This months mag

May 15, 2010
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You've gone on about where to go to watch the world cup. Now where can we go to get away from it?

I am very happy to be one of the 3,409,538,370 (taken from mag) not watching. I'll get the results 'ad nauseum' in/on evey little piece of media and trying to hold a conversation with anyone will be a waste of time unless I want to talk football.

So you have catered for the half of the population who will watch the world cup how about something for the other half who have little or no interest other than maybe the result.

Brummie
 
Jan 12, 2010
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its only every 4 years & only last a month,on this months mag though,

thought the live test with the sprite muscateer was realy good.keep it up .the isle of white section bored me to tears though,thought it was over killed slightly
 
Jan 19, 2008
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Each to their own. I can't wait for it to start and am really looking forward to it :O)

I wish I could say the same thing for cricket although I do try and sit through it if I'm suffering one of my bouts of insomnia.

Even so, I do like to see the team do well in internationals because I'm a patriotic Englishman. Yes, there are a few of us still about :O)
 
G

Guest

"Only lasts a month"

I get the feeling that for once, it may well last the full month,patriotically wise.

England have a very good chance,and not the normal from the heart stuff type of chance, although for me the media attention and the amount of time given to nit bits and highlights does spoil it somewhat....
 
Aug 4, 2004
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Brummie I am beginning to like you more and mnore. Not only do you drive a surf and caravan but you have a dislike of football like us. :)
 
Nov 13, 2008
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Dear All,

We don't write about football very often - hope you forgive us this once!

Can I just ask what wasn't liked about the IOW feature? Too long? Wrong place? And where would you like us to go next? We have trips to Lincolnshire, Dumfries and Galloway, Wye Valley and North Yorkshire Coast already in the bag for later in the year, but if there is anywhere you would like to send a member of the Practical Caravan team (nothing rude please) then let me know...

As always, mag feedback is always welcome

Nigel Donnelly

Editor

Practical Caravan

Cheers
 
Jan 19, 2007
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Devon, inland Dorset, southern Somerset especially to CLs and CSs with ehu but no other facilities....do you want me to go, Nigel? On the other hand, if people find these areas as as wonderful as they are, they might end up full of people and alien worshipers!
 
Aug 4, 2004
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Havew articles ever been written on 100 top "Sites with a sea view" or 100 top "Sites by a river/docks/marina/water etc. Or even 100 top "sites within easy walimkng distance of an attaction or even a great pub?

I know that you do the 100 top sites every year but these are always full blown commercial sites and do not include CL and CS sites.

More and more people are staertikng to use the CL & CS network as club and commercial sites are now pricing themselves far too high for an average weekend where you arrive at 7pm on the Friday and then have to leave by 12pm on the Sunday. I can understand and accept the timing but not the prices.

You arrive home by 2pm and then what do you do for the rest fo the day whereas on a CL generally you cna stay on until 5pm before leaving.
 
Nov 3, 2009
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Getting back on topic - if you want to get away from the footy there are hundreds of CL/CS's you could go to and hide away in were there is no electric, telly or even mobile reception!

Me, I'm with Lord B and can't wait - bring it on!
 
Aug 4, 2004
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I will be glad when it is all over and sorry for the country that has been left massive debts by FIFA crooks for hosting the football. FIFA is only there to line their own pockets.
 

Parksy

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Nov 12, 2009
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Well done England!

Last nights 3-1 win in the friendly with Mexico provided a great send off for the team before they report for duty in Graz for the last warm up match before the big kick off on June 12th.

For those who hold cynical views about 'pockets being lined' whatever it's perceived faults football has broken down barriers between different cultures, children living in real poverty can escape the reality of their situation for a brief spell and the worlds attention is focused on places such as South Africa which will benefit the poor of that country.

The World Cup represents the greatest football tournament on earth and most of us who support England will be excited at the prospect of some real progress for our national team under Fabio Capello with his no nonsense approach to team discipline and tactical knowledge.

For the moaners who begrudge us a couple of weeks in the spotlight there's always cookery or home improvement programmes for you to watch instead.

Come on England!!!
 
Aug 12, 2007
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I don't begrudge anyone watching a load of vastly overpaid posers, who have an over-inflated sense of their own importance and a tendency to behave like animals in the rutting season....I simply don't watch it (the football, that is, not the rutting, hehehe.....erm, not that I watch that either! lol).

I much prefer rugby or F1 myself, but each to their own. ;o)
 

Parksy

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Nov 12, 2009
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Hi Sue

' I don't begrudge anyone watching a load of vastly overpaid posers, who have an over-inflated sense of their own importance and a tendency to behave like animals in the rutting season..'

I thought that you meant the forum moderators for a minute there until I saw the 'vastly overpaid' bit.
 
Aug 4, 2004
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Well done England!

Last nights 3-1 win in the friendly with Mexico provided a great send off for the team before they report for duty in Graz for the last warm up match before the big kick off on June 12th.

For those who hold cynical views about 'pockets being lined' whatever it's perceived faults football has broken down barriers between different cultures, children living in real poverty can escape the reality of their situation for a brief spell and the worlds attention is focused on places such as South Africa which will benefit the poor of that country.

The World Cup represents the greatest football tournament on earth and most of us who support England will be excited at the prospect of some real progress for our national team under Fabio Capello with his no nonsense approach to team discipline and tactical knowledge.

For the moaners who begrudge us a couple of weeks in the spotlight there's always cookery or home improvement programmes for you to watch instead.

Come on England!!!
The poor will NOT benefit unfortunately. If you want to pm me I will send you links proving this. I think that what you read will send shivers up and down your spine. This is for info only and not for a politrical debate or similar. As A South African I am disgusted with what FIFA have done and what is happening.
 

Damian

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Mar 14, 2005
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Damian,

Coming from the Isle of Wight you would know that.
Jimbob, you have great insight,lol

And yes I do get a little fed up with people ignorantly calling it the Isle of White instead of Wight as it should be.

But then being a caulkhead I am entitled to.
 
Aug 4, 2004
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Here is a non political report regarding the football world cup from a respected reporter who lives in Johannesburg and demonstrates how FIFA is ruining the game;

Rian Malan, at home in Melville, west Johannesburg. Photograph: Andy Hall for the Observer

It's a sunny weekday afternoon in Jo'burg, and I am lunching with friends at an outdoor restaurant. The joint we're in was hit by armed robbers earlier this week. The newspapers on the table are full of hair-raising tribulations - our former police chief on trial for bribery and commuter buses shot up by murderous taxi bosses who won't tolerate competition.

In a normal society, such questions would induce nervous breakdown, but my mates and I are laughing. We're sitting in the African sun, sharing jokes, and wondering how to con foreigners into coming here for the World Cup.

Once upon a time, South Africans imagined that this soccer extravaganza would make us all rich. Myself, I struggled to believe that half a million football tourists would cross the planet in the midst of a brutal recession to visit a country best known for its high crime rate. My neighbours scoffed, preferring to believe they would make a killing by renting out their homes. Alas. Bookings are running at about half the anticipated level. Would-be scalpers are stuck with tickets they can't even give away, and Fifa's gluttonous marketing arm has reportedly managed to lease only 1% of the luxury private boxes in our enormously expensive new stadia.

I am rather enjoying the resulting cries of pain. Fifa has made a monkey out of South Africa, encouraging us to spend billions we don't have on football stadiums we don't need in the absurd belief that we could recoup our losses by gouging football tourists whose willingness to come here was always in doubt. Our own leaders collaborated enthusiastically, partly because they relished the glory of presiding over an event of World Cup stature, but also because they were eager to participate in murky backroom deals that saw politically connected individuals reaping obscene profits on taxpayer-funded construction contracts. Now we're all saddled by debts it will take generations to pay off. I'm so riled that part of me would be gratified if the World Cup were a complete failure.

But South Africa is a complicated country, and there's always another side of the story. As I write, a certain Mrs Gladys Dladla is ironing clothes in my kitchen. Gladys is an old-school Zulu matriarch, struggling heroically to maintain a huge family on her meagre earnings as my once-a-week char. She lacks the wherewithal to bribe officials who control access to state housing, so she's lived in a tin shack for 16 years. In recent weeks, getting to work has become a frightening ordeal thanks to renewed tensions between police and the aforementioned taxi thugs. Gladys's life seems entirely miserable, but she always shows up on time, chattering cheerfully about church and her hope that God and the ancestral spirits will soon guide us to victory in the national lottery. Gladys and I have a little syndicate going.

The World Cup is an event of huge symbolic importance to Mrs Dladla. In the next several weeks, oily ANC politicians will attempt to convince you that this tournament is a tribute to their heroic victory over apartheid and associated triumphs of the human spirit. Hm. For people like Gladys, the longing for success is actually rooted in despair. They're so tired of being losers and also-rans, trapped at the bottom of a society that constantly threatens to degenerate into just another African basket case. Their dream was that in June 2010 the world's eyes would descend on us, and at last find something to admire.

Mrs Dladla looks on these things with enormous pride. She feels that their glory reflects on her directly, and besides, there's always the hope that football tourism might generate jobs for her unemployed offspring. She was a great supporter of short-lived plans to turn my rambling old home into a cheap doss house for football hooligans. In the end, I baulked at paying tribute to Fifa, whose lawyers crushed all attempts to market World Cup lodgings through any channels other than their own. Just as well, because our doss house would most likely have failed anyway.

So now we stand before you with clean hands. We have nothing to gain from the World Cup but the pleasure of your company, so it would be nice if you changed your minds about coming. Please! We've almost bankrupted ourselves in our determination to stage a tournament that runs like clockwork. And if it doesn't - you can have a chuckle at our expense. Last week's newspapers reported a state of abject unreadiness among the pom-pom girls scheduled to perform at the opening ceremony. A day or two later, President Jacob Zuma informed America that we have the laziest and most useless civil service on the planet. Elsewhere such an admission would have precipitated the government's downfall. Here, the story was relegated to page five.

I struggle to see how anyone can resist a country where such things happen. South Africa is amazing! At any given moment, all possible futures seem entirely plausible. We are winning, we are losing. We are progressing even as we hurtle backwards. Every day brings momentous exhilarations and dumbfounding setbacks, and the sun shines brightly even in winter. Throw in the heady proximity of Mandela and Beckham, and you're almost guaranteed a splendid time.

As for crime, well, yes, crime is a threat, but our police have been given orders to smash anyone who so much as touches a hair on any football fan's head. If you book now, you'll arrive just in time to catch a last glimpse of our fading rainbow, and the first stirrings of our next upheaval.

If that sounds alarming, I wouldn't worry. There is much to be said for living on the edge, in a place shot through with "heartspace and the danger of beauty", as the Boer poet Breytenbach once phrased it. Britain seems pallid in comparison. We are told that your election was an event of epochal significance, but from Jo'burg, it looked boring - three nice white men with almost identical opinions jostling for space on the same centrist pinhead. As for the prospect of a hung parliament. you call that a crisis? Good God. We have far worse, every day, before breakfast. And we're still laughing. Better get here before we stop.
 

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