The Cellar

The Cellar (http://cellar.org/index.php)
-   Health (http://cellar.org/forumdisplay.php?f=33)
-   -   Great Idea! (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=27314)

monster 05-08-2012 10:37 PM

Great Idea!
 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-17818223

glatt 05-09-2012 06:56 AM

We had a blast playing at one of these in Canterbury.

Sundae 05-09-2012 12:43 PM

I want proper playgrounds, just adult size.
I would happily burn calories off in them.

An outdoor gym doesn't give me enough reward.
I would rather poubd up the steps to a wide bumpy slide than use an outside step machine any day.

Or run round one of those things that lifts you up in the air, but is the right height for me not to badly graze my knees on the lower stretches (that bloody hurt!)

Myabe then, when I lost enough weight, I might be interested in the outside gym equipment.
Nah - it's surely aimed at parents in this climate.

piercehawkeye45 05-10-2012 05:42 PM

Those are all over the place in Singapore. Some people were actually using them too.

monster 05-10-2012 08:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae (Post 810750)
I want proper playgrounds, just adult size.
I would happily burn calories off in them.

really? Because most modern playground equipment -in US and UK- does fit adults. So what's stopping you?

Quote:

[Nah - it's surely aimed at parents in this climate.
correct. but the majority of adults become parents at some point and many get very, very bored while their kids play sometimes.... and don't have tim ein the rest of their busy lives to work out..... So it is a great idea.

glatt 05-11-2012 07:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by monster (Post 811022)
many get very, very bored while their kids play sometimes

I've been so tired, and so bored, when my kids were playing at the park when they were younger, that I've almost fallen asleep lying flat on one of the benches. It happened more than once. I'd be struggling to stay awake, because what kind of father falls asleep in a public park near a busy street when they are supposed to be watching their toddler?

infinite monkey 05-11-2012 07:45 AM

It's like a parcourse without all that damn running. ;)

They have a very small area of outside exercise stuffy at my old job.

Sundae 05-11-2012 01:42 PM

I didn't suggest it was a bad idea.
I was responding from a personal point of view.

And no, I could not fit down a slide in the UK.
And I don't just mean now I have a super-fat arse. It's been the case since I was a UK size 14. They're built for children.

Tyre swings, yes.
Average swings, no.
Slides, no.
Climbing frames, no.
Those long rocking horses and barrell runs, no.
Those things that spin you around on the end of a rope - no. As I said, I was too tall for the part where you are supposed to run to get momentum and took the skin off my knees.

I'm not saying that's wrong. And neither are exercise machines in these locations.
It's great for parents who want to use them while watching their kids.

I'm just saying I want, I want, I want a playground please.
Pref with a witch's hat :)

infinite monkey 05-11-2012 01:43 PM

Woah, wait. You have Tyra swings? I LOVE her.

Oh. Tyre. Ooops. Carry on. :blush:

:bolt:

monster 05-11-2012 09:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae (Post 811166)
And no, I could not fit down a slide in the UK.
And I don't just mean now I have a super-fat arse. It's been the case since I was a UK size 14. They're built for children.


The ones in Birmingham fit adults. I went on them all the time with my kids.

Sundae 05-12-2012 02:53 AM

Bye, I'm off to Black Patch Park...

DanaC 05-12-2012 05:48 AM

None of the ones near me would fit adults. And besides, you'd look a proper pratt swinging in a kiddie park, without any kiddies in tow. And in the event any local council workers, wardens or community police officers were to pass by you'd be asked, politely but firmly, not to use the play equipment which is intended (and insured accordingly) for the use of children.

monster 05-12-2012 07:18 AM

...

DanaC 05-12-2012 08:13 AM

I would definitely give it a go if one were to sprout up in my town...but I would also definitly prefer it if there was a fort and a witch's hat

Sundae 05-12-2012 08:38 AM

Oh! a witches hat! Don't even know how to apostrophise that.
I'm sure I've sung its praises before.

For a small skinny girl it was even better than a roller coaster, because it was free and (in my case) Mum and Dad weren't there.
Big boys and girls controlled it, made it fast, weighed it down so you went up impossibly high in the air but didn't dare scream in case they thought you were a gommy and chucked you off.

They were hard to find in '79-'82 (the years I base my WH memories on)
And gone completely after that.

I have to have a bumpy slide in our adult playground.
One where you take off after each bump.
Might take some figuring out, but I need to recreate the literal air-time I had as a kid in Jubilee Gardens, Waterloo, London SE1. Where the London Eye is now.
Their bumpy slide was literally breathtaking; it was a reasonable trade-off for the hurt to my boney buttocks.

monster 05-12-2012 03:40 PM

fwiw little calories burned on the witches hat and precious few on the swings.

And am I recalling incorrectly a pic of Sundae on a swing? Don't remember her looking like a proper pratt [sic], but maybe you just felt to polite to say at the time, Dana?

jimhelm 05-12-2012 03:58 PM

I'd like to play on some of those things they have on MXC. THAT would be fun!

DanaC 05-12-2012 04:00 PM

Wow...we're [sic]ing spelling errors now huh ;P

monster 05-12-2012 06:54 PM

...

classicman 05-12-2012 10:36 PM

1 Attachment(s)
...

monster 05-13-2012 07:45 PM

Third ?man in -automatic ejection.

monster 05-13-2012 07:51 PM

:redcard:

:jagoff:

Lamplighter 08-03-2012 11:09 PM

I like the title of this thread, so here is major thread drift....

I read an article about this a few weeks ago, but it was more confusing than enlightening.
Maybe this one explains what is happening in the kidney transplant arena...


Huffington Post

8/3/12

Honica Brittman Kidney Transplant Chain: Woman's Altruism Spurs 5 Kidney Swaps
Quote:

A soon-to-be wed gay couple, a retired teacher and his wife,
and two pairs of fathers and sons were among those whose lives were changed
one extraordinary day this week when a 35-year-old single mother of four
from North Carolina donated a kidney to a stranger in New York.<snip>

Brittman, who decided to be part of the swap after learning
she could not donate to a family friend because of incompatibility,
represents what experts say is a critical and growing number of "altruistic"
or "non-directed" donors, people willing to donate to anyone in need
as long as their blood type, antigens and other factors are compatible.
<snip>

The series of operation on Wednesday and Thursday, which required 10 separate surgical teams
and weeks of coordination, was made up of a series of swaps within a group of men and women
between the ages of 23 and 68 and with compatible blood types,
all motivated by a mix of compassion and commitment to their loved ones.

The chain started with Brittman, who donated a kidney to a 39-year-old television producer,
whose fiancée and partner of more than 10 years donated to a businessman from upstate New York.

In turn, the businessman's son, a college-age student who felt that for being healthy
and the youngest of four sons, he should step up on behalf of his father
and donate one of his kidneys to another young man, a 23-year-old originally from Haiti.

His father then donated to a retired teacher from New Jersey.
Lots and lots of good on them...

Pico and ME 08-03-2012 11:18 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I might have liked the witches hat when I was a youngster, but I certainly couldn't tolerate it now...the spinning :greenface.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:53 PM.

Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.