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Made in ru
Hardened Veteran Guardsman






By central you mean boiler in your house or central is connected to city network? Or you don't have citywise heating?

My IG strugles feel free to post your criticism here 
   
Made in gb
Decrepit Dakkanaut




UK

 kabaakaba wrote:
By central you mean boiler in your house or central is connected to city network? Or you don't have citywise heating?


"central heating" in the UK means a heating system central to the house itself; not city wide.
So there will be a boiler fuelled typically by oil if you're in the countryside/smaller villages or gas if you're in the towns.
That then runs heated water around the house to radiators.


A Blog in Miniature

3D Printing, hobbying and model fun! 
   
Made in ru
Hardened Veteran Guardsman






Oh, lol, we call centrally heating only city/village wide heating.
Is gas there is cheaper then wood or coal?


My IG strugles feel free to post your criticism here 
   
Made in gb
Decrepit Dakkanaut




UK

Gas is cheaper than wood and coal plus you typically only see the latter in countryside areas where there's no gas and only oil heating.

I believe there's likely also a bunch of restrictions/limits/discouragements to coal/wood in urban areas. Most urban homes are simply not built with anywhere to burn solid fuels. Even in the countryside its woodburners for the most part today instead of open fires (heck we changed our open fire to a woodburner as they are both safer and more efficient)

A Blog in Miniature

3D Printing, hobbying and model fun! 
   
Made in us
Arch Magos w/ 4 Meg of RAM






The Land of Humidity

 Mad Doc Grotsnik wrote:
 Lathe Biosas wrote:
Do you have any fluffballs in your new home?


Not yet, but I will be getting a dog eventually.


Do you have a fenced in yard... or the bane of greyhounds: stairs?

(I miss having a four legged companion... but I don't have the space, and I'm not going to put a dog through apartment life.)

 BorderCountess wrote:
Just because you're doing something right doesn't necessarily mean you know what you're doing...

 
   
Made in us
The Marine Standing Behind Marneus Calgar





Upstate, New York

If you don’t have space for a dog, cats are there for you.

Even if you do have space, cats are still there. And the better option.

(He says, with a cat purring in his lap)

   
Made in ca
Irked Necron Immortal






 Mad Doc Grotsnik wrote:
Fair points

On a slight downer? Had a wobble last Friday night. I’m a creature of habit and whilst not a slave to it, I prefer to have a routine.

With the house move, having to go into the office for work, issues with deliveries and the lads in sorting the roof? I hadn’t had a chance to have my home to myself since I first moved in.

It felt like I was just house sitting, something I did for a period around 15 years ago when I was homeless. New environment, lots of things going on. Just made me want to go “home”.

I’m struggling to describe it, but it was just too much variation on routine in too short a space of time. And having to get up three hours early for my commute, with no broadband for comfort watching? I was left wondering if I’d made the right decision.

I mean…I had, of course I had. I’ve bought a bloody house, cash down. If there’s a world where that’s an objectively bad idea it’s not a world I want to live in. But still the out of sorts feel persisted.

Feeling much more Me now. Got some of my woodcuts up, my delightful books are around 50% unpacked and shelved. The last two days I’ve been back to Working From Home. So it’s all settling down.

Still a bit to go with the unpacking and finding a home for my assorted bits and doodads and gubbins and thingies and wotsits and that. But on the right side of Temporary Discomfort Hill.


Yeah, moving into a new house is always rough for me. My job has me relocating every three years, and honestly it takes a good six months to a year before I feel properly "settled in." It’s not just unpacking boxes—it’s the routine of learning where things go, how the space flows, and building that familiarity over time. Once everything has its place and I’m used to the little quirks of the house, that’s when it finally starts feeling like home. Until then, it always feels a bit like I’m just visiting.
   
Made in us
Arch Magos w/ 4 Meg of RAM






The Land of Humidity

 Nevelon wrote:
If you don’t have space for a dog, cats are there for you.

Even if you do have space, cats are still there. And the better option.

(He says, with a cat purring in his lap)


https://www.britannica.com/topic/Encyclopaedia-Britannica-First-Edition-Cats-2229528

I looked up this "cat." Very interesting article.

 BorderCountess wrote:
Just because you're doing something right doesn't necessarily mean you know what you're doing...

 
   
 
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