The first trolley of the new month was a special needs trolley from Sainsbury's, captured on East Street in the course of a Ewell Village anti-clockwise. Having passed up on the significantly reduced stack of trolleys at the creationists. A trolley which seemed particularly heavy going on bumpy stretches of pavement, not least the arrays of bumps at junctions provided to help the blind.
A bit further round, on the footbridge over the railway at Ewell West, a basket rather than a trolley. A basket from the small Co-op in the parade at the bottom end of Longmead Road, bottom in the sense of the direction the stream is flowing on its way to join the Hogsmill.
A basket which was made by the same Wanzl people of reference 2 who make most of the supermarket trolleys that I come across. I suppose the curious shape is partly just trying to make a bit of visual interest, partly in the interests of clean and easy stacking.
Some sticky buds from Longmead Road. On which topic, BH has been reading how lots of plants and animals are getting a bit out of sync as a result of global warming, with some making adjustments faster than others. Resulting, for example, of tits wanting grubs with which to feed their young before the grubs have got around to hatching.
Dementia facility visible behind. See references 3.
References
Reference 1: https://psmv5.blogspot.com/2022/01/trolley-465.html.
Reference 2: https://www.wanzl.com/en_GB. A rather more flashy looking site than I had remembered. Perhaps it has been a while since I last looked.
Reference 3a: https://www.careuk.com/.
Reference 3b: https://www.careuk.com/care-homes. Appleby House top of the list.
No comments:
Post a Comment