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Bigunder

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  1. Hello again, I had a great afternoon yesterday at Pride Park, obviously helped by the outcome. Absolutely brilliant support, underlined by the fact that a Premier League fixture down the road had a lower attendance, even with the decent following that the West Midlands sent over. Decent noise throughout the game too, Pride Park seems to work well with the crowd sound and atmosphere - some of the new stadiums get this wrong. I don't think anybody has managed to emulate atmosphere from the old stadiums that were touched by the hand of Archibald Leitch but Pride Park certainly has most of it and, of course, the people component. As for the game, it seemed to me that there looked to be a division between the two sides. I felt that the club, city and fan base seemed to be out of place at L1 level. Back soon.
  2. Perfect thank you, that shows where the pitch was very nicely. See you all tomorrow at 3PM.
  3. Thanks, so the current memorial is roughly where the floodlight was at the end of Cambridge Street. Looking at aerial photos and maps, the Keeper's Green grassy area is a bit of the pitch towards the Normanton End and the grassy area to the right of the memorial (facing from Cambridge Street) is roughly where the Osmaston End goal/penalty area was. I wonder if the kids who play football on that grass now are aware of the history under their feet.
  4. Question about the BaseBall Ground site: The stadium was between Vulkan Street and the end of Cambridge Street along the curve of Shaftesbury crescent, assuming that Vulkan Street redevelopment is in the same place as the original Vulkan Street (?) then the grassy area with X shaped pathways across called "Keeper's Green" must be part of the pitch?
  5. Must be careful here, there is a saying that "familiarity breeds contempt" and that there is a natural human tendency to focus on the negative and the most negative things stand out and become salient in our minds, then we find ourselves unknowingly overlooking the positive. I do see a lot of this country on my travels and there are some places that I don't care for, Derby is not one of them - it's one of the better ones. Nowhere is perfect and any complaint you might have about the place could be made for any other place and often is worse. And those places might not have the Peaks on their doorstep. I would happily live in Derby if circumstances called for it.
  6. That's a no football City to be fair! I would never, back then, have imagined that Derby County would be playing in the same division as Burton though. My non-league town might well have played fixture with them in those days.
  7. Hello folks, A few weeks back, some of you kind people helped me get my bearings in Derby as I have started visiting regularly now my daughter has her first proper job there, after years of training in various places. She has moved to Derby and made it part of my life again. I say again because I have cousins in Derby and I used to be a regular visitor, often spending weeks of school holidays here, so I've been on some nostalgia trips remembering where I used to be as a child - which is where some of you helped, thank you. Anyway, I'm back tomorrow for another visit this weekend. This will include a trip to Pride Park for the Leyton Orient game. This is coincidental because on my school holiday visits, the end of the time would overlap with the first match of the football season. If it was a home match then we would go along. On 29th August 1981 we went along to the opening Div 2 fixture against Orient. Going to see Derby was a big deal then, as within recent memory they had won their second Div 1 league title under Dave Mackay. Now under Colin Addison, those big names like Franny Lee, Bruce Rioch, Colin Todd, Roy MacFarland and Archie Gemmill were all gone. Kevin Hector (who scored on that day) was back for his second spell. I lived in a no-football town so most of my league football was MotD and The Big Match ITV. Being the first day of the season, the Baseball Ground pitch hadn't become the famous mud pit, about 12500 were in attendance and we were in the cheapest standing up enclosure Pop Side and as one of the goal ends had lately been converted to seating we were quite packed in. I still have the match day program which was in a newspaper format rather than a magazine. I've been for a walkabout on the old BB ground site, which is hard to place among the houses now but at least there is a monument. I look forward to Saturday and hearing all your voices - especially as we are at the business end of the season now and there is much at stake for Rams.
  8. I love the idealism, but a terra formed Mars or a Mars isolated bio-container is likely to be even more fragile than Earth's environment. On the scale of the galaxy, let alone the Universe, our entire solar system is barely more significant than the earth itself, so moving within it is not a huge step on a universal scale. And the saddest of all, human nature isn't capable of changing mindset, it would carry its problems with it. Namely there will always be some that are of nefarious intention and often that some are the ones most determined to seek positions of authority or leadership.
  9. This price rise is designed to push people to use the Protect Plus subscription and add more devices. The new price of £49.99 is £100 for two devices, so people might as well get protect plus at £80 to cover any number of devices. They will then invest in extra cameras and become captive to the service. Ring can then jack up the £80 protect plus subscription and wring more cash out of its customers. Meanwhile, people are chucking Ring and changing to alternatives that don't need subscription.
  10. For an analog, have a look at Antarctica habitation by humans in winter. Coastal research stations since the 1950s have sustained people in very artificial circumstances and there are around 1000 scientists and support workers over winter there. It's much easier to reach than any planet, and has plentiful supply of air and water and is easy to resupply but in 70 years there has not been anything significant other than science there. Because there is no other reason to go. If there was a very large oilfield or some other lucrative mineral discovered there, then this might change and the Antarctic Treaty might not stand up too well.
  11. Thank you, I’m putting together the memories. I had a great time in Derby and up in the Peaks. I rolled out along the A52 about 4PM, lights were on at Pride Park - I guess you were all in there. Thanks for everyone’s help, I’ll be back soon.
  12. Hello me again, another question. How long has the St. Peters Mall with the entrance on St. Peters Street been there? i am in city centre currently.
  13. I’ve found the entrance to former Eagle Market, had some strong memory vibes close to the Castle & Falcon. Also River Gardens were a clear memory, felt like they hadn’t changed much. I wonder if anyone remembers a record shop in the city centre, entrance off a main road, and up some stairs - the record shop was on the first floor? Early 1980s. Having a great time exploring, even in the rain.
  14. Yes Ram-Alf, thank you - that’s one thing I do remember about it is that it was over against the side. Everybody was wearing these Pod shoes and they were all bought from here. Pretty sure it was Eagle now. I’m going to have a good look at that area tomorrow. Don’t be too down on Derby, you are describing a nationwide problem as we are transitioning from traditional commercial city centres. I get around the country quite a lot and Derby is definitely one of the better places.
  15. Thanks Boycie, I have a feeling that it was Eagle, though my memory might be playing tricks on me. I will have a look round there on Thursday/Friday and see if there is anything to jog my memory.
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