Info on hot tub nurse plz
*waves at YGH*
Mibbe your crabbitness has spread across the north south divide this morning! 🙈
Aye, too late now, the time to do it was June or July, but people don't accept draconian changes when case rates are low.
compared to the rest of you plague rats –
Fellow central belter here, our rates are lower than salt n sauce, but I still wouldn't say their low, doubled in the last week.
You may as well close the border on every council area if you want an effective reduction.
It is called lockdown.
You may note that a lot of Scotland had a Tier 4 (so pretty much lockdown) in November.
Closing a border and stopping flights for me fits into the 'every little helps' category.
The fundamental issue is somewhere between folk having to still work and folk ignoring guidance in Scotland.
Edited previous reply. Guess we're all just pissed off.
It is called lockdown.
And is based on trust. There is no closure. There is no lockdown either, people are still out and about.
*shrugs*
our rates are lower than salt n sauce
😂
edit: now I am being drawn in and grumpy. I am stepping away from the thread.

wonder what the secret message of "dropscone bunny" is.
Dropsy flopsy?
Just talking to a colleague who knows loads of folk working in hospitality in the Highlands.
She said that during the spell when the Highlands were tier 1 and lots of other areas were tier 3 or 4 hospitality here was booked solid and a large proportion were out of area visitors. In conjunction with the blase attitude some have had here due to low rates and the festive mixing that goes a long way to describing the rapid rise in cases.
And yet when the various voices of the hospitality sector are on news, radio etc, they claim to be running a tight ship.
A shite tip in reality*
(a favourite still game line!)
In Sept when I went to Kintyre the difference in attitude between different hotels was astonishing - from "don't bother with masks" to someone following you around with a disinfectant spray
She said that during the spell when the Highlands were tier 1 and lots of other areas were tier 3 or 4 hospitality here was booked solid and a large proportion were out of area visitors. In conjunction with the blase attitude some have had here due to low rates and the festive mixing that goes a long way to describing the rapid rise in cases.
I've been saying this all along. At some places, you couldn't book a table unless you had a local address. Meanwhile, other venues didn't give a shit. Various second/holiday homes are occupied with folk from Central Belt etc, even now. The mix of local complacency, tier tourism and lack of policing meant this recent increase was inevitable.
...
@scotroutes, I posted about that a little while back. Saw a random 'contact' on FB that had nipped up to Aviemore for the weekend, from a Tier 3 area, stayed in a hotel, eaten out etc - twice. And shes a flippin nurse as well. I couldn't believe it would have been able to book but I guess some businesses were turning a blind eye for revenue.
yourguitarhero
Free MemberInfo on hot tub nurse plz
Sadly for me, TJ is closer to the truth than I'd like to imagine!! The nurse in question is happily married with teenage children and I would have been sharing the hot tub with her husband!
I had to go to Forth Valley hospital pharmacy today to pick up a prescription.
The roads were busy, like pretty normal.
Eldest_oab has just returned from work in Covid test centre in Stirling saying that they have spent all day commenting on how many cars there were too be seen and heard...
Hmmmm.
YGH- with regards to your pump track world's, the Olympic Committee chap said today that the only way the games will go ahead in July is if all the athletes are vaccinated. So I doubt a pulp track event will be a goer even by then, which is sad as I'd been hoping to do some bike races in May.
YGH - we also took the decision yesterday to go online for a conference we're organising in September, already postponed from last year.
Ours was an international event, but likely over half of attendees would be UK. I just can't see international travel opened up properly in time and even in the UK trying to gather 300+ people under one roof isn't going to work.
Hopefully that will become the norm, we should now be in a position to see that such international conferences and business travel is seen for what it is, both in terms of financial and environmental cost.
Maybe we'll do it on Zwift!
Edinburgh seems to be on a rather different trajectory to Glasgow. why? Also anecdotally the traffic past my house ( main arterial route) is still massively down from normal if up from april levels which from others comments seems unusual
Anyone any clues? Christmas lockdown in Edinburgh but not in Glasgow for shopping IIRC? More white collar workers so more working from home?
More white collar workers so more working from home?
Yep. Not may office blocks in Aviemore.
My wife has a dentists appointment this afternoon. I know they are still open and working but this is just for a clean/de-scale. We're both surprised they're carrying those out.
Markedly quieter on the road past my house in East Lothian. Not down to late March, obviously but definitely abnormal.
My wife has a dentists appointment this afternoon. I know they are still open and working but this is just for a clean/de-scale. We’re both surprised they’re carrying those out.
Aye, I got a message from my dentist in sept to say I was due this as well, patched it.
Opticians still doing regular eye tests. Pretty sure that wasn't happening in lockdown 1?
Felt odd with someone right in your face doing the tests.
Yeah, as I've said, i guess lots of folk are more organised with PPE and procedures than they were 10 months ago. Still, if the Govt are looking to cut down on travel and interaction then there are obviously a few things they could add to the list.
FWIW, must have been about 100 cars and twice as many folk at or around the Glenmore area and up the ski road to Cairngorm today. Can't say I saw any groups of folk or that it was actually crowded but I'm pretty sure they all passsed somewhere suitable for exercise before they got there 🙂 *
* We're planning to drive up to Glenmore and walk up to Coire Cas tomorrow actually
Lots of positive measures are being taken by politicians and the general public which should help at least to control the spread somewhat.
Ultimately though I feel sad for the world we have created. Looking at kids walking around in masks. It is just not right. We have utterly screwed up this planet if we are having to wear face masks to survive.
I can't see the generation at school now easily forgetting this experience, hopefully it will drive them to seek positive lasting change when it is their time to come to power. The current generation are abject failures globally in preserving the planet, myself included, I should ride more, drive less.
Some days I can't help but think it really is time for the asteroid to reset things. Sad sad times indeed.
Ultimately though I feel sad for the world we have created. Looking at kids walking around in masks. It is just not right. We have utterly screwed up this planet if we are having to wear face masks to survive.
Not the same thing at all. You can argue the rights and wrongs of how the virus took the species leap but at the end of the day it's not anything new. Yes, living with the virus is compatible with more sustainable living and I'm all for that but one is not necessarily a symptom of the other.
Yeah interesting thought but I think that the only thing about the modern world that has really helped the virus is our desire to travel. Ultimately it's close human contact that the virus uses to spread and we have always wanted and needed that. The really sad bit for me is that fact that it managed to mutate at the perfect time to cause maximum harm in the UK! Probably just very bad luck.
Probably just very bad luck.
Or maybe government not taking it seriously enough at the start and continuing the too-little-to-late theme and turning the UK into a giant fermentation vessel had something to do with it
Can't understand why with the cases escalating and deaths rising Scotland is in a softer lockdown than England.
Scotland is in a softer lockdown than England
Softer? Certainly a different lockdown. For instance, I believe churches and other places of worship are still open in England.
Are we really in a softer lockdown? There's were football fans at English grounds last week ffs, the vast majority of the SE has only just gone back under restrictions, whereas us in the central belt have been under restrictions for quite a while. A blind man running for a bus could see that England, particularly the south, was heading for bother.
Nicola's comments on click and collect were interesting, takeaways too. Probably time it was delivery only. Supermarkets have dropped their guards too, limited numbers seems to have gone, full families all going in, all of this is small fry, but adds up.
I'm an eternal optimist, but looking at our numbers it would appear (hopefully) that the xmas/new variant bounce is stabilising. Hospitalisations and deaths will continue to rise though, due to the lag.
Or maybe government not taking it seriously enough at the start and continuing the too-little-to-late theme and turning the UK into a giant fermentation vessel had something to do with it
I have to say that I have a lot of sympathy for the government(s) during the pandemic. Yes they have been far from perfect but there have been no correct or easy decisions. Every choice has been difficult and an fine balancing act. Everyone will have a different opinion on those choices depending on whether they have very sadly lost loved ones, lost job/income, lost freedom, lost an NHS treatment etc etc.
Can’t understand why with the cases escalating and deaths rising Scotland is in a softer lockdown than England.
Its a differnt country with differnbt problem and needs. I have confidence in the scottish government to be trying to do the right things for the right reasons. also our infection rates are much lower.
lotto
Free MemberCan’t understand why with the cases escalating and deaths rising Scotland is in a softer lockdown than England.
Are we? It's a little different but seems in the same ballpark for soft/hardness, even leaving aside all the differences in messaging and leadership which is pretty much one-way weakening of the English lockdown. So what are the major things that make Scotland's lockdown weaker?
Always worth wondering what England's lockdown would look like today, if they'd had 291 cases per 100000 in the last 7 days rather than 626. I mean, we shouldn't be where we are either, goes without saying... But following the 7 day averages definitely looks like we might be peaked- needs a few more days to really trust that but the all-uk stats do not look like that at all. Because of course a similar level of lockdown with a different level of cases will deliver different results.
England are actively discouraging driving for exercise with police prescence at beauty spots etc. Scotland don't seem to bother. Driving to work today and cars everywhere abandoned for kids to go sledging. Same story at beaches, they are packed with people. Hardly surprising Scotland now has record high Covid patients in hospital. This period is worse than March/April time and the restrictions are less/softer.
While it may look bad, I really don't think folk exercising in the outdoors is a factor in spreading the virus.
I know some folk want everyone locked in their homes, but that ain't gonna happen.
Lotto - cops are also having words / stopping / fining folk in Scotland.
cops are also having words / stopping / fining folk in Scotland.
Not in my experience. Was stuck for ages last week on the A82 near Kings House as the police tried to keep the road open due to wreckless parking. I didn't see them talk to anybody in all the time I was stuck there.
That's cos they were trying to keep the road open.
They were stopping and turning back at Loch Doon locally last weekend.
lotto
Free MemberEngland are actively discouraging driving for exercise with police prescence at beauty spots etc. Scotland don’t seem to bother. Driving to work today and cars everywhere abandoned for kids to go sledging. Same story at beaches, they are packed with people.
Do you have any reason to think that's what's driving the increase, though? There's little evidence for outdoor transmission. But also, this is happening everywhere, right? But the increases aren't happening equally. THere's no reason that travelling for exercise in Edinburgh and the Lothians would be less infectious than in Dumfries or Inverclyde.
Living on the edge of the Pentlands I've been up there a lot (and seen a lot more from the pentlands facebook group I help run). And yes it's busy but very little of it is actually transmission activity (there's a lot more pearl-clutching than there is actual risk-taking)
I get why it'd bother people, it's not a good visual and could help motivate other poor behaviours but I just don't think it's where the cases are coming from. And for all track-and-trace is pretty much overwhelmed just now apparently, they do still have good information on where a lot of these cases actually happen and why, which is what ought to drive public policy.
Driving to work today and cars everywhere abandoned for kids to go sledging. Same story at beaches, they are packed with people. Hardly surprising Scotland now has record high Covid patients in hospital.
It's the indoor mixing over Christmas and the new variant that's caused the increase, not people going to the beach for a walk.
I would class the cars they are using as indoors. Loads of people were clearly car sharing last weekend to go sledging/skiing. Car in front of mine had 4 males around mid twenties with their skis on roof. They all got out for a smoke we were stuck for so long.

