Originally broadcast on: http://radiosoapbox.com Radio Soapbox
Women's Hour broadcasts live every Sunday at 7:00p.m. uk time.
9-1-2024
Good evening, everyone! Welcome to another episode of Women's Hour with your host, Shelley Tasker. Today, we have an exciting hour lined up for you. In the first half, we catch up with our regular guest, Jo, who shares her busy week, camping adventures, and some amusing anecdotes about family life and quirky word dislikes. Jo also gives us a fascinating insight into her experience with non-fluoride toothpaste and its unexpected benefits.
In the second half, we are joined by the lovely Janet Moyle from Troon, a local legend who has recently set up a popular line dancing group. Janet shares her journey from retirement to becoming a community leader, the positive impact of line dancing on her life, and the joy it brings to the participants. We also discuss the importance of supporting local farmers and the Farmers Movement Cornwall.
Join us for a heartwarming and entertaining episode filled with laughter, community spirit, and inspiring stories.
Good evening to all of the beautiful ladies out there and the occasional gent that might be listening in. Today's date is Sunday, 1st September 2024. We are well into autumn. Happened for a couple of weeks now in the UK. This is Women's Hour. I am your host, Shelley Tasker. So we've got a great hour lined up for you this evening. For the first half an hour, we've got our regular slot with Jo. Gonna get hold of Jo in a second. And then for the second half, we've got the awesome Janet Moyle, who is a bit of a legend in our next neighbouring village Troon and she's gonna tell us why everybody really looks up to her really. Anyway onwards. Let's get hold of Joe.
Right. Well, let's get Jo on the line. Jo is at work this week, so it's gonna be a sneaky little call. Good evening, Jo. Are you there?
[00:02:00] Unknown:
I am. I am. I am being sneaky. I'm hiding away in the the back office from all the lovely little darlings. So fire away.
[00:02:10] Unknown:
Fire away. Well, have you had a good week?
[00:02:13] Unknown:
I've had a busy week. I've had a busy week. What with one thing and another, I'm glad it's over. You need to start again.
[00:02:24] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, mind you, I'm quite looking forward to next week because the kids go back to school. Not until Thursday, but it's like the end is an air after 6 weeks.
[00:02:35] Unknown:
Yeah. A long, long time. How was the camping?
[00:02:40] Unknown:
Oh, it was lush. It was lush. They were so good. I finally taken the tent down. They didn't wanna stay in it again. Wow.
[00:02:49] Unknown:
Like, you you sort of had them out there for x amount of time. And then once they came in, did you not take the tent down, or you just left it up? I left it up for a few days thinking they might go out there and play. Yeah. Well, you know, I was just thinking of Darren's grass. Oh, lord. It's not lawn poached. I mean, the lawn the lawn, the grass. Yeah. I mean, have you got a yellow pet? We certainly have. Darren reckons that it's
[00:03:17] Unknown:
being eaten by midgets or something because there's a real dark brown patch, but he's looking into it, and he's gotta feed it. But, yeah, the the camping went well. I've had a lovely week off annual leave, which was nice. I mean, I did start with a phone call last week. The house phone was ringing early ish, 10 o'clock on the Monday morning. When no. When exactly. When the house phone rings, I always think of my nan or Eve who we used to look after, and I think, no. It can't be them because nobody rings the house phone anymore. No. No. And then I thought it must be Amazon or something like that. But, anyway, I went back to sleep and then the mobile's ringing. And then you're thinking, oh, dear. Which one is it? I always think it's family. Yeah. So it's my dad.
Oh, your mom's had a fall. Oh, no. Yeah. I know. She's fallen over. She's shaking up. She's got a massive bump on her head. So I was like, okay. Okay. I've literally just woken up. So he's like, don't rush. Don't panic. Have a cup of tea and come down in a bit. I said, yeah. I will do. And, like, 15 minutes later, he phones up and says, are you alright? Because you're not here yet. And I'm like, you've just told me to have a quick cup of tea. Oh, alright. We just thought you might have had an accident or something, like, getting worried. I know. No. I'm on my way. Anyway, my poor mum, bless her. I ended up taking you? Well, they've got this new puppy, which is lovely, but the puppy and the cat don't yet get along.
So she was outside putting the dog out. She's dodging the cat and the dog, and she just basically fell right over. And she's got a lovely face at the moment. Lovely face. I know. Oh. So, you know, she is fine. She was shaking it up shaking off, and I just said, right. If it happens again, that dog has to go. It's a funny thing if, like, you're too are you too old to get a dog?
[00:05:08] Unknown:
Yeah. There's a fine line, isn't there? And especially like you've just said, if you've got other animals in the house that have been there and they are established, you know, bring in a new pet in. The dynamics are just, you know, cray cray.
[00:05:24] Unknown:
Well, this cat is, like, 16, and then he's got a little bouncy puppy. You know? Yeah. Anyway, I think it's all going well. It's all going well, and she's much better. We've been out this week, and she's just, like, kept her sunglasses on and stuff. But To stop the awkward question. Yeah. Yeah. But, yeah, we've it's cost a lot like holidays do with kids, don't they? We haven't done loads of crazy things, but it soon adds up. But I am looking forward to Thursday, Jo. Bit of rhythm, a bit of routine. I like a bit of rhythm and routine. You
[00:05:57] Unknown:
routine. I love routine. I absolutely love it. You know? And I know that we all get, oh, it's so boring. There's a I I don't have a problem being bored. You know? I like to know what I'm doing. Yeah. Yeah. Have yourself a little nap, a little snack, and then a little nap if you're bored. Life's life's peachy. It's fine. Do you know that word snack? I don't know why for whatever reason, but it really bothers me. I don't like the word snack, but there's no other word, is there? Unless we invent another word.
[00:06:31] Unknown:
Mhmm. I don't I don't know why. It really bugs me. And I tell you what other word I don't like, lunch. It's the at the end. Okay.
[00:06:40] Unknown:
Right. Okay. So if we're if we're on dislike of words, my top one. Oh, I don't know why. I just when somebody says it, which is not very often given the word that it is, but when somebody says it, I just wanna smash them in the face with a wet fish, it just really grates on me. Doily.
[00:07:04] Unknown:
Doily?
[00:07:05] Unknown:
Doily.
[00:07:06] Unknown:
Like, as in, like, a paper napkin for a plate?
[00:07:09] Unknown:
Yeah. That you put, like, little
[00:07:11] Unknown:
fancy cake. I don't know what you mean.
[00:07:13] Unknown:
I hate that. Oh, I hate it. Isn't it funny? Yeah. Yeah. And and and I think this is quite a typical word as well, moist. Oh, no.
[00:07:27] Unknown:
Oh, no. I think over the years as you get older and, like, yeah, there's the whole naughty side of
[00:07:34] Unknown:
that. Well, I I'm not even down that sort of, you know, avenue with that word moist. It's just like like like you sort of saying lunch, that bit at the end. Yeah. Moist, that bit at the beginning. You know?
[00:07:54] Unknown:
But so what do you I mean, like, when you eat during the day, do what do you have? Do you have lunch or dinner, or do you have dinner and tea?
[00:08:03] Unknown:
No. No. No. I'm strictly a lunch and dinner girl. So it would be breakfast, lunch, dinner. You know? We don't do you know, I say we like I'm, you know, some sort of royal we. We don't do breakfast 11s or crib, you know, because it it just depends, doesn't it? Or maybe maybe there are some people out there that are greedy. Maybe they do crib. No. Maybe they do breakfast, lunch. Get in a sneaky crib before dinner, which would be lunch, and then tea.
[00:08:45] Unknown:
And then supper. Then supper. I was just gonna say that.
[00:08:48] Unknown:
You know? I mean, crikey. I wonder if we're the only nation that sort of, you know, has such a variety in eating routine.
[00:08:59] Unknown:
Do you eat supper? Do you? No.
[00:09:02] Unknown:
No. I don't. When I'm working, I tend not really to eat lunch per se. I mean, I don't think it's any secret, but I love carrots. I love raw carrots. So my lunch generally consists of munching on a raw carrot. Love it. Love it. Do you peel it? Yes. Yes. Yes. I do. Now there was a time many, many moons ago when I was pregnant that if you gave me a carrot with dirt on, I would literally demand you go back and find one that's even more dirt. I loved it. If it had dirt on it, oh my gosh. It was even tastier.
[00:09:50] Unknown:
I loved sniffing a pot of filler when I was pregnant with my eldest. Oh, I loved it.
[00:09:56] Unknown:
Even when I was in labor, I had this pot of filler with me at the hospital. Oh my god. No. No. No. Oh, I was you know, no. No is my answer to that. I was not I was not down at any of those Just a dirty old carrot. Just a dirty old carrot. But now I've cleaned my act up and I will have it peeled. So I will have lunch and then I will have my dinner, probably about half past 5 when I'm at work because I don't wanna come home. I don't wanna eat late, or I don't even wanna have to think about, oh, now I'm gonna have to, like, quickly cook something. No.
[00:10:37] Unknown:
No. No. I can't stand. I get my moments for cooking. I have one day this week, I cooked lasagna, and I I saw a recipe on Facebook to make, like, crispy, dirty fries, and I did it. And I know I did it. What did they like? They were lovely. And, you know, mum came around and Maddie came around and it was really nice, but then you see it tires towards the end of the week. And like tonight for tea, we quite often once a week have a tin of beans and sausages on toast with grated cheese on top and a cheese sauce. Yeah. Easy.
[00:11:08] Unknown:
So are you talking the little sausages
[00:11:12] Unknown:
actually in the can of beans? Yeah. Yeah. The ones that are probably made of nothing. I don't even wanna check the ingredients.
[00:11:18] Unknown:
Well, you know, there there is that, isn't there? But That's, like, my dirty meal each week. Yeah. I I I used to be quite partial to that. I don't know why I don't have that anymore, But it's quite reminiscent of every time I come on your show, I'm talking about 1970, you know. It's obviously a memorable period for you, Jo. Well, you know, yeah. Take me back when all was good in the bloody world, you know, not like now. However, moving on. Yeah. It's quite reminiscent of a 19 seventies esque kind of kids dinner, you know, or you would have spaghetti hoops on toast. Yep.
Now that was not at the top of my list. You know, I was always disappointed if it was spaghetti hoops. But somehow, it made a slight difference if they were alphabet spaghetti hoops.
[00:12:21] Unknown:
Oh, god.
[00:12:22] Unknown:
Well, you see, you're a little bit older than me, Jo. Not much, but I think bear. But I don't think my mum introduced such a thing into my diet. Oh, lucky you. But I remember when my children were younger, you know, trying to get them to eat all the different spaghetti, Peppa Pig, you name it. Yeah. Did you get it? Yeah. Yeah. They they just somehow
[00:12:43] Unknown:
made it easier to, you know, eat if they were spaghetti letters over hoops. Don't know why. It's the same thing, but there you go.
[00:12:54] Unknown:
Yeah. I think it's funny now because I'm getting older and, like, well, I'd see, like, my mum will be out buying things like that, and she'll pick up a a little tin. You know, one of the little cute ones, and that's enough for their dinner.
[00:13:06] Unknown:
Yes. Little tinned beans. Yeah. Still a bit beaten out. Are are you just a strict baked beans on toast, or are you putting, like, you know cheese on top. Cheese. Loads of salt and pepper. Salt and pepper?
[00:13:20] Unknown:
And HP sauce.
[00:13:22] Unknown:
HP sauce, I am, like, brown sauce or daddy's sauce. Yeah. That's what goes on top.
[00:13:30] Unknown:
Gotta have sauce. We've got a cupboard full of sauces here. Darren just loves all the different sauces. But, you know, they hold some calories, don't they? I mean, I was at work a few weeks ago, and I said, oh, I'll have a salad, please, today. And then the chef said, do you want any of this, Dijon mustardy? Oh, you're gonna top in. And I'm like, oh, yeah. Anyway, I tipped that on, and that was so lovely. And I said, out of interest, how many calories is that? Yeah. And I looked. Yeah. And it was, like, 500 calories for the serving that I had. I was like, bloody hell. I should've just had chips.
[00:14:04] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. But a little top tip is always ask for the dressing on the side. And then, you know, you go, but what difference does it make? Because I'm gonna pour it on as opposed to somebody else. No. No. No. No. That's not what we do. We have the dressing on the sides, and then you dip your fork in the dressing before you then pick the salad leaf or whatever up with your fork. And that way, you are still getting the taste of the dressing, but you're not saturating it. I'll try that tip. I'm I know. With that. I'm just of font of all knowledge. You are. And do you know, I was thinking about you, when I went out last night,
[00:14:50] Unknown:
because I was applying my new false eyelashes.
[00:14:53] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Right. We'll come back to that in a minute. Yeah?
[00:14:57] Unknown:
But I was thinking about you. I was like, I can do it. There's no doubt about it. Be a Jo. Yeah. Damn it, dog's looking. I'll have a sticker like that. Just be a Joe. Just be a Joe. Just be a Joe. Yeah. Yeah. And I wasn't because you usually sit here, and I'm, like, watching tutorials, and I was like, just do it. Just do it. Anyway, I did it. They weren't amazing. You know? Oh, damn that dog. Why does he do this when I'm recording?
[00:15:23] Unknown:
He he he does that all the time, doesn't he? Because it's just a test. It's just a test.
[00:15:30] Unknown:
Well, I think there's probably people walking by, to be fair. I should've shut shut the curtains. Anyway, he'll stop in a second. He will. He will. He will. But my eyelashes yeah. The thing is I've realized today because I had a bit of time, and I thought I'm gonna practice again today. Let's master it because I know people that put them on every day, and they say, oh, it only, yeah, it only takes me a minute. But my problem is getting them stuck in both of the corners. You know? And Yeah. Do they, like, curl up in the in the corner? Well It's fiddly, but I've realized now that the problem is I've not really got any eyelashes for them to cling to. Ah. So But I'm gonna get a serum.
A serum? A serum. Serum. Serum. Eyelashes. Yeah. See if they'll grow because I think I took all the other ones out over the week, and is they have taken a good chunk of my eyelashes. Really? Yep. I was probably a bit ruthless because I just wanted them gone, and I'm just like rip them off. Well, yeah.
[00:16:26] Unknown:
Oh, dear. Anyway, no. Get when I say individual, I don't mean like a individual eyelash hair. Clumps. Yeah. Surely, they would be easier to put on because they're so short. There isn't anything to curl up in the corner of your sort of eye, is there?
[00:16:46] Unknown:
Yeah. Possibly. Possibly. I have thought that because lately, you see, since you've done my hair and I've now done my eyelashes, I just feel like, do you know what? I'm gonna just try out more things Yeah. And learn rather than paying for it. You know? Just be a Jo. What Just be a Joe. Yeah. Nothing. And then I ordered a packet of these, like, Russian eyelashes, a pack of 10 from Amazon. And when they came, I thought, oh my god. They're they're like a bit hideous, actually. They're not too bad, I suppose. But anyway, for some reason, I went to sort out returns and with other things, and it said that on this occasion, you do not need need to send the item back.
[00:17:24] Unknown:
I've had that a couple of times. I yes. I was about to say, I've had that a couple of times. So for work, I mean, oh gosh. You know, I again, I sound like I'm archaic, but I have support socks. Like, I don't know what they're called. Runners use them. What are they called? Compression Do you? Compression socks. Yeah. They're not compression
[00:17:50] Unknown:
flight socks. They're like That's what I was thinking. They're like They're sexy medical socks.
[00:17:55] Unknown:
No. No. No. No. None of that going on. They're like sports socks. So like the Terry Towling, but they're compression ones. Right. And, yeah, sometime last year, I ordered a pair but they weren't big enough. They literally cut my circulation off and, they said you don't need to return them. I'm like, oh, I'll go through the pain threshold, and I'll still wear them then.
[00:18:21] Unknown:
I'll stretch them. Yeah. Absolutely. It is free when they yeah. Because I had another freebie this week because they sent the wrong item. I got a pair of gloves, like gardening gloves when I was waiting for my eyelash glue. And, yeah, and when I've said tried to say because they're like, how was your order? And it's with the right name and address, and I had to go through all that ordeal of messaging and saying, well, actually, I didn't eat because there was no option to say the item isn't what it's supposed to be. Somebody sent the wrong item, you know, on the returns part. Anyway, so I spoke to somebody in the end, and they just said, oh, you can keep those on this occasion. I'm like, thanks. So 2 things in 1 week. Oh, in one week, lady luck for sure. I know you know. I mean, how many Amazon deliveries do you reckon you get a week, Jo?
[00:19:07] Unknown:
Me personally or people in well, I go through phases where I'm just, like, throw caution to the wind. Sod it. I'll have it. I'll have it. I'll have it. And then and then I either come to my senses or the gods think, come on now, love. You don't really need that because the novelty of just being able to press the button and it's delivered the next day wears off. Because when it arrives, I look at it and go, I don't want that. I don't really you know? So I've I've gone through the whole rigmarole of trawling through Amazon, seeing whatever jumps out at me and buying it only to have it delivered and send it straight back.
[00:19:53] Unknown:
But it's the joy of having post, isn't it? Possible. Especially if you're not quite the thing is you ordered your own present, basically, didn't you?
[00:20:03] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I suppose so. Yeah. I mean, post. I mean, let's just talk about post. I don't, you know, I don't particularly like receiving post because then more often than not, it's something I have to deal with. Yeah. I would just I would just rather be incognito and not have any post because that dictates people know where I am. I don't want that.
[00:20:32] Unknown:
Yeah. I know I know what you're like with your privacy and stuff, but I'm just thinking, you know, I see obviously, we can't have as many postman as we used to have because the post office has just died out because of every and Wow. Amazon and stuff. Yeah. And Yeah. You know, I probably get post a couple of times a week, odd bits, but it just goes to show how this whole AI is progressing, doesn't it? We all said it's gonna put people out of jobs, but, I mean, it was probably Amazon and everybody that did that. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Because it was so much cheaper than Royal Mail.
[00:21:09] Unknown:
Yeah. I say it was a slow progression, but, you know, I I I think it was it was a slow progression in terms of it was a slow runaway train, if there's such an analogy. You know? Once it started, there was no stopping it, and it was gathering speeds, and, you know, here we are. However, interesting fact for the day, I was outraged. That is not an interesting fact. That happens on a daily occurrence. However, mister Posty rocked up today at work. Okay? Mhmm. I'm like, what the hell is that? And I'm like, that's it. I'm I'm out my seat quicker than lightning, literally chomping at the bit. And I'm like, you alright, buddy? He went, yeah. I've just got some post. And I'm like, woah. Before you go, what's that outside?
He said, that's a postman. I said, no. It's not. It's not red. He said, oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We're we're switching over to white ones now. I'm like, you what? What do you mean you're switching over to white ones? He says, well, for us to buy all reds post vans, it's more expensive than just buying plain white ones and sticking the Royal Mail emblem on the side. And I'm like, no. No. That's wrong. That's that's just wrong. But, yeah, that's what Royal Mail of the times. It is. That's what Royal Mail are doing now. They are not when their red vans sort of, you know, give up the ghost, need replacing, they're not replacing them with red ones. They're replacing them with white because they're cheaper.
[00:22:56] Unknown:
Right. Well, that is an interesting fact, and people can say they heard it from Jo first.
[00:23:00] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Full of full of inspiring trivia information.
[00:23:06] Unknown:
Yeah. But that's the sort of thing I would remember. I'm a bit annoyed actually because I was trying to tell someone the other day all about my reasons for coming off the mini pill and stuff like that. And do you know a month ago? Because I know I reeled it all off to you, all the facts about estrogen and,
[00:23:21] Unknown:
Yeah. You were very good. Testosterone.
[00:23:23] Unknown:
And what's the other one?
[00:23:25] Unknown:
Progesterone.
[00:23:26] Unknown:
Yeah. Anyway, I researched it. La di da di da. And I was trying to tell someone, and I've just got I I I can't remember. I think I've got real brain fog for, like, perimenopause. My brain is bad enough anyway, but that was a month ago that I heavily researched, and I was, like, telling everyone. And now it's like, I've totally forgotten. Where's it gone? But then you can take some lion's mane mushroom I'm taking that, Jo. Oh, okay. And I'm taking my little medicinal microdosing things.
[00:23:58] Unknown:
Right. Yeah. And how's that going?
[00:24:01] Unknown:
Yeah. I haven't seen a significant difference. It's probably coming on for 2 weeks. They recommend at least 4 weeks. But the one weird thing I am noticing is beauty in people. And I I don't necessarily mean their kindness or anything. Just, like, really attractive people. I don't know if it's, like, their aura or something. Like, I was in a shoe shop a couple of days ago in Truro, and this young woman was serving me. And she was stunning. And, you know, I'm I'm not attracted to other women as such, but you look at and you can see, oh, you're attractive. You're pretty. Blah blah blah. What makes someone attractive to look at? But she was just stunning, but she had something about her. And I couldn't say, do you know you're stunning? Because she would think, what a freaking weirdo. And the like, a week ago, I was somewhere else and this other girl was serving me and her hair was lovely. She just looked amazing. And I said, oh, love your hair. What have you? And then I was dropping a parcel off at one of these parcel locker places, and this man was walking by with his 2 children in the buggy. And I nearly said to him, god, you've got beautiful children.
I'm just seeing faces and having this weird sort of sense of, like, I don't know if, like, perhaps on a very spiritual way, it's opened a gateway that I can see these these special beings or something. I don't know. It's really weird. Well, no. It's not weird. It's not weird.
[00:25:26] Unknown:
I've had something similar, and I'm still deciding whether it's because I've switched a product which has enabled me just to see things in a different light. And by that, I just mean, like, noticing things. Mhmm. I can't I can't describe it, But I think it's something along the lines of, you know, removing a blockage. So, you know, people out there don't hate on me. Don't hate on me. We're all creatures of habit. It's taken me till now to give up fluoride toothpaste. So oh my gosh. This product, Shelley, I love it. I love it. Literally, within probably using it twice, you can see that your teeth are a whole load brighter.
It's got something PAP in it. So they're like minute molecules that actually get through the microscopic pores in the enamel into your teeth, and they neutralise any of the yellow. It's it's absolutely wonderful stuff. Anyway, I was using it and then all of a sudden it dawned on me. It was almost as if somebody had you know, you get, you know, you get those lights that are on dimmer switches. Yeah. It was like as if somebody had turned up the dimmer switch so things were a lot brighter. Oh, really? Yeah. And I was like, oh, that's interesting.
You know, is it is it in part because I'm not using fluorides anymore? And I don't know anything about this, whether there is some sort of process of
[00:27:30] Unknown:
decalcification or whatever, you know, of the pineal gland? Oh my gosh. Listen to you. You're like a a dentist. You need to research this. Yeah. And we are running out of time. So I expect you next week to come back with a report. Alright? Okay.
[00:27:46] Unknown:
I will. But yes. Yeah. I I think there is I think there is some sort of little awakening we're all having further awakening.
[00:27:55] Unknown:
Interesting. It is interesting a lot bit. Wow. Yes. I know. So we are gonna have to I'm gonna have to let you get back to your last bit of work, Jo. I know. I know. I'm gonna have to round up. I tell you, it's like herding cats. It really
[00:28:10] Unknown:
is. But, yeah,
[00:28:12] Unknown:
I'm gonna sort them to your darlings out. As always, lovely to speak to you. Yes. You too, my lovely. And we will catch up in the week, I'm sure.
[00:28:20] Unknown:
Okeydokey.
[00:28:21] Unknown:
Thanks, Jo. Speak to you soon. Alright, bye. Bye. And now we have our second guest, which is the lovely Janet Moyle from Trune. Good evening, Janet, and welcome to Woman's Hour. Good evening, Shelley. Thanks for having me. No. You're welcome. It's lovely. I know we've talked about this for a while. For those listening, Janet is Janet, how do we describe you? I want that song to come on that some in that film. Janet. Janet. You know what? Don't mind me. Now I'm fortunate enough to know Janet. I've become aware of Janet over the last few years, and, oddly enough, I used to go out with her son when we were in school many years ago. But Janet is, probably regarded very high in the Trim community.
She's recently set up, well, it's become a very popular line dancing group, and it now you know, it didn't it started with 1, and now it's running over 2 nights a week. You're a busy lady, Janet.
[00:29:30] Unknown:
I am. Yes. So yeah. Well, I retired I retired last May, and sort of worked 20 months over retirement age, you know, even the the extended one that they put on us. And, thought, what am I gonna do? I'll retire in the summer. So I did in May and enjoyed the garden, the beach, you know, ladies who lunch and that kind of thing. And then the winter came. I thought, pry you. This is horrendous. What began to do now? This is gotta think of something. So, I think it was about February this year. A friend and myself, thought, oh, let's, you know, line dancing. What can we do? And we went after a fabulous group in Redruth that's running Redruth Rugby Club line dancing.
And I used to do it many, many years ago at Trune Cricket Club. And, I thought, picked it up again quite well, and I thought, this is fabulous. And we were going there for weeks. And, I said to the lady, you know, have you got time to do one at Trune? Because I thought, but the ladies in Trune would love it. And, she didn't have time. She's a very busy lady as well doing all sorts. And, so I just put something out on the Trune Facebook and said, would anybody like to join us at the village hall? I'm going with a friend just to practice some lung dancing steps if anybody wants to join us. And a few ladies came. Oh, there's only about 5 or 6 that came. And then others were, oh, I didn't realize that was on, so we post a bit late. Are you doing it anymore? And it was such a, you know, quite an a take on it. So I thought, right. Let's let's do it. Let's set up a group. And you came to my first night.
[00:31:06] Unknown:
I did. That's brilliant.
[00:31:09] Unknown:
I know. And we were all a little bit cramped. I didn't expect so many to turn up. And, so we're all a little bit cramped, and I had more people on the waiting list. So I asked the football club here in Troon, and we were renting the room off if we could have 2 nights. And we're doing it over 2 nights, and it's, it's just really taken off. And we've been about 12 weeks now, and they just know so many dancers. And it's people just say to me after us, thank you for starting this, or this is really lovely. We've had such a fun night. But I have. I mean, what it's done for me, you know, let alone the ladies. It's it's done huge things for me.
You know, just building What has it done for you? Well, I started to lose over the winter a bit of my confidence. For my job, I worked for a housing association. So I was doing kitchen and bathroom surveys. So I was around the whole county with all my little samples of, you know, worktops and units and paint colors and things, measuring up, etcetera. And, so I was all over the corner meeting people who would love to see me because they were getting a new kitchen or a new bathroom. And it was great. And I love the job. That's why I was really reluctant to finish. But, you know, it got to a time where you think not enough. And, and then it was just nothing.
Like I say, the 1st few months of last summer, ladies who lunch in the garden down the beach. It's alright for so long, isn't it? Yeah. And then winter hits, doesn't it? And you don't see a soul, and you're thinking I've gone all day. I've not spoken to anybody. So for me, again, I've met some wonderful, wonderful people. A lot in a lot of what's happened over the last 4 years or so. We've all met some really wonderful people we thought we'd never never get to meet. Totally different people, you know, we probably wouldn't be in their sort of groups or their sort of life, things. But life just met the most amazing, amazing group of people. There's about 38 of of them.
That's just absolutely wonderful. And it's it's inspired me again, because a friend of mine said to me, today, I said that I was I was gonna be doing this. And he said, oh, you've I said, oh, I said, I'm feeling a little bit nervous, I think. And, I thought even though I know you, so he said, how can you be? You've set up a live dancing group with a lot of people you didn't really know. And I thought, yeah, I did. You did. So, yeah, that it's really inspired me. It's given me a lot more confidence again, which I started to lose. I think which you can when you retire and you're on your own. You can start to lose that confidence of, you know, not speaking with people. And, and, yeah, and off I go every Monday and Wednesday. Off I go up there without wonderful, wonderful teasing.
[00:34:00] Unknown:
I saw. You're now almost like a company. You're you're a proper club, aren't you? True line dancing. And for those that obviously can't see, Janet, has been holding up a nice red t shirt that they've all had done. But I mean, really, it just goes to show people, isn't it? Because this theory always comes in that you can't know about something or teach someone unless you have a qualification. Now you're not a teacher as such, but you knew what you were doing. And low and behold, here you are now running your own Yeah. Blind dancing group.
[00:34:34] Unknown:
And this is what I said here. Just a step at a time. Just follow me, basically. No. I'm not teaching it.
[00:34:42] Unknown:
But, you know, this You are. You're showing everybody. You know what I mean? It was interesting that first night because you had a few technical issues. It did make me laugh. You're trying to do the find things on YouTube. The dance Oh. To copy and See, that was the best. I could do the live dancing, but I couldn't work the television. So That's like me. That's like me. Before we've set up this recording, I have to get my other half to come in here and change the microphone settings and the audio settings. And I say to him every time he does it, I said, I must write that down.
[00:35:14] Unknown:
And now automatically, he's like, I've done your sound for you. I'm like, oh, brilliant. Thank you. No. I can't plan. Take a look. I can do it now. You know, it's like but I mean, I haven't got that kind of TV. Like, no. I don't really watch TV and then because it's all this modern stuff of YouTube on there, which you can find on your laptop. And then, yeah. Yeah. But,
[00:35:32] Unknown:
I have no idea what I was doing that first night with the telly. No. It didn't matter though. It didn't matter. Everyone had fun. Everybody was bouncing, and I couldn't believe actually, like, how much you build up a sweat and you get your heart rate up.
[00:35:46] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. You really do. People think it's such a gentle thing, which it it is. You know, you're not sort of jumping up and down or anything like that. But you really do. Yeah. I mean, this this last week or so, we're gonna have some really nice sunshine. We've had to, have sort of 2 breaks during the evening rather than the one. Because we're just so hot. Doors and windows open. And last Wednesday, I got them out on the football field to dance.
[00:36:12] Unknown:
Oh, lovely. Lovely. So do you have the same group twice, or is it, like, different people on both nights?
[00:36:20] Unknown:
Different people. I think there's 3 that come both nights. They enjoy it so much. They're really keen people. Yeah. Yeah. Really keen. They come both nights. But, yeah, the the rest are, yeah, different people on different nights. And so I've organized a social night on, 13th September down at the Conservative Club. So the 2 groups can actually get together. So we've got an entertainer, a singer, who's coming down, oh, who's not coming down, but who's coming over, and he's doing that for us. And, and actually, he's the gentleman that, sponsored our t shirts. Alright. Brilliant.
Yeah. He's paid for them all. He's just absolutely amazing. So he's coming. He's a singer as well. He's, you know, he's got a day business, but he's a singer. And, so he's come in to do that, and I'm asking what kind of songs we want that we can do line dances to so he can get himself a a list together. Get get the 2 groups together.
[00:37:18] Unknown:
And anybody else? Sorry. Go on. No. Have your groups, yeah,
[00:37:23] Unknown:
started going mad, all mad with, like, the hats and the boots and the the extras yet? Because if I carried on, I just would have done. I would have done. Yeah. There's a few that have been starting to pick up hats and things. They all got that nearly all got their t shirts, because the gentleman again that, it's amazing how these things happen. Isn't it? You start up something like this, and I think in the support I've had. So a gentleman that I used to work at at the housing association with, he left that. He's also an entertainer.
He's he's, you know, he, goes around the circuit. And, he has got a design company where he does printed t shirts, mugs, and things like that as well. So, I don't know if I'm supposed to say the names of these people in there. Like. Oh, I'm gonna take it out. So, so first of all, the the gentleman that's paid for our t shirt is called Dave James, and, he's got a garage, Ross Speith in Penzance and, Dave James all closed, but, also, he's a singer. And, then there's Paul Chin, who's Move It is the, the band Move It. He sings with them as well, and he's got Dreamy Designs that designed all our t shirts. And, I happen to say to him, you know, if we wanted some t shirts, I see that somebody's told me that you print them, and he said, yeah. Yeah.
That's fine. I can I can do that for you? You know, I'll do some designs and see what you think. And, I said, because I knew him in house in them. And then the gentleman who's a friend, who paid for them all messaged me, and he said, hey. You're getting some t shirts done. Blah blah blah. And he said, do you want to see if a business will sponsor you? I said, no. I can't go doing that. I can't go asking people. So he said, well, some business will sponsor you. And I said, oh, no. No. I said, I'll try and save what money I I get extra from the line dancing to sort of subsidize and then see if the ladies will want to buy them. And he said, I don't think you'd know what I'm trying to say to you. I went, what?
So don't make me cry. He said, I will sponsor your t shirts. I said, it's gonna be a great day of them. Yeah. And he didn't make me cry. You know? And I thought, I can't believe it. So we've had half of them done, and the other half should be coming this week for the rest of the ladies. And they wear them up at their, up at their classes. They put them on, and they're black jeans or black leggings. I've got a cap where I had my daughter bought it for me last week.
[00:39:54] Unknown:
Oh, I love it. Unfortunately, for me, it was like the gym on the Monday night or line dancing or scouts. And, actually, I'm not doing anything now on a Monday night. But, it's always everything happens at once, doesn't it? And I didn't think my other half was overly keen, but he did it. Bless him. Did it? Didn't he? Oh, no. He did, didn't he? I I thought, I bet he's been dragged along. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And then it was just that other man there. And it was quite funny because the other man, came and spoke to him in the interval to, like, make him feel a bit more comfortable, I think. Have you got any men doing it now, or is it all women? Just one. Yeah. 1 on a Wednesday. 1 man, Steve, on a Wednesday,
[00:40:32] Unknown:
and he's probably been coming about 5 or 6 weeks now.
[00:40:36] Unknown:
So will he have some, like, little lead roles, Willie? Because he's the only man he can get up and do, like, a a Well, we we
[00:40:43] Unknown:
do sort of laugh at him because we do one dance to Shania's trends, man, I feel like a woman. It's a real sort of point at him, you know, but he's great. He really takes it, you know, and and good, yeah. He's good. And the ladies all sort of rally around and show him if he's doing a foot wrong somewhere, but
[00:41:02] Unknown:
absolutely brilliant. You know, he's picking it up. And it's really in, though, isn't it? My you know, my partner plays in a band, and he said that they're now gonna start doing a few line dancing tracks because it's just all the rage.
[00:41:13] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Well, it it really, really is. And this is like Dave who's going to do our social nights so they can both get together. And it's open to anybody else that wants to come because we're selling tickets for £3 to pay for the entertainment. And, yeah. So and to anybody else that wants to come. And they just can't wait to get together. And he just said, what sort of things do you dance to that he can sing? And then in his break, he'll put some tracks on. He said to me, what tracks do you want to put on things like Shania Twain that he can't do? So while he has his break, he'll put some tracks on that we can announce to as well. Oh, nice. And it will be fun as well because you will all you will all no doubt be having a few drinks, some of you.
[00:41:58] Unknown:
And, but I'm like, you know, you don't usually drink now on a Monday or Wednesday. And I bet it would be interesting because I bet some people as well with a couple of drinks on board and a bit more confidence. A bit confidence. Yeah. Won't they? Yeah. They will. Do you know what? It's pretty amazing. You can see how confident they're getting with it as well now because,
[00:42:17] Unknown:
you know, before you're so busy concentrating, eyes down, looking at your feet. And I said to them, try and keep your head up because you can still see someone else's feet in front. But it's your head and your feet that need to work, not your head, eyes, and feet because that's where you start to get confused. So try not to look at your feet, but use your head to move your feet, your brains sort of thing. And, they're just brilliant. And now that they've got that, I mean, no. So many dancers
[00:42:42] Unknown:
just like that, you can see their arms swinging, and they sing. Oh, wow. You know? I knew they are getting good. Yeah. Yeah. And it's funny actually because when I step down into my lounge, I do one of the steps that you've taught us. It's like a shift with with your foot. It's real I don't know why I'll do it ever since that night. I do one of these stupid steps. Fair. Everyday life. But and I think people like a bit of a dance where they can get up and all all join in, and it's nothing too too complex. Is it?
[00:43:14] Unknown:
Yeah. No. This is it. You know, and they're all in line now whereas, you know, they were sort of all zigzagging and jumping into one moment. And they all keep their lines and their distances, and it just works so well. You know? Sometimes I stand back because I start dancing with them, and then I sort of move towards to get the next track ready. And I look back at them, and I'm thinking, look at just look at them. Arms swinging, singing, smiling, you know, hips going, all in line. And I think, oh my god. All clapping at the same time because we're doing dances that got claps in them and feet stomping in them now. I was just thinking, oh my god. My absolute heart bursts with pride. It really does when you think they were going to absolute heart bursts with pride. It really does when you think they were going so lovely. That's so lovely, though, because you've got that proud feeling. It's like your mama to them all, aren't you? You brought them those steps. You brought them all together,
[00:44:04] Unknown:
and you bought them out of themselves into a social side, but perhaps a lot of them probably never even go out or wouldn't want to go to a gym or bring on, you know, any sort of exercise or something like that. And I thought I found everyone very friendly when I went. But, no. Wonderful.
[00:44:20] Unknown:
Oh, they are the most wonderful people. They really are the authority.
[00:44:26] Unknown:
Trooden based, are they, or are they splattered over? No. No. Yeah. They come out. Campbell,
[00:44:34] Unknown:
right. Yeah. Yeah. So, I mean, quite a few of them are are truing based. Must be a good sort of probably dozen of them that are truing based, and then we've got some Beacon. But, do you know what? I I mean, I often say to them, you should be really proud of yourselves for what you've done. Because they can't and that's what got me. After the first few weeks that they got a few dancers off my heart, they cheered and clapped themselves at the end of the dance. And I Lovely. Yeah. Well done. You know? Because they are they're they're such I mean, when I have a few of them messaging me saying I'd like to do that, you know, right at the beginning when I said I was gonna do it. I'd like to, but I've got 2 left feet. I haven't got much confidence. I haven't got much rhythm or whatever. And I said, everybody is starting from scratch.
You'll all be in the same position. The first 2 or 3 weeks, you'll be feet, legs, and arms everywhere. You know? I said, don't worry about it. You'll all be exactly the same. And they came up and, you know, it was, I don't really see many people. I don't mix with many people or things like that. But the everybody's just chatting and laughing at break time, and it will end between break time. Somebody turns the wrong way, and everybody's facing this way, and they're facing that way. And and everybody has a laugh. It's they are just the loveliest,
[00:45:50] Unknown:
loveliest. I mean, I feel really privileged to have these 2 groups. I really do. You do. You tell how much you love it as well. And I bet now you're constantly I know I tend to bump into in the shop in Trune. I bet now and out into the shop for you, like, takes about 2 hours.
[00:46:09] Unknown:
I always go in for my chocolate afterwards. I go straight in the shop with some chocolate
[00:46:14] Unknown:
after a long dance session. You deserve it for sure. But I found this week actually on I don't know what day it was. On the weekend, my other half of my son actually got worried about me because I was gone for over half an hour. I said, I'm just gonna go to the shop to get some eggs. And, I started chatting to this man probably about 10 doors down, and we have the most loveliest chats. And, I mean, I love chatting to people. Hence, this is why I do these shows to learn about people, about their lives, and stuff like that. And what I do notice is a lot of these elderly people, they they like to tell you all about their ailments and what's wrong with them. And he really opened up about how poorly his wife had been and their past, you know, what they've done in their retirement years and stuff like that. But, they were lovely. And I think people miss out these days because they're always in such a rush. And he said nobody stops to have a chat anymore.
And he said, he was saying about the houses opposite. He said, all they worry about is their cars. He said, in the evenings, he said, if a space comes free, he said, they're out there moving their car, so it's right by their house. Now I've gotta laugh because I think you've got a car incident, haven't you? I can't you're a robber, I think, who told me that you can't do something because you don't wanna move your car.
[00:47:33] Unknown:
Well, the thing is, I mean, I'm fine in a day. I'm afraid to go out sometimes at night, which I've I've taken. It's probably enough the last few months, I've been going out. I can't get in and I've got all the 2 streets away. Yeah. But I used to. I think the winter months are the worst for me because I don't like coming back home alone in the dark and just park in 2 streets away. That that worries me. That's fair enough. Yeah. But we've, you know, we've to tune is
[00:48:01] Unknown:
horrendous, you know. Everywhere to be fair. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:48:04] Unknown:
So, I mean, most people look good. They will try and park. Yeah. But for me, going out in the evening, I'll say this time of the year, I don't mind, you know, park around the corner or anything. But in the winter, I I'm coming home alone. I, you know, thinking, I don't wanna go out, you know, in the dark because I will I be able to park when I get back? Yeah. Yeah. Now I've just got to the point where, well, whatever. I've got a friend I've got a friend up the road who stays up late. Like, if I've gone out somewhere, I'll say to her, right. I'm coming in. I'm parking at your end of the street. Can you watch me go down the road? And she'll come out the door and watch me go down the road.
[00:48:41] Unknown:
Oh, so it's like real team spirit looking out for each other. And you've got to do them in the dark, haven't you? Nowhere safe these days.
[00:48:48] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I think that's where it's this line dancing has sort of got some of that that back because everybody was saying there was nothing for us ladies in the village. Nothing. You know, years years ago, when our moms were sort of young girl or our grounds, they have the women's WI and things like that to to go to. And, it just didn't seem to be anything. So I'm sure it's a big village, isn't it? You know, you've got people on the side, all lanes together. So, you know, you're just thinking just to be able to do something.
[00:49:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Twice twice a week if you want to. And, you know, I know, another lady who I'm gonna interview has a lot to do with Trune as well. Yeah. Yeah. 2 great ladies from Trune. And it is people like you that we need in the community, though, to get these things going. Perhaps you should start a WI next, you know, for one of your free nights off. But when you're not dance in and organizing stuff, what are you doing? What what are you, oh, where's your passion lie, Janet?
[00:49:52] Unknown:
I think my passion is lying with the dancing at the moment. This sort of just takes us quite quite a bit of time. But I started a walk when I started I joined a walking group on a Tuesday morning last year, about last September, October time. Thought the winter's coming in. I don't mind walking in the rain, but as it is, Tuesday mornings always seems to be fairly dry. So we're not really even if it's tucked in down the rest of the days. So I joined a walking group on a Tuesday morning, which is just for an hour. But, again, wonderful people that you just chat chat chat to walking all the way around. And did they did in train then?
No. They meet in Cambourne. Alright. Okay. Yeah, by Cambourne Park, and it's the reach training company. And, I've been down little lanes I didn't even know existed before in Campbell. I thought I've never where does this? Down the back of Key Helen, and I'm thinking, where am I now? Where's across the field? Where am I gonna come out? You know? So it's been really that's been really lovely. And then, for Christmas, my daughter bought me, a set of acrylic paints with some canvases and the canvas cards, you know, that you can paint on so that you're not ruining your canvases when you're learning. Never picked up a paintbrush before. And it just stayed there and stayed there till about 5 or 6 weeks ago.
And then I just got them down one day, and I just sat at the table, and I was lost for hours painting.
[00:51:15] Unknown:
And and are you any good? Are you any good? Well, I don't know. Well,
[00:51:20] Unknown:
you've you know what art is like in this day and age. You could flick some splatters at it and, like, could be worth Well, this is what it was. I mean, I just started off mixing colors and swaying all over the place. It was nothing it was not a picture in particular. And, people come, that's really good. I swear, I don't know what I don't know what it is. I've got a clue.
[00:51:41] Unknown:
But it's all you're feeling, the colors, the emotion. It's so far, you're making retirement look really exciting, actually. Nine bouncing a couple of nights a week, your little trips to the
[00:51:53] Unknown:
shop, you know, worrying about carpeting spaces. Yeah. Get me chocolate and have a chat with everybody.
[00:52:01] Unknown:
No. Good for you. And then on the other side, you do have we have a, like, slight connection. I think we support some of the same causes. And, Farmers Movement Cornwall Farmers Movement? I say it wrong all the time. Yeah. Yeah. You're quite involved with that?
[00:52:19] Unknown:
We're we're yeah. Oh, yeah. So always, you know, support them wherever we can. A friend and I went down when they had the one by the Caronwell. Is it the veg stand? It's not veg stand. The photo
[00:52:36] Unknown:
for.
[00:52:36] Unknown:
Oh, yes. That's the one. Yeah. We went down there and hung up the banner and had our t shirts and not been able to get to much recently, but, I mean, I I tell my grindancers all about.
[00:52:49] Unknown:
Just tell the listeners then what exactly is this,
[00:52:53] Unknown:
farmers movement call more. Give them a bit more. You may know more about me, and I'm probably speaking to Joan Davis. But basic. Just the basic. Yeah. So with what's been going on the last 4 years and people that don't know this, there's a lot of things going on politically, but they're they're trying to take land from farmers. And for a lot of years, they've been paying them to not grow things on their land, to not farm on their land. And now it's getting quite crucial where they really are looking at stopping them from feeding us, basically.
And without the farmers, not only do we not have food, but we're going to have food shortages because things have been really hot enough lately. But we won't have clothes. I mean, everything comes from the land, you know, and those those farmers that it's it's not a job to them, is it? It's a vocation. You know, they it's their life and their livelihood, and and we need them. And more and more over the years, which I didn't realize, and I've had to learn all this, they've just been taking so much away and important so much rather than using what we've got here. I mean, when I go out of my walks on a Tuesday, and we're all retired people and they'll say, did you just don't see any animals on the farm or we don't see the growth on the farms like we used to? You know, we might be at a high point, as part of the walk and you're looking down over fields.
And you're just thinking, where's all the animals? You used to look down over the fields and see sheep and cows and, you know, and you just don't stare to that. And the growth, you know, whatever vegetation's in at the time, that time of the year. And it's getting really, really serious now. If we don't start standing up and saying, we're not having it. We don't want to import foods that we don't know what's in it. We want to own grow. Means for me, for a long, long time now, my daughter and friends that I've spoken to have all started to do the same. I go to farmers shops as much as possible. I go down to the dairies to get my milk, take my bottles down there and fill up the milk, you know, and get a lot of food from the, you know, from the phone shops. Necessarily
[00:55:07] Unknown:
that much more expensive, I don't think. And I think you know where it's coming from. I mean, I can buy milk at my butchers, which is the same milk that goes to your big supermarkets anyway, and it's the same price. But I'm giving them the business. Yeah. And buying my eggs there, and, I spend a lot of money on eggs each week because I've started baking, and I've done a lot of stuff from scratch. And, you know, spending about £10 a week just on eggs.
[00:55:35] Unknown:
Nothing really cheap. I mean, I always come down to your local shop to get the cornhill eggs because Yeah. They're local eggs, and I just
[00:55:43] Unknown:
love those eggs. And if you get the large ones, you usually get the double yolkers.
[00:55:48] Unknown:
Yeah. It's just really good fun of this. Fresh. Yeah. Just supporting everything as local as possible. And it's not always expensive because when I was at the supermarket, you know, you couldn't always pick up individual things. And certainly, the local shop, if you want a menu, you've gotta buy 3 kind of thing. And, and it means I could buy what I want. But, also, it was getting me out. I wasn't just going into this supermarket where I'm thinking just sell everything in a basket because these crowds all around you. Just, you know, and now I just I have a morning, or an afternoon sometimes where I go off to the dairy, go to this farm shop to get this, go to that farm shop to that, go and get sort of so and so's bread from and just have a little time out going around Yeah. Chatting and getting the things that I want, that I know I will use.
I mean, my son was the youngest son was saying that he's, well, you've got these food bins now. And I said, no. And he he think in these little bins, he lives in place to put food waste in. I said, I don't really get any food waste. He said, really? I would no. Because I buy what I need and use it even if I've gotta freeze it after it's cooked because I'm, you know, not gonna be but I use it now. So I find, yes, it doesn't really cost me anymore, and I'm more picky. I'm not picking up things just for the sake of filling the cupboards anymore. No. No. Our cupboards are quite empty, actually. And it was funny, a couple of days ago because I used to be, like, buying your Kit Kats and everything like that.
[00:57:17] Unknown:
And since I've started baking and everything, my son stopped asking because he's like, that's all there is. You know? That's all there is. And I've managed to source raw milk. I have to drive half an hour away to get it, but he's getting that goodness in him. Oh, you you still you still still me? I will have a chat because it's like treasure. And and it's a really it's a really hot topic as well because I know so many people that want raw milk, and they say, where do you get your raw milk? And I say, I can't say. I can't say because the farmer is so worried.
[00:57:48] Unknown:
Yeah. You know? That's right.
[00:57:50] Unknown:
Lose his business over that. But the point is like it. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:57:54] Unknown:
Yeah. It was pasteurized, but it's No. It's not pasteurized at all. It's totally So I'm getting it pasteurized, but not hydrogenized. And so it tastes like the milk did when I was a child. Yeah. Lovely. Cream on the top and everything. So I'm I've been getting that from shrimp dairy, but I've heard there's a dairy just at the top of trilling just up there going on. That as well. My mom was telling me that. But,
[00:58:18] Unknown:
yeah, I'm really into all of this natural stuff and what have you. But Yeah. Anyway, we're gonna have to call it time because we've been chatting for half an hour. And Really? I know. I know. You're gonna have to come on again, and we can chat more about the farmer's movement and just life because, yeah, just Yes. Good to know that.
[00:58:38] Unknown:
Thank
[00:58:38] Unknown:
you so much, and I wish you the best for the line dancing. And I look forward to seeing you post post on Facebook and stuff. So Oh, there'll be some posts up on my social right. I'm sure it's videos as well, the drunk people and, you know Yeah. You're the drunk people. Yeah. I think I know there might be. Certain ringleaders. Yeah. Well, you take care of myself, my lovely, and we'll catch up again soon.
[00:59:01] Unknown:
And thank you very much. You're welcome. Bye for now. Bye. Bye.
[00:59:06] Unknown:
And that's it for this week, guys. I'll be back the same time next week. Have an awesome week.