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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2008 13:07 
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Roger wrote:
I wonder how the folk debating on here would interpret my lane discipline?

I always position myself for minimum risk overall. This for the most part means, when the road is otherwise empty, to the point that there is at least 20 seconds before I catch up with anything or anything catches up with me, my position is for optimum visibility and/or maximm tolerance to mechanical drift. Typically this is "tearing along the dotted line" between L2 and 3 or, on a 2-each-way road, the dotted line between 1 & 2.

If anything is appraoching from behind, at or around the 30-seconds to catch-me-up point I will be in the leftmost lane (having been already adjusting speed to a secondary degree up or down to ensure any overtake I am to make is either over or not started before the carcher-upper caeches up or is past me respectively.

If I am catching up traffic in front, I will be in the rightmost lane, with speed asjusted to avoid the above scenario and/or avoid a too slow or too fast differential speed for an overtake.


I'd probably think you'd been drinking and were overcompensating.

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2008 15:10 
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Roger wrote:
I wonder how the folk debating on here would interpret my lane discipline?

I always position myself for minimum risk overall. This for the most part means, when the road is otherwise empty, to the point that there is at least 20 seconds before I catch up with anything or anything catches up with me, my position is for optimum visibility and/or maximm tolerance to mechanical drift. Typically this is "tearing along the dotted line" between L2 and 3 or, on a 2-each-way road, the dotted line between 1 & 2.

If anything is appraoching from behind, at or around the 30-seconds to catch-me-up point I will be in the leftmost lane (having been already adjusting speed to a secondary degree up or down to ensure any overtake I am to make is either over or not started before the carcher-upper caeches up or is past me respectively.

If I am catching up traffic in front, I will be in the rightmost lane, with speed asjusted to avoid the above scenario and/or avoid a too slow or too fast differential speed for an overtake.


I do not split between L2 & 3, otherwise pretty much what I do.

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2008 15:36 
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Cooler wrote:
RobinXe wrote:
Cooler wrote:
safedriver wrote:
I recently came upon a man on the M6 Toll in the middle lane, all on his own, going about 65 mph. The inside lane was clear as far as the eye could see.

Why for heavens sake ?


Safedriver,

Well, he had paid for his space.

C.


Nope, the only dimension he has paid for is his distance, all other dimensions are still subject to sharing and cooperation with other road users.


Robin,

You said that he was all on his own. Who was he sharing and cooperating with?

C.


I said nothing of the sort.

He was observed, therefore presumably not alone.

QED.


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2008 15:48 
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I'm the same as Roger too but it varies depending whether I'm using the car or motorbike. When I'm on my bike, wherever the road bends I visualize what I would skid into if I hit some crud on a wet day. I'd prefer not to slide into a tree or the swords they use for the uprights on barriers.

So with this in mind I ride such that if the worst happens I will at least slide to a halt, which means my road position may be somewhat questionable at times but it maximises my safety. (Whether the driver behind me knocks me into the middle of next week is another matter).

So, like most bikers, I try to make the bends as big as possible by positioning myself accordingly. Other drivers will see it as strange but this comes back to my argument about the best drivers are more likely to be those who have had experience on two wheels.

PS. I've just seen an accident today :( An 84 year old lady crashed into a bus stop. She had a plant on her passenger seat which fell over and as she tried to put it back upright she veered off the road. She was okay apart from a bloody nose, from the air bag. Micra will definitely be written off. Good job there wasn't anyone at the bus stop :yikes:

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2008 16:25 
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RobinXe wrote:
Cooler wrote:
RobinXe wrote:
Cooler wrote:
safedriver wrote:
I recently came upon a man on the M6 Toll in the middle lane, all on his own, going about 65 mph. The inside lane was clear as far as the eye could see.

Why for heavens sake ?


Safedriver,

Well, he had paid for his space.

C.


Nope, the only dimension he has paid for is his distance, all other dimensions are still subject to sharing and cooperation with other road users.


Robin,

You said that he was all on his own. Who was he sharing and cooperating with?

C.


I said nothing of the sort.

He was observed, therefore presumably not alone.

QED.


Robin,

Quite correct and noted. The quote above is from 'safedriver'.

C.

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2008 16:28 
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Big Tone wrote:
I'm the same as Roger too but it varies depending whether I'm using the car or motorbike. When I'm on my bike, wherever the road bends I visualize what I would skid into if I hit some crud on a wet day. I'd prefer not to slide into a tree or the swords they use for the uprights on barriers.

So with this in mind I ride such that if the worst happens I will at least slide to a halt, which means my road position may be somewhat questionable at times but it maximises my safety. (Whether the driver behind me knocks me into the middle of next week is another matter).

So, like most bikers, I try to make the bends as big as possible by positioning myself accordingly. Other drivers will see it as strange but this comes back to my argument about the best drivers are more likely to be those who have had experience on two wheels.


BT,

I've seen an advanced riding instructor doing just this on a training video.

C.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 04, 2008 23:44 
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I’m sorry chaps and chapesses, but this is getting very boring. The whole thing is extremely simple - KEEP LEFT UNLESS OVERTAKING. Obviously that has to be modified to suit the prevailing circumstances and conditions - e.g. if you have the misfortune to be driving along the M1 and L1 is chocker with nose-to-tail HGVs. But the principle remains the same - keep as far left as is reasonably practicable, unless you are actually overtaking someone.

If you’re piddling along in L2 because you’re “afraid to get boxed in” or because you think that “changing lanes is dangerous” or because "L1 is the slug lane" then you shouldn’t be on a motorway at all. If you deliberately drive in L2 to slow other people down you shouldn’t be driving anywhere.

This is my first and last post on this thread.

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 05, 2008 11:23 
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Yokel wrote:
... this is getting very boring. The whole thing is extremely simple - KEEP LEFT UNLESS OVERTAKING. Obviously that has to be modified to suit the prevailing circumstances and conditions...


Yokel,

You have summed up the debate very clearly and concisely. The question under discussion does indeed turn on 'prevailing circumstances and conditions'.

The 'prevailing circumstances and conditions' will influence drivers to either remain in L2 or hop back into L1. I think this is primarily to do with the distances between slower moving vehicles in L1 and also the average speed of this traffic in L1. As our motorways become more congested, L1 becomes less attractive for faster moving traffic for the above reasons.

C.

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 05, 2008 11:47 
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Cooler wrote:
Yokel wrote:
... this is getting very boring. The whole thing is extremely simple - KEEP LEFT UNLESS OVERTAKING. Obviously that has to be modified to suit the prevailing circumstances and conditions...


Yokel,

You have summed up the debate very clearly and concisely. The question under discussion does indeed turn on 'prevailing circumstances and conditions'.

The 'prevailing circumstances and conditions' will influence drivers to either remain in L2 or hop back into L1. I think this is primarily to do with the distances between slower moving vehicles in L1 and also the average speed of this traffic in L1. As our motorways become more congested, L1 becomes less attractive for faster moving traffic for the above reasons.

C.


Stop trying to prolong the argument. As yokel (and others) have said if there’s room in L1 you should pull over, not only because it’s part of the highway code, but it’s also good manners. Simple!

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 05, 2008 19:19 
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Dixie wrote:
Cooler wrote:
Yokel wrote:
... this is getting very boring. The whole thing is extremely simple - KEEP LEFT UNLESS OVERTAKING. Obviously that has to be modified to suit the prevailing circumstances and conditions...


Yokel,

You have summed up the debate very clearly and concisely. The question under discussion does indeed turn on 'prevailing circumstances and conditions'.

The 'prevailing circumstances and conditions' will influence drivers to either remain in L2 or hop back into L1. I think this is primarily to do with the distances between slower moving vehicles in L1 and also the average speed of this traffic in L1. As our motorways become more congested, L1 becomes less attractive for faster moving traffic for the above reasons.

C.


Stop trying to prolong the argument. As yokel (and others) have said if there’s room in L1 you should pull over, not only because it’s part of the highway code, but it’s also good manners. Simple!


Dixie,

I'm a bit disappointed in the progress of this thread to be honest. We established early on that there are grounds for a debate on the disparity between the HC and what drivers actually do on motorways.

I was hoping that we would have an interesting psychological inquiry into this disparity, but so many posters have just reiterated claims of rules and manners without delving deeper into driver behaviour on our changing motorways.

Maybe that debate will never happen and this thread has indeed been a waste of time and effort.

C. :?

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 05, 2008 20:03 
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What's the story with your new sig at the bottom of your posts, Cooler?

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 05, 2008 20:58 
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SigmaMotion wrote:
What's the story with your new sig at the bottom of your posts, Cooler?

:scratchchin:

Cooler, I genuinely can't work you out. You have the posting style of an affable, clever old gent, and some of your opinions seem to match that, but then you seem to contradict yourself in other places. For example, sometimes you seem to (rightly) say that speed cameras are a pointless distraction which have made you drive in a less safe manner, then in threads like these you make out that anyone wishing to exceed 70mph on the motorway can have no complaints if they're unnecessarily held up by someone in the middle lane doing 70mph. So is speeding dangerous or not? And now, as SigmaMotion implies, your signature has added further confusion. Where else have you called for more rules and regulations, and why would someone who was haunted by speed cameras want such a thing? Which rules and regulations would you like to see?

I'm not trying to be nasty, I'm just at a loss. Usually new posters on here are either broadly with us or against us. I can't fault your originality, but I just thought you might want to clarify your position for us. :)

(I know I said I'd stop reading this topic, but after goodness knows how many hedgehog-free posts, I guessed (rightly) that his influence would be long-gone.... Till next time (hopefully never), my prickly "friend"....)

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 05, 2008 21:09 
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Cooler wrote:
I was hoping that we would have an interesting psychological inquiry into this disparity, but so many posters have just reiterated claims of rules and manners without delving deeper into driver behaviour on our changing motorways.


How can you delve deeper when we don't have a cross section of drivers who will honestly state why they behave the way they do? This site is largely self-selcting; people are here because they have an interest in driving and driving properly whereas the majority of drivers do not. And its the behavior of that majority that needs examining.

That said, some have made an attempt to rationalise or hypothesise why drivers do demonstrate poor lane discipline, but by-and-large you haven't liked what you have read and have dismissed it. But, in a nutshell:

1. No motorway training. Drivers learn from each others bad habits and, as I previously stated, lane indiscipline is the worst facet of UK motorway driving as identified by one of our advanced driving institutions.
2. No government campaigns (other than speed kills) to improve driver behaviour and skills. Most drivers have probably never read the HC relating to motorways and don't actually know the rules. Nobody has ever bothered to try and tell them.
3. There is a myth that the three standard motorway lanes are the slow, middle and fast lanes. If you are just cruising along you should be in the middle lane; the slow lane is for trucks.
4. Some drivers try to enforce the rules of the road on others. They believe that if nobody should travel at more than 70mph then they should be able to travel in the middle lane at 70 mph.
5. Drivers don't trust each other. They believe that if they move into lane 1 they will get boxed in by faster moving vehicles that won't let them back out again when they need to pass a slower vehicle.
6. Drivers don't care about each other. A middle lane hog's prime excuse is to point to the coping strategies that other drivers should use to ameliorate their own bad habit. Weird!
7. Drivers are lazy and behave like sheep. Their experiences at getting boxed in are a result of this, they haven't thought far enough ahead and planned their next move. This is common on UK roads, many drivers don't plan for anything that isn't right in front of their own bonnet.
8. Most drivers don't care about their driving and simply want to get from A to B with as little effort as possible. Middle lane cruising offers a lazymans way of negotioating our motorways. There is no real incentive to improve, besides a modest insurance reduction by some companies for passing an advanced driving test, therefore few drivers bother trying to improve.
9. The rules are too loose, lazy drivers will use the looseness of the rules to validate their behaviour.

There you go.

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PostPosted: Sun Apr 06, 2008 01:01 
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Rigpig wrote:
Cooler wrote:
I was hoping that we would have an interesting psychological inquiry into this disparity, but so many posters have just reiterated claims of rules and manners without delving deeper into driver behaviour on our changing motorways.


How can you delve deeper when we don't have a cross section of drivers who will honestly state why they behave the way they do? This site is largely self-selcting; people are here because they have an interest in driving and driving properly whereas the majority of drivers do not. And its the behavior of that majority that needs examining.

That said, some have made an attempt to rationalise or hypothesise why drivers do demonstrate poor lane discipline, but by-and-large you haven't liked what you have read and have dismissed it. But, in a nutshell:

1. No motorway training. Drivers learn from each others bad habits and, as I previously stated, lane indiscipline is the worst facet of UK motorway driving as identified by one of our advanced driving institutions.
2. No government campaigns (other than speed kills) to improve driver behaviour and skills. Most drivers have probably never read the HC relating to motorways and don't actually know the rules. Nobody has ever bothered to try and tell them.
3. There is a myth that the three standard motorway lanes are the slow, middle and fast lanes. If you are just cruising along you should be in the middle lane; the slow lane is for trucks.
4. Some drivers try to enforce the rules of the road on others. They believe that if nobody should travel at more than 70mph then they should be able to travel in the middle lane at 70 mph.
5. Drivers don't trust each other. They believe that if they move into lane 1 they will get boxed in by faster moving vehicles that won't let them back out again when they need to pass a slower vehicle.
6. Drivers don't care about each other. A middle lane hog's prime excuse is to point to the coping strategies that other drivers should use to ameliorate their own bad habit. Weird!
7. Drivers are lazy and behave like sheep. Their experiences at getting boxed in are a result of this, they haven't thought far enough ahead and planned their next move. This is common on UK roads, many drivers don't plan for anything that isn't right in front of their own bonnet.
8. Most drivers don't care about their driving and simply want to get from A to B with as little effort as possible. Middle lane cruising offers a lazymans way of negotioating our motorways. There is no real incentive to improve, besides a modest insurance reduction by some companies for passing an advanced driving test, therefore few drivers bother trying to improve.
9. The rules are too loose, lazy drivers will use the looseness of the rules to validate their behaviour.

There you go.

Spot on, yet again :D

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PostPosted: Sun Apr 06, 2008 01:02 
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Rigpig wrote:
Cooler wrote:
I was hoping that we would have an interesting psychological inquiry into this disparity, but so many posters have just reiterated claims of rules and manners without delving deeper into driver behaviour on our changing motorways.


How can you delve deeper when we don't have a cross section of drivers who will honestly state why they behave the way they do? This site is largely self-selcting; people are here because they have an interest in driving and driving properly whereas the majority of drivers do not. And its the behavior of that majority that needs examining.

That said, some have made an attempt to rationalise or hypothesise why drivers do demonstrate poor lane discipline, but by-and-large you haven't liked what you have read and have dismissed it. But, in a nutshell:

1. No motorway training. Drivers learn from each others bad habits and, as I previously stated, lane indiscipline is the worst facet of UK motorway driving as identified by one of our advanced driving institutions.
2. No government campaigns (other than speed kills) to improve driver behaviour and skills. Most drivers have probably never read the HC relating to motorways and don't actually know the rules. Nobody has ever bothered to try and tell them.
3. There is a myth that the three standard motorway lanes are the slow, middle and fast lanes. If you are just cruising along you should be in the middle lane; the slow lane is for trucks.
4. Some drivers try to enforce the rules of the road on others. They believe that if nobody should travel at more than 70mph then they should be able to travel in the middle lane at 70 mph.
5. Drivers don't trust each other. They believe that if they move into lane 1 they will get boxed in by faster moving vehicles that won't let them back out again when they need to pass a slower vehicle.
6. Drivers don't care about each other. A middle lane hog's prime excuse is to point to the coping strategies that other drivers should use to ameliorate their own bad habit. Weird!
7. Drivers are lazy and behave like sheep. Their experiences at getting boxed in are a result of this, they haven't thought far enough ahead and planned their next move. This is common on UK roads, many drivers don't plan for anything that isn't right in front of their own bonnet.
8. Most drivers don't care about their driving and simply want to get from A to B with as little effort as possible. Middle lane cruising offers a lazymans way of negotioating our motorways. There is no real incentive to improve, besides a modest insurance reduction by some companies for passing an advanced driving test, therefore few drivers bother trying to improve.
9. The rules are too loose, lazy drivers will use the looseness of the rules to validate their behaviour.

There you go.

Spot on, yet again :D

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PostPosted: Sun Apr 06, 2008 09:03 
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Cooler wrote:
I'm a bit disappointed in the progress of this thread to be honest. We established early on that there are grounds for a debate on the disparity between the HC and what drivers actually do on motorways.

I was hoping that we would have an interesting psychological inquiry into this disparity, but so many posters have just reiterated claims of rules and manners without delving deeper into driver behaviour on our changing motorways.

Maybe that debate will never happen and this thread has indeed been a waste of time and effort


I can't really add to what Rigpig said. The disparity is because in the absence of any lane discipline enforcement or education (apart from the odd matrix sign) only some people care about driving in a way that maximises road space, whereas a lot of people are MLMs because either:

a. they just don't care about anyone else and can't be bothered to use the lanes properly
b. they are scared of changing lane (that's quite scary)
c. They think that if they are going at what they believe is the speed limit, there is no reason to use the lanes properly as noone should be passing them, some even using this as a crude attempt to 'teach other drivers a lesson' (which is deeply scary)

The fact that some drivers don't use lanes properly, while an interesting observation, does not somehow endorse that behaviour, and to imply that this thread is going nowhere just because while we all agree that it happens all but one of us think it's wrong is utterly mistaken.

Cooler, your last few posts have a had a somewhat conciliatory tone, so summarise your viewpoint for me:

We all agree that middle-lane-moronism happens. You've observed that it happens. Do you think that it is therfore legitimate just because others do it?


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PostPosted: Sun Apr 06, 2008 09:38 
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Rigpig, Johnneytheboy,

Spot on, now why couldn’t someone have said all that earlier?.. :lol:

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PostPosted: Sun Apr 06, 2008 11:23 
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bombus wrote:
SigmaMotion wrote:
What's the story with your new sig at the bottom of your posts, Cooler?

:scratchchin:

Cooler, I genuinely can't work you out. You have the posting style of an affable, clever old gent, and some of your opinions seem to match that, but then you seem to contradict yourself in other places.


bombus,

There is some irony in my postings which doesn't seem to travel well on the net. 'Affable, clever old gent'? - Yes, maybe, but in my experience these are just the people who contradict themselves whilst wearing odd socks and a jumper on back to front. I know I do.


Quote:
For example, sometimes you seem to (rightly) say that speed cameras are a pointless distraction which have made you drive in a less safe manner


Agreed

Quote:
then in threads like these you make out that anyone wishing to exceed 70mph on the motorway can have no complaints if they're unnecessarily held up by someone in the middle lane doing 70mph.


Not quite. However I do think that road rage is misdirected at someone driving at 70mph in L2 of a motorway. A gentle reminder maybe, but not the fingers. It's a question of which is most dangerous.


Quote:
So is speeding dangerous or not?


Safespeed is not dangerous, but if you want to do it, don't take both hands off the wheel to abuse the car in front - just overtake.

Quote:
your signature has added further confusion. Where else have you called for more rules and regulations, and why would someone who was haunted by speed cameras want such a thing? Which rules and regulations would you like to see?


irony!! Good grief, we are drowning in rules and regulations in this country, and not just on the roads.

Quote:
I'm not trying to be nasty, I'm just at a loss. Usually new posters on here are either broadly with us or against us. I can't fault your originality, but I just thought you might want to clarify your position for us.


I was hoping to flush out a real ding -dong debate on this one, but most people are on the same side - not all though.

Quote:
(I know I said I'd stop reading this topic, but after goodness knows how many hedgehog-free posts, I guessed (rightly) that his influence would be long-gone.... Till next time (hopefully never), my prickly "friend"....)
:)

You may be referring to another poster? A troublesome one?

Cheers, C.

PS - Ok, I might have teased some of folks a bit, but I didn't mean any real harm. For example, a survey reported in the Sunday papers recently said that 78% of drivers interviewed supported the current speed camera policy. I nearly choked on my weetabix! Then I noticed who had conducted the survey - the IAM. More rules and regulations please?

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PostPosted: Sun Apr 06, 2008 11:32 
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Johnnytheboy wrote:
..some even using this as a crude attempt to 'teach other drivers a lesson' (which is deeply scary)


Johnny,

Not as scary as having some twerp behind you at the legal speed limit with his hands off the steering wheel. Now that's scary (for his passengers).

An angry driver is a bad driver. Anyone care to disagree?

Quote:
The fact that some drivers don't use lanes properly, while an interesting observation, does not somehow endorse that behaviour, and to imply that this thread is going nowhere just because while we all agree that it happens all but one of us think it's wrong is utterly mistaken.


Someone did agree with me. In fact, if you read this thread you may find more than one.

C.

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PostPosted: Sun Apr 06, 2008 11:43 
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Cooler wrote:
Quote:
(I know I said I'd stop reading this topic, but after goodness knows how many hedgehog-free posts, I guessed (rightly) that his influence would be long-gone.... Till next time (hopefully never), my prickly "friend"....)
:)

You may be referring to another poster? A troublesome one?

Indeed. The one I PMed you about before as a matter of fact. Smeggy coined the nickname "hedgehog". ;)

Thanks for the rest of your reply. You're right that irony is often hard to get across when you only have text at your disposal.

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