Where does northern...
 

[Closed] Where does northern England start?

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 ianv
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Driving up the m1, at what point do you reckon to get into northern England?


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:23 am
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Nottingham


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:25 am
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watford gap service station


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:26 am
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Stoke in the west Sheffield in the east.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:27 am
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When you enter Yorkshire on one side, or Cheshire on the other. Derbyshire's a tricky one because half is in the north and half in the south. Not sure exactly where the dividing line is though.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:28 am
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Just south of Sheffield, around about the M18 junction I'd say. Nottingham is definitely in the midlands.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:29 am
 grum
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Manchester.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:29 am
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Yeah, Manchester.

Wherever regional accents get to the point that southeners can't understand them.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:31 am
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M25 if you believe the news


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:32 am
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Wherever regional accents get to the point that southeners can't understand them.

Bristol in that case.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:32 am
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Wherever regional accents get to the point that southeners can't [s]under[/s]stand them.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:34 am
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Driving up the M1, I'd say it starts when you can see Emley Moor TV transmitter tower.

To me, it's a sign of 'home'.

Rachel


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:34 am
 IHN
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[img] [/img]

[url= http://www.amazon.co.uk/Pies-Prejudice-Search-North-ebook/dp/B0033Y95O2/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1334561693&sr=8-3 ]Read this, it contains all the answers you need[/url]


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:36 am
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Stoke in the west Sheffield in the east.

Nah - Stoke's in the Midlands. Crewe.

Though on reflection, the South is surely anywhere south of Kilmarnock.

Andy


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:36 am
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I live in Poole, all the maps here show nothing north of the M4, apart from "Here be Dragons"


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:39 am
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Here you go:

http://sasi.group.shef.ac.uk/maps/nsdivide/index.html


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:42 am
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That Stuart Maconie book is pretty good, I'd also recommend it.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:42 am
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Need oxygen when venturing North of St Albans.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:48 am
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+1 for "pies and predjudice". Having read it I know know why my grandad said that his being northern was as much about state of mind as where he lived.

As a rough map I've always though the North was north of Sheffield and the South below Northampton. Everything inbetween is the Midlands.

As a quick guide you could always get on public transport and try talking to someone. If they look at you like you are some kind of sexual deviant then you are in the south. Most likely the south east.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:50 am
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I think of the North/South divide running along a diagonal line between The Wash and The Bristol Channel. It's where the letter A changes from short to long. The North proper starts just north of Mansfield and Crewe.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 7:55 am
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maycontainnuts - Member
I live in Poole, all the maps here show nothing north of the M4, apart from "Here be Dragons"

You must have one of those new fangled maps. I'm from Dorset and mine only get's as far as the A303.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:02 am
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Easily Birmingham . It used to be Birham but some one felt that "ming" should be added.
Quite possibly from Gloucester eastwards. They are all funny buggers north of there.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:02 am
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Anything past Buxton is the south.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:07 am
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Bits of nottingham are northern, bits are southern. i'd say "the north" properly begins at Mansfield.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:08 am
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When you enter Yorkshire on one side, or Cheshire on the other. Derbyshire's a tricky one because half is in the north and half in the south. Not sure exactly where the dividing line is though.

Cheshire, seriously?

Northern = you're still bitter/happy about the outcome of the war of the roses. So we'll accept Manchester, but Crew is definately Midlands.

Does this make Liverpool the kid no one want's in the divorce?


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:09 am
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Newton Aycliffe as everyone south of there talks funny. And Manchester is in the Middle of the country length ways, so is the Midlands.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:11 am
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I'd say anything south of a line roughly drawn between Scarborough and the top end of Morecambe Bay counts as the start of the midlands.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:21 am
 Drac
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When you cross over the River Wear.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:23 am
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That's easy it's well signposted in that Lunnon which is already pretty North, sign then says - Hatfield & The North. So Hatfield must be the border.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:23 am
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No Newton aycliffe is the cheese savoury line


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:24 am
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The North South divide is here apparently

[img] [/img]

[img] [/img]

from here

[url= http://sasi.group.shef.ac.uk/maps/nsdivide/index.html ]North South divide[/url]


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:26 am
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I've developed a meter that measures the levels of seething regional resentment towards our Capital City. It goes from 1 to 10. Once you're past 5 then you're officially 'North'.

When driving up the M6 the needle steadily moves upwards, hovering around the 5 as you hit Stoke.

Once past Crewe it starts to go a bit mad, clear cheshire and it immediately starts bending the needle over the ten mark. Hit Manchester and it explodes. I'm too scared to take it anywhere near Liverpool


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:31 am
 ianv
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I'd say anything south of a line roughly drawn between Scarborough and the top end of Morecambe Bay counts as the start of the midlands.

So Bradford and Leeds are in the Midlands. 😥


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:32 am
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I've developed a meter that measures the levels of seething regional resentment towards our Capital City. It goes from 1 to 10. Once you're past 5 then you're officially 'North'.

I tend to work on complete indifference in the west country. By the time you get to the lizard, the big stink may as well not exist...


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:33 am
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North of Balham, unless there is a middle-England...


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:33 am
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If that line is true I must be Scottish.
best get my accent working then.

"Och aye the noo, gis uh a can ee lager eh eel chin yah in the taties"

How's that?


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:33 am
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I thought Yorkshire was an independent nation state, neither north or south. Just 'other'


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:33 am
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[i]I've developed a meter that measures the levels of seething regional resentment towards our Capital City. It goes from 1 to 10. Once you're past 5 then you're officially 'North'.

When driving up the M6 the needle steadily moves upwards, hovering around the 5 as you hit Stoke.

Once past Crewe it starts to go a bit mad, clear cheshire and it immediately starts bending the needle over the ten mark. Hit Manchester and it explodes. I'm too scared to take it anywhere near Liverpool [/i]

Brilliant. I think that's this question settled.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:34 am
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M62.

Sheffield is in the Midlands! It's two hours south of here. That distance again and you can be nearing the M25.

If you live in London then it is the Watford Gap.

If you are a born and bread Geordie then it is the Tyne, The Wear if you are feeling generous.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:38 am
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The north begins where your prejudices start (or ends depending on which side you consider yourself to be on)

And the Stuart Maconie book is terrible drivel. As southerner who now lives in the north I found it bordering on racism with its overly romanticised picture of northern Britain and thinly veiled hatred for southerners and the south in general. Couldn't even reading it finish it.

I'm sure its brilliant if you are a northerner with a chip on your shoulder though! 😉


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:42 am
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Sandbatch services on the M6. Or Sandbacccchhhh as I prefer to call it, on my way home to the land of locccchhhhhs and mountains from dahn sarf. A sure sign that your journey to the true north is gaining some momentum.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:42 am
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If you are a born and bread Geordie then it is the Tyne, The Wear if you are feeling generous.

From Northumberland so I was going for Hadrians Wall, but be generous and say the M62, Manchester et al are the midlands


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:43 am
 Esme
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Radio 4 recently did a programme about the North-South Divide, suggesting that it ran from the Humber to the Severn, zigzagging from Cleethorpes to Gloucester - as in Bimbler's map

This division is based more on a "state of mind" rather than geographical location, so Shackleton's grandad was quite right 🙂

[url= http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01dht1z ]Cleethorpes to Coventry[/url]
[url= http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01dtwls ]Warwick to the Severn[/url]

But what about The Midlands, that No-man's Land which protects the soft southerners from the sweary northerners? 😉


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:48 am
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I found it bordering on racism with its overly romanticised picture of northern Britain and thinly veiled hatred for southerners and the south in general.

So... actually a searingly accurate depiction of 'the North' then?

Couldn't even reading it finish it.

Tsk! Typical oversensitive southern types 😉


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:49 am
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If you are a born and bread Geordie then it is the Tyne, The Wear if you are feeling generous.

+1, and I'm not feeling generous!


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:54 am
 Pook
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The m18 junction is east north east of Sheffield, being east of Rotherham...

I say the chesterfield junction.

.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:54 am
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[img] [/img]

Anything below here is the South. HTH. :mrgreen:


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 8:58 am
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If you are driving down the A1/M1, just after you leave scotland innit. 🙂


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 9:16 am
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The Northernmost Waitrose is now in central Manchester, therefore the borders have shifted. The North now starts in north Manchester. Boggart Hole Clough precisely.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 9:23 am
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The Northernmost Waitrose is now in central Manchester, therefore the borders have shifted. The North now starts in north Manchester. Boggart Hole Clough precisely.

Erm we have one in Preston and i'm pretty sure that there is on in Newcastle too, it would appear that northern England is pretty much at the Scottish border now!


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 9:26 am
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Wow. Ok then, Booths marks the southernmost reaches of the North. Knutsford it is then.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 9:28 am
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cheburashka - Member
The Northernmost Waitrose is now in central Manchester,
There's one in Edinburgh.....


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 9:32 am
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I thought Yorkshire was an independent nation state, neither north or south. Just 'other'

I agree with that. You have the south. Then yorkshire. Then you cross over into teeside and when you see those purple clouds and gigantic cooling towers....that's when you know you've hit the north.

Lancashire is just west.

That's all fact.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 9:33 am
 loum
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I've developed a meter that measures the levels of seething regional resentment towards our Capital City. It goes from 1 to 10. Once you're past 5 then you're officially 'North'.
When driving up the M6 the needle steadily moves upwards, hovering around the 5 as you hit Stoke.
Once past Crewe it starts to go a bit mad, clear cheshire and it immediately starts bending the needle over the ten mark. Hit Manchester and it explodes. I'm too scared to take it anywhere near Liverpool

TBH, scousers quite like their trips to Anfield South. Maybe the meter was miscaliberated in Manchester.

My wife thinks it starts at Kings Cross station, platform nine and three quarters to be precise.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 9:47 am
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The Northernmost Waitrose is now in central Manchester,

My local one must be fake then.

(I'll check for eBay type "waitroes" misspelling)


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 9:51 am
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When Scotland gets its long fought for [b]'FREEEEEDOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM!!!!'[/b] and Alex is King, with TJ seated at his right hand, will the border of the North have to move down a bit? To, say Stafford services?


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 9:55 am
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Can you not just draw a line at the latitude of the first chippy that does PROPER gravy? Or the point a which you get a head of your beer because that's how it served, not just because it's some poncy belgian number?


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 9:56 am
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This division is based more on a "state of mind" rather than geographical location, so Shackleton's grandad was quite right

Precisely. It's why Altringham is in the south, but Stoke is in the north. And Cornwall has much more in common with the north than the south-east.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 9:58 am
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Interesting comment in the prologue to that Stuart Maconie book about there not being a "South of England" correspondent .

I mean why would there need to be, are they not content that we let them listen to our radio stations? It's bad enough we've had dodgy dialect presenters fro some considerably irritating length of time now.

And since when were they allowed cappuccino makers and who taught them how to make them work?

I did like the "If you're an Alien how come you sound like you come from oop North?"
"Loads of Planets have a North!"

I know I shall probably be banned for this Northophobia/ism, since this forum also suffers with a North South Divide, I've noticed its pretty much Southerners that get banned regularly and assume there's only a limited tolerance of Southern Fairies here, but you have to laugh, the cliches are so often true...

Oh yes there was one other thing, how the **** do they get to sun dry tomatoes up there without the pidgeons crapping all over them?


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:03 am
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I agree that 'Northern' is a state of mind, and has nothing to do with latitude.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:09 am
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cheburashka - Member
The Northernmost Waitrose is now in central Manchester, therefore the borders have shifted. The North now starts in north Manchester. Boggart Hole Clough precisely.

Wahay, Boggart Hole Clough 😀

Some great riding in there - Favourite used to be the track from the Glen Avenue entrance west to Rochdale Road, coming out at the gate opposite Mount Carmel church on Old Road.
Some nice bits up on the top fields near the running track too.

As a Blackleyite/Mostonian, I'd say your almost there:

All of the area north of Deansgate in Manchester is officially the North - you can't exclude Harpurhey, Crumpsall, Collyhurst, Newton Heath or Miles Platting, for God's sake - there's nowhere in the world more Northern than Conran Street Market, for example.

The line is a bit wavy though - Cheshire is practically London, as is Derbyshire, so that's out.
Anywhere in Yorkshire is definitely Northern, as is Wales. All of Wales, even the bits that are in the South.
Oh and Wythenshawe - definitely Northern.

Basically, if they sell gravy in the chippy, if strangers talk to you in the pub or on the train, if someone holds a door open for you it's Northern. Even if it's not.

jfletch - Member
The north begins where your prejudices start (or ends depending on which side you consider yourself to be on)

And the Stuart Maconie book is terrible drivel. As southerner who now lives in the north I found it bordering on racism with its overly romanticised picture of northern Britain and thinly veiled hatred for southerners and the south in general. Couldn't even reading it finish it.

I'm sure its brilliant if you are a northerner with a chip on your shoulder though!

Ah, I can see where you've gone wrong there.
It's not 'thinly veiled hatred', it's pity mixed with contempt. 😉
No chips on shoulders btw - the gravy stains your weskit, see?


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:11 am
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Lympstone was the best answer so far... 😉 (not on M1 of course...)

[url= http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tees-Exe_line ]Exe - Tees Line[/url]

Divides the Palaeozoic rocks (older, harder, hillier, wetter climate) from the Mezozoic (softer) and Cenozoic rocks (soft as)


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:11 am
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+1 really enjoyed the Stuart Maconie book.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:19 am
 loum
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Going back to the OP's more geographical question,
[i]Driving up the m1, at what point do you reckon to get into northern England?[/i]
I reckon its at the A38 junction for Mansfield. Above that Chesterfield, Sheffield Rotheram are all in. Below that are the outskirts of Derby and Nottingham, still in the East Midlands.
Coming back down the other one, the M6, its between Stoke (North) and Stafford (Midlands) but the borders harder to find 'cos of the landmines.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:21 am
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Ecky-Thump - Member
+1 really enjoyed the Stuart Maconie book.

Have you read all of it, I must say I'm tempted after the preview..


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:27 am
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I've read both [i]Pies and Prejudice[/i] and [i]Adventure on the High Teas[/i]. Both well worth a read.

Basically, if they sell gravy in the chippy, if strangers talk to you in the pub or on the train, if someone holds a door open for you it's Northern. Even if it's not.

This.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:30 am
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The Stuart Maconie book is fantatic! I didn't find it over-romanticised at all. He's quite brutal about a lot of places.

Cider with Roadies is also really good

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:31 am
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+1 really enjoyed the Stuart Maconie book.

Have you read all of it, I must say I'm tempted after the preview..

Read it a couple of years ago now, I think. Yeah it's a good lighthearted wander around the better end of the country. Recommended.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:39 am
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From Northumberland so I was going for Hadrians Wall, but be generous and say the M62, Manchester et al are the midlands

Agreed that the Mancs and Scousers are far from Northern, and I've always taken the view that the Mackems are like your annoying younger brother that you have to accept really are part of the same family, despite not understanding how this could have happened.

Durham marks the start of the South. Going the other way, after Rothbury it starts getting a bit bag-pipey.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:46 am
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Travelling North up the M1 - I reckon it's Loughborough

Purely on the basis that I once had to find an address there so I stopped and asked [eventually] and was offered written directions for a quid
so I concluded that must of been the South or at least the guy was a Southerner


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:48 am
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you don't enter the North.
it enters you.


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:49 am
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Ecky-Thump - Member

Read it a couple of years ago now, I think. Yeah it's a good lighthearted wander around the better end of the country. Recommended.

Right, I'm going to make it my first 'kindle experience', who is he? I thought he was some sort of Radio One Disc jockey they bought in to make you lot feel at home with us civilised popsters.. (We all switched to Radio 2 the moment that alien sound came out of the wireless.)


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 10:51 am
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and I've always taken the view that the Mackems are like your annoying younger brother that you have to accept really are part of the same family, despite not understanding how this could have happened.

Very true


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 11:08 am
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Cheshire, seriously?

I'm in Chester and as we're actually fairly close to the sea we're certainly not in the Midlands - how can we be if we're near the edge?


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 11:12 am
 s
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Sounds like we have a disputed border, god help us if there is a civil war 😉


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 11:23 am
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Chester? The Midlands? You're almost Welsh! 😉


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 11:25 am
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You're almost Welsh!

😯
😐
😥


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 11:27 am
 timc
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we confusing north west England & north west Britain here?


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 11:34 am
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Below Gretna


 
Posted : 16/04/2012 11:34 am
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