No need to remove them but I had a great time smashing them off the wall :D
I got a speshul tool to do it, is quick as feck and quite neat, so clean up before next lot is quite quick. I end up taking the top layer of paper off the plasterboard, filling in and plastering where necessary, (Not usually necessary much at all) sealing then off you go with the tiles. :):):):)
 
I got a speshul tool to do it, is quick as feck and quite neat, so clean up before next lot is quite quick. I end up taking the top layer of paper off the plasterboard, filling in and plastering where necessary, (Not usually necessary much at all) sealing then off you go with the tiles. :):):):)

I tiled my house floors with tiles tis like a Spanish villa lol :D
 
We have a 5 seater D2 and we put the dogs on the row of seats behind us. They lose hair all the time.:rolleyes:
Wifey made a special car seat cover for the two folding seats, out of an old duvet and towelling. It is tailor made for the seat, with holes in it for the seat-belt. With the waterproof covers on then duvet side down, towelling side up, they are as snug as bugs in rugs. We can thus secure their harnesses to the seat belts. And the special cover can be washed in the washing machine and dried in the tumble dryer. We use far fewer towels and not the three blankets we used to need.
Wifey should patent it! :):):)
Mine's the 7 seater so the dogs have their own compartment (which is almost half the length of the car) at the back. They have seat belts in there, too. I am fortunate in having the lovely water flowing down off the Black Mountains which the dogs love wallowing in no matter what the temperature. Even when it is flowing violently down, they know where to go and where not to. Being very long haired I am pleased they do this 'cos it cleans them off before we drive home. :) It does mean that I have to dry off towels every day though. :rolleyes: They do not like having anything 'warm' to lie on and once the towels have soaked up the water they scrape them to one side and just lie on the waterproof mat that is underneath. It has to be said that they do not get really wet as the deep undercoat seems impenetrable, the long hair is like human hair and dries just as that does.:)
 
I tiled my house floors with tiles tis like a Spanish villa lol :D
Our place in frogland has only the master bedroom and the walk-in wardrobe floored in wood, the rest of the house is in matching floor tiles. Only thing when it is feck-off hot. Also when it gets cold, the underfloor heating comes through it well, when we bother to put it on!
Looks nice, they are very nearly white so make the place very light, and they are easy to keep clean. The dogs do get a bit of "paw-spin" on them though!
Oh and the front edge of each step on the stairs is in hardwood, to match the bannister etc. About 2" deep. Less painful than a hard tile edge!
But yours must be a bit of a rare thing in Scottyland.:D
How do we put it, less Hacienda, more Macienda? (That only works in writing, not in sound!) Or the Pond-a-Rosa!
Hmm! Fun!
The walls aren't Adobe are they? More Microsoft Word?
I'll give up now!:D:D:D:D
 
Mine's the 7 seater so the dogs have their own compartment (which is almost half the length of the car) at the back. They have seat belts in there, too. I am fortunate in having the lovely water flowing down off the Black Mountains which the dogs love wallowing in no matter what the temperature. Even when it is flowing violently down, they know where to go and where not to. Being very long haired I am pleased they do this 'cos it cleans them off before we drive home. :) It does mean that I have to dry off towels every day though. :rolleyes: They do not like having anything 'warm' to lie on and once the towels have soaked up the water they scrape them to one side and just lie on the waterproof mat that is underneath. It has to be said that they do not get really wet as the deep undercoat seems impenetrable, the long hair is like human hair and dries just as that does.:)
Sounds all very dog friendly.
We have one dog that doesn't like it too hot as they too are water dogs, webbed feet etc. So one of them always looks for a tiled floor to lie on. But ours don't go swimming, with a pool in France, we don't encourage it. So it is only ever rainwater.
Funny that you live in the Black Mountains and in Fr we live in La Montagne Noire.:D (Think i have commented on this before!:rolleyes:)
 
Sounds all very dog friendly.
We have one dog that doesn't like it too hot as they too are water dogs, webbed feet etc. So one of them always looks for a tiled floor to lie on. But ours don't go swimming, with a pool in France, we don't encourage it. So it is only ever rainwater.
Funny that you live in the Black Mountains and in Fr we live in La Montagne Noire.:D (Think i have commented on this before!:rolleyes:)
No, I don't live in the Black Mountains, I live up in the southern edge of the Cambrian Mountains, I drive down to the river everyday so the dogs get a good free- run time with lots of their friends.
 
Isn't that how peeps like IKEA write their "how to assemble" instructions, to avoid translating into umpteen languages..:rolleyes:)

Our firms major sale is the ESBE line out of Sweden, their instructions are much the same. They're OK.. So long as you know what you're doing, you've done it before, an maybe rung me to make sure you got it right.. Ergo, they int ver good really.
Keeps me employed mind you :)
 
Here's an odd one.
Came in today, Wifey was cleaning a bathroom and coughing her lungs up.
She was so bad that I made her stop and go outside to get some fresh air. It took quite a few cups of fruit tea and a long time to stop the coughing.
I asked her what set it off, she told me it was putting toilet cleaner down the loo and scrubbing it.
I looked at the stuff and it contained 9% HCl, which i thought seemed a lot.
Then after thinking about it, I remembered that the cistern had one of those tablets in it that give off bleach, amongst other things.
I haven't done Chemistry since 1972, so do not know exactly what the equation would be for the reaction but was wondering if maybe neat chlorine was given off.:eek::eek::eek:
Anyway, worth remembering next time!
And yes, I did finish off the cleaning for her.

Just checked. yep I was right,
https://www.acsh.org/news/2019/11/0...ted that another,previously used on the floor.

At least she survived unlike the poor sod in this article!
 
Our firms major sale is the ESBE line out of Sweden, their instructions are much the same. They're OK.. So long as you know what you're doing, you've done it before, an maybe rung me to make sure you got it right.. Ergo, they int ver good really.
Keeps me employed mind you :)
Dooo yoooo hev to speeek in a sveeedish aaacccent?:D:D:D:D:D
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_Chef
 
Our place in frogland has only the master bedroom and the walk-in wardrobe floored in wood, the rest of the house is in matching floor tiles. Only thing when it is feck-off hot. Also when it gets cold, the underfloor heating comes through it well, when we bother to put it on!
Looks nice, they are very nearly white so make the place very light, and they are easy to keep clean. The dogs do get a bit of "paw-spin" on them though!
Oh and the front edge of each step on the stairs is in hardwood, to match the bannister etc. About 2" deep. Less painful than a hard tile edge!
But yours must be a bit of a rare thing in Scottyland.:D
How do we put it, less Hacienda, more Macienda? (That only works in writing, not in sound!) Or the Pond-a-Rosa!
Hmm! Fun!
The walls aren't Adobe are they? More Microsoft Word?
I'll give up now!:D:D:D:D

Haha :D
I dont know anyone that has a tiled floor here I must be mad o_Oo_O:D
 
Daily, I drive down from our 'ills to the Towy valley, then drive a few miles following the course of the river before crossing it and then driving towards the Black Mountains, following a tributary river (Sawdde) of the Towy, which is flowing off the black mountains although I walk on the flat plain before the rise up. Got it!!:)
 

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