317 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
317 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3152
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Title: HPR3152: My Pocket Knives
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3152/hpr3152.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 17:51:03
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3152 for Tuesday, 1 September 2020. Today's show is entitled,
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My Pocket Knives. It is hosted by Dave Morris
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and is about 15 minutes long
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and carries an explicit flag. The summary is
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I talk a little about some pocket knives, I often carry.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code
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HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Music
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Hello everybody.
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Welcome to Hacker Public Radio. This is Dave Morris.
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Today I've got a fairly short show. It's the sort that I quite like to listen to, quite like to do.
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It's basically a list, but you might find it interesting.
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I'm talking about pocket knives.
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Now, when I was a boy, quite long time ago now,
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maybe from about the age 10, I was given a pen knife
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as they were called. Have they still called that?
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It was a little thing with a pearl handle, with two blades in it.
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It carried that all the time around with me.
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It was pretty normal. I mean, you could take that to school
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and sharpen pencils with it. It was very common to do that.
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Anyway, since then, I've always carried pocket knives
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with some sort with me.
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Not necessarily in my pocket, but in a rock sack or whatever.
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There were three knives that often travel with me just now.
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Though two of them have got a locking function on them,
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and UK laws seem to be against such knives for reasons
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that I'm not entirely clear about.
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Given that a knife is just as deadly with it locks or not,
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but there you go. If you have one and you're stopped by the police,
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you have to give a good reason for why you're carrying it.
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You know, it's to do with your business or something.
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Anyway, I'm going to talk about these three knives,
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and just in brief, just to summarize what I'm going to talk about,
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one's a Victoria Knox Huntsman.
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The other one is a duerol French knife,
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and the third one is a Roxon knife from China.
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Let's talk about the Huntsman, the Victoria Knox.
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I expect most people know about these sorts of knives.
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They're generally called Swiss Army Knives.
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That's what they originally derived from.
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There's quite a lot of information about the history of this stuff,
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and I've pointed to a few things like Wikipedia article.
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They're usually knives which have lots of tools in them.
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The number of tools can vary.
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It can just be two or three, but can be quite a enormous amount
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for the more expensive ones.
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Victoria Knox is the predominant brand now.
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They used to be others, but they've all been sort of bought.
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I'll disappear, I think.
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The Wikipedia article I refer to tells you quite a lot.
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The model I've got is the Huntsman,
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and it's classified as a medium-sized knife, if you'll.
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The Victoria Knox website.
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I won't list all the bits, but in brief,
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it's got two blades, which are really sharp.
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There are scissors.
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It's actually got a saw for cutting wood,
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which I, for some reason, are other in the photos I forgot to open out.
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If you open out all the tools on these things,
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you have to be really careful on how you think.
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So maybe I was just being ultra cautious.
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Anyway, yeah, it's a cool thing.
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Some pictures of it.
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It's also got a couple of little detachable tools in it,
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which is a toothpick, which is a plastic toothpick.
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Strange thing to have in a knife, I guess.
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You never know.
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And a pair of tweezers, which are actually quite good for, again,
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splinters or fingers, or whatever I've found.
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One of the best pairs of tweezers I have.
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I recently bought one of these,
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a very long time ago in Edinburgh,
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from my tool shop near the centre of the city.
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And this tool shop was really old fashioned,
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by a family, sort of family shop, had lots and lots and lots and lots of stuff,
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not organised in any particular way to sort of all around the place.
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But you could get so much good stuff in there.
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And they had a sale of these knives.
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I don't know why, because I think they hold their price pretty well,
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but I took advantage of it in bought one, bought the Huntsman.
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Love that knife.
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Carried it with me a lot in my pocket.
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But when I, walking with the kids one weekend,
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and we were cutting sticks,
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because that's what you do when you're out in the woods with children,
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and using the saw.
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And I put it back in my pocket,
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and it must have fallen out at some point,
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because I lost it.
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So I felt pretty sorry for myself,
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but it was really, you know,
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the things that you really like and that you lose,
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you do tend to regret this I do.
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But eventually I decided, well,
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the only sensible thing to do would be to get another one.
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So I bought the current one of Amazon,
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where the price was not as good as the original sale price,
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but it wasn't too painful.
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I think there's somewhere around 30, 35 pounds for this one now.
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I think in the 20, 25 sort of area when I bought it,
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28, I don't remember now.
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Anyway, but so I'm very careful with it,
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tend not to carry it in my pocket so much.
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And it's usually in my rucksack,
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but you have to watch out for carrying knives in a rucksack,
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because often these days you go into museums and stuff,
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and they want to put anything you're carrying through,
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and you, in some cases, through a metal detector.
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So...
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Second knife cut is a duo,
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I think it's a duo brand,
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and there's a couple of pictures of it.
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It's manufactured in an interesting city
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in central France called Tier,
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let's say, France.
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And it's known as the Knife City,
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because it's got loads of factories that make knives.
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It's the source of many knives that you'll find in France,
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and elsewhere I think.
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This is a classic design,
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and Tier is in...
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How do you say this?
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Anyway, it's in the over and region,
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central, central France.
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Never been there myself,
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but some might really like to visit one day.
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On the Wikipedia page for this,
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it says it's about Tier,
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is a major historical center of knife manufacturing
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with about 100 companies and a cutlery museum.
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70% of French pocket knives,
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kitchen table knives are manufactured in Tier.
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My sort of bass, really.
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This particular knife has a wooden handle,
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which I believe is ash.
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I can't identify myself.
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I think the design's been ash for the old fashioned one,
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which this is.
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There's a metal collar at the top,
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which if you picture, you'll see.
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And through the collar is a riveted pivot
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on which the blade sits.
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The blade is locked in a closed position,
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and there's a red button on the handle
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of the knife, which you press, and you can unlock.
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Then when it's in the open position,
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it locks again,
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and the red button does the job.
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The knife design is documented
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as possibly being derived from the other
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a classic French pocket knife,
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which I assume it must therefore be...
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have been created before the Dural.
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And that's the Opinel.
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And just so having that Shane Shenan
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did a show on this knife,
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and a few other things showed 2650.
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Partly what gave me the idea to talk about my knife.
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I think it's actually a nice subject.
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There's something to be thinking of doing a show
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and you're into knives, then.
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That might be a fun thing to talk about.
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So this model is the basic one.
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Yeah, I think it is the bottom version.
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And there are others with different colours,
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plastic handles, more accessories,
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like coarse-groo, or bottom-loading,
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this sort of thing.
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So I tell you the tale of how I came by this knife.
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I bought it in France in the 1980s,
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somewhere, not quite clear when, exactly,
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but to 82, 3, somewhere like that.
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We used to go to conferences.
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I was working at local university at that point.
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We used to go to conferences
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because there was a budget for doing that.
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My boss tended to chair various bits,
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like to be on management committees and stuff for us.
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We were going to Paris.
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We were driving from Edinburgh,
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which was an interesting thing to do,
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but something he did fairly often.
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It was being a great flank of file.
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And I made some footnote here thinking,
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maybe you might have been interested in this.
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Footnote says,
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to get to, from Edinburgh to Paris,
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we drove in my bus's car.
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It's not surprisingly a French car.
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And we took share, we shared the driving.
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We drove to Dover on South Coast of England.
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And we took then hover speed hovercraft service to Calais.
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So that was, that's long gone now.
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I think it's closed down.
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The link is a link here, which we'll tell you.
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I don't remember.
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I think it closed down in about 2005,
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having been running from the early 1980s.
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Hovercraft were more cool and they seemed to be...
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It was a great massive thing that came up ramp on the beaches,
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I recall.
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You could drive a car into an upper ramp and into the usual thing.
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It got strapped down.
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Then you sat in a thing that felt a bit like an aeroplane,
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seating area.
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And it was a reasonably smooth crossing.
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I don't think hovercraft were very good with choppy,
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sea conditions.
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Certainly heavy, a heavy swell would stop the service,
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as far as I understand.
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And they were incredibly noisy too,
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with sort of big aircraft engine on the top to drive the fans.
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Anyway, we took the hovercraft to Calais.
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We just ran up the beach and we then drove from there
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into Calais, itself.
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We drove to Paris from there.
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But on our way through Calais,
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there was... Calais was famous.
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I don't know if it still is for these
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Heeper Maashe hypermarkets,
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which a lot of brits tended to visit,
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because it's a good place to get cheap wine and cheese
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and all sorts of stuff.
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I don't know what the status of that stuff is now,
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but at that particular point is a very cool thing to do.
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And we went in one to see what it was like
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and to get some stuff for lunch.
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And I bought a bit, get some cheese
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and there are the usual things that you do
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and you're in France.
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There's some smelly cheese, because it's...
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And I saw this knife available in the...
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in the hardware, and thought,
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oh, that'd be good for...
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because you can use it for spreading stuff
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and you can use it for cutting stuff.
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So, I'm gonna have that.
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So, I bought that there.
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And it stayed with me ever since.
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So, it's pretty, pretty old.
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It doesn't look too bad at it, actually.
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It's used to throw a bit.
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So, that's my tail.
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So, the third knife is called Rockson,
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ROXON, and I saw it on Amazon
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and thought it would be quite cool.
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It's a single-bladed knife
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and you can open it with one hand
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because it got the button on the blade
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that you could swivel around.
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I've never owned such a knife before
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and thought it would be quite a stylish-looking thing.
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You can see, if you've got access to the pictures,
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it locks open and then when, as it opens,
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it reveals an unlock button,
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you can press and close the blade up again.
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It's not spring loaded or it wouldn't be with it.
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I'd say it was a right-handed design, though.
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I would imagine it'd be quite difficult to open it
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and be left-handed in the way I can do it with my right hand.
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But, I don't know, I've never been left-handed,
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so I don't know.
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It's got a belt clip or a pocket clip on the rear,
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which you can detach, apparently,
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looked into doing that.
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From that side, there's a pair of scissors.
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Scissors in knives, nothing very special.
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These are massive, given the size of the knife.
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They are really junky and very robust and sharp and effective.
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What little experience I've had with them.
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You could prune small plants and that sort of thing with them in the garden.
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You could cut heavy fabrics and so on and so forth.
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I got the knife from Amazon, as I said.
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It was about 25 pounds.
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I found that it's made in China when I looked at the box.
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It's hard to find out where it's come from on Amazon.
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They don't always tell you random stuff, nothing that you want to know often.
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The rocks on the website don't set telly very much about where it is.
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Anyway, it's getting different as a very limited.
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It seems quite well made and it's quite comfortable to hold and to use.
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My only concern is that the knife has got two bevels to it.
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It's got a usual sort of cutting edge, long cutting edge,
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and then rather than curving to the tip, there's a turn to it.
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I don't know how easy it would be to sharpen just that we tip it.
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But, of course, use a wet stone or some sort.
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In conclusion, if I had to choose one knife to take with me on a trip,
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I think I'd take the Victorian Oxford, which has got so much versatility
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and all the gadgets with it.
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But most of the time, I have all three of these in pretty proximity bag in a pocket.
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On the desk beside me, isn't it?
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And so, don't really have a strong preference.
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So that's the end.
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Hope you find that interesting.
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As I say, if you think it's a subject worth adding to, then do so by all means.
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Okay, then, bye.
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You've been listening to Hecker Public Radio at Hecker Public Radio.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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