AthleticoSpizz He makes good point tho’
Reading is a sh1t pit
It really isn’t. There are plenty of much worse places to live.
by leon » 05 Jan 2020 20:05
AthleticoSpizz He makes good point tho’
Reading is a sh1t pit
by AthleticoSpizz » 05 Jan 2020 20:11
by URZZZZ » 05 Jan 2020 20:16
AthleticoSpizz Is that why you don’t live here?
Believe me, Reading (other than being a dormitory town full of opportunities for office workers) is a sh1t pit...currently no swimming pools, no production, gridlocked most evenings, expensive parking, hospital that can barely cope....unaffordable ‘affordable’ housing
Sh1t pit
Nice rivers tho’
by AthleticoSpizz » 05 Jan 2020 20:18
by Hound » 05 Jan 2020 20:30
by AthleticoSpizz » 05 Jan 2020 20:36
by URZZZZ » 05 Jan 2020 20:41
Hound Ah it’s pretty good on the whole. Has it’s issues but I quite living in what’s basically a city, great access to London, a decent jobs market and plenty of usable green space nearby.
As mentioned I’m influenced by the weather as well and it’s as good (ie warm/dry) as anywhere in the country
Certainly I feel there’s been far too much development without supporting infrastructure mind you
Still could be plenty worse
by Jagermesiter1871 » 05 Jan 2020 20:59
Singing DefectiveWestwood52Victor Meldrew
I think you will find that because of the low-lying nature of the area ( the clue is in "valley") pulmonary problems are higher than in other areas unless of course you live in Tilehurst or Caversham Heights and don't go out much.
We don’t get out much in Tilehurst.Too high and too cold.
We get out plenty in Tilehurst. The intelligentsia at The Watertower has to be seen to be believed, and my dogs do appreciate the fog drawing a subtle veil over their attempts to cull the deer. Even if it does elicit a dainty cough or ten minutes.
The main danger to health are the twelve million speed bumps some local Safety Officer has put on the crumbling roads. I’ve started wearing a mouth guard on the bus.
by AthleticoSpizz » 05 Jan 2020 21:03
by Jagermesiter1871 » 05 Jan 2020 21:04
AthleticoSpizz Is that why you don’t live here?
Believe me, Reading (other than being a dormitory town full of opportunities for office workers) is a sh1t pit...currently no swimming pools, no production, gridlocked most evenings, expensive parking, hospital that can barely cope....unaffordable ‘affordable’ housing
Sh1t pit
Nice rivers tho’
by Jagermesiter1871 » 05 Jan 2020 21:06
AthleticoSpizz Not just Tilehurst Jagers....years of p1ss poor repairs and neglect..
The whole town is populated with pot holes and crumbling roads....my car is taking a hammering even at 25mph.
Seems to be money available to facilitate bus lanes tho’
by Hound » 05 Jan 2020 21:39
URZZZZHound Ah it’s pretty good on the whole. Has it’s issues but I quite living in what’s basically a city, great access to London, a decent jobs market and plenty of usable green space nearby.
As mentioned I’m influenced by the weather as well and it’s as good (ie warm/dry) as anywhere in the country
Certainly I feel there’s been far too much development without supporting infrastructure mind you
Still could be plenty worse
To be fair, it pretty much rains everywhere in England, think you’d be better off abroad if you’re influenced by weather, rather than Reading...
by Hound » 05 Jan 2020 21:43
Jagermesiter1871AthleticoSpizz Is that why you don’t live here?
Believe me, Reading (other than being a dormitory town full of opportunities for office workers) is a sh1t pit...currently no swimming pools, no production, gridlocked most evenings, expensive parking, hospital that can barely cope....unaffordable ‘affordable’ housing
Sh1t pit
Nice rivers tho’
None of those reasons make it a shit pit tbf. More the result of it being a good place to live and people flocking here - swimming pools for flats. I actually also think there has been an uptick in independent restaurants and shops in the town. There are some absolute scum areas mind - Oxford Road flowing into the Broad street end of town seems the attract the absolute pits of society. There also is a lot of homeless, but this is true of every town and city in the country these days - perhaps the war on drugs isn't going great?
by You're Bard » 05 Jan 2020 21:44
St Pauli
Not sure if this is a wind up but if it isn’t you’re really trying too hard here.
I’ve nothing against northerners, I’ve something against tired old wind ups/cliches from opposition fans about the club, regardless of where they’re from Blackpool, or Fulham/Brighton. If I’m sat in the bus to or from an away game in someone else’s town I’ll not slag off the home team ground, club or town because I don’t need to define my passing existence on this earth by being in opposition to something as meaningless as another group of people’s building for, and ways of, supporting their local football club.
As for disliking the North, the fact you automatically equate ‘the North’ with ‘Working Class’ just shows how limited your understanding of my point is. The massive social problems Blackpool has (that cause its low house prices) aren’t some part of working class culture to be proud of, they’re awful, horrific things that working class communities (in the North and South, and Wales, and Scotland) have to suffer. The fact you’re trying to romanticise them/ignore them by claiming my post is some sort of southern snobbery suggests to me you haven’t set foot inside the community you claim to be standing up for in years.
by URZZZZZZZZ » 05 Jan 2020 21:55
Victor MeldrewFrom Despair To Where? Liverpool and Manchester have fantastic public transport networks and certainly being by the coast means Liverpool doesn't get as cold. Liverpool and Manchester are thriving economically. Having lived in both, I prefer Liverpool because the people are nicer but they're both fantastic cities.
Well done FDTW for once again educating some of these tossers on the merits of life away from the South-East.
Having lived away from Reading for so much longer than the first 24 years of my life I see Reading as the ugly girlfriend-I love her but nobody else can see the attraction.
A town that only has the Forbury Gardens and the Abbey ruins (add in the jail if you like) as areas that have not been destroyed just to make the town one big traffic jam really doesn't appear attractive from the outside.
Modern office buildings?
Yeah, great.
Not only is it an unhealthy area to live with the notorious Thames Valley mist and fog it is characterless-there are a couple of rivers but unlike coastal towns there is no magic of an open sea.
So do kid yourselves that the Thames Valley with over-population is wonderful because.................................….well it's not far from London and is so much better than the Midlands or North because...………………………………………………
A shame that St P had to rough it by mixing on a bus with the proletariat talking in a funny way as they travelled "dayn tayn" but maybe they are happy with their lot and are proud of their tower known far and wide whereas they perceive Reading as a non-descript Southern town a bit bigger than but just as ugly as a Slough or a Milton Keynes or ,dare I say, a Swindon.
Reading I love you but I can fully understand why others don't.
by From Despair To Where? » 05 Jan 2020 22:08
by leon » 05 Jan 2020 23:53
AthleticoSpizz Well quite, but Leon (correctly) chooses not to live here.
by Stranded » 06 Jan 2020 07:25
by Hound » 06 Jan 2020 07:38
Stranded Not sure what it says about the team board but the last couple of pages on here have been the best read on it for a while - except for my posts of course.
by Snowflake Royal » 06 Jan 2020 11:20
HoundURZZZZHound Ah it’s pretty good on the whole. Has it’s issues but I quite living in what’s basically a city, great access to London, a decent jobs market and plenty of usable green space nearby.
As mentioned I’m influenced by the weather as well and it’s as good (ie warm/dry) as anywhere in the country
Certainly I feel there’s been far too much development without supporting infrastructure mind you
Still could be plenty worse
To be fair, it pretty much rains everywhere in England, think you’d be better off abroad if you’re influenced by weather, rather than Reading...
Not really an option. It really doesn’t rain that much at all in the S of England. Cloudy yes, rain not so much
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