Nina & Kira

Almost right, Shrove Tuesday actually falls 47 days before Easter Sunday. This is because each of the Sundays are not part of lent. There are 40 days for lent with 6 Sundays for feast days.

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I copied it off Google ,blame them ,not me😀

Grandad is back doing the new door , at least it’s something to watch👍

Whatever turns you on pal :laughing:
Am rather confused as to whether this is really the front door as one doesn’t usually enter the front door straight into the wash room :laughing:

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It’s better than watching Nina as___p ,at least there’s some movement

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I agree with @robwin that one doesn’t usually enter the front door. Even so, since I have been watching in this new house, this is the door the use. Not sure where another door would bee even though this does appear to be a house. Having a new door put in hopefully will also be and energy saver for them. I have always seen a blanket over the door and can assume it has been to keep the weather out.

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It is the only door


If you recall, many of their past apartments have had extremely large entrance “halls” as well. A couple of them were larger than the living rooms, like the one prior to this house. I guess it’s a Russian design thing? Here in America, I rarely use my front door, except for the occasional visitor. I park my vehicle in my garage and then enter the house via the “mud room” where boots, shoes, coats, hats, etc are removed before entering the house proper, in my case the kitchen. My “mud room” contains the washer/dryer, utility tub, shower and s__tter. My actual front door is simply decorative, if anything. Those Russians, they know how to consolidate!

When they first moved into the house ,I said to Rob that house is a fire risk ,a wooden building with only one front door ,no other door👨‍🚒

Dont they have windows on the ground floor they can use? :thinking:

I know they have ground floor windows ,in the uk we have a front and back door making in easier to get out in an emergency maybe that’s the way russia built there housing

Never heard of that. We here in Germany have one front door and sometimes a backdoor but mostly out of convenience for example to reach a garage or shed easier…

their house as shown by Slada has only one front door. There is no window door.
Regarding fire hazards, read this:
“A fire in a wooden house is no more dangerous than in a masonry house. On the contrary, because wood, although used as fuel, also has excellent fire resistance. It transmits heat 12 times slower than concrete, 250 times slower than steel and 1500 times slower than aluminium!This thanks to its low thermal conductivity.The risk of a wooden house facing fire is therefore less important than in a concrete building .”

Thanks for that imformation ,I was only thinking of the girl’s and Sam,s safety :smiling_face_with_three_hearts:

Take a concrete block and a piece of timber and try and set fire to each of them.
Which one would burn and which one wouldn’t?
Answers on a postage stamp please :laughing:

He was talking about transmitting heat. I am sure that is right. However when you try to set them on fire wood will burn a lot easier of course.

You see a picture of a burnt out house in the UK and funnily enough you will find the walls still standing.
It’s the internal components which burn which are the stud walls, floor joists,rafters and furniture, and what are these made out of? Let me guess, oh yes, wood of course.
Next question please :laughing:

Well it ain’t b___dy rocket science is it, of course the wood will burn.
Wood is probably a better insulator but are we not talking about fire risk here?

Concrete and stones are considered the most fire proof materials. So of course not :joy:

Well we got at least one sensible person on here then :laughing:
Well two including me pal :rofl: