speaker 1 (02:20:10):
Good inspiration. Tracy, thank you for more from Marcus Slash Nights.
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