I actually put the heating on for an hour yesterday morning because the stat had dropped in the house and I was feeling cold. Not just me because my husband put it on last night for a while too.Went out and cut all the grass this morning.COLD!
Weather is all over the place,a week ago it was shattering windows![]()
I did hear on the forecast a chance of frost in some areas, but didn't catch where. Very unpredictable weather!
Don't care what the calendar says - I've got a sweater on today!

Surely though, even if they did impose such restrictions, it wouldn't happen overnight, and retailers won't stop selling them until close to any such restrictions being actually implemented ..and it'll surely take a year or so after next May to do that?Surely with the TPD,it's upto each nation, how severely they implement a ban.Maybe here in the U.K it won't be so strict as in the link Trish posted.I read the other day 25% of British smokers have turned to vaping.The ban has proved a failure in Italy,if driving people back to smoking is what they had in mind.
There's far too much that's vague regarding the UK - almost as though they cannot make up their minds which way to jump ...or are they afraid to be specific because it'll cause a fuss.
The positive evidence is plain for them to see - they don't even have to go looking for it - yet still they choose to ignore it in favour of appeasing the BT and BP companies.
They should leave it be and do a proper 5-10 year study on the effects, not only on the e cig using population, but that of the NHS with regard to smoking related disease cases and costs. There must surely be a significant drop.
If, within the confines of that 5-10 year study, proven, irrefutable evidence came to light that some aspect of it was indeed dangerous to health in some previously unknown way, then would be the time to consider the silly restrictions mentioned in things like that newsletter email.
I've been reading about some prescription drugs for an ailment I've been suffering with these past few weeks - all carry significant side effects, and I'm not prepared to start taking any of them until I see if I can improve things with alternatives that may take longer to work, but have few if any side effects.
E-cigs aren't much different - aspects of them do cause 'side effects' for a minority, and we choose whether or not to use them, much in the same way as we do with certain drugs/treatments.
I know for a fact that some heavily prescribed drugs can and do cause significant side effects, some irreversible if not caught in time, yet still they mass prescribe them - where's the difference? If anything, the latter is far more worrying than the former as things stand.