I really shouldn’t be writing blogs at all at the moment I
am far too busy with my bookshop, the bookshop world has changed and the
effects are coming my way in terms of extra work, more of that later on in the
post if I get the time.
So starting with the council cabinet meeting about
Pleasurama, my take here is that all the political side of Pleasurama counts
for very little and ultimately it is the physical problems related to the site.
One of these is the cliff and I have added some pictures and
newspaper articles which will expand so the are big enough to read if you click
on them and then click again once expanded.
Anyway here are the videos of the part of the council
cabinet meeting that discussed Pleasurama.
Part 2
Well the meeting certainly shows that the councillors are interested in confronting the councillors of other political parties, but i am less certain they are interested in what the people they represent actually want.
Obviously this site has to be dealt with in some way and it
does seem likely that however it goes it will be some sort of privately
financed development there. In terms of local developers Cardy Construction are
one of the best, so if there is going to be a developer involved then we are
very unlikely to better than them.
I have had a bit of a look at the various things on the
internet about the cabinet meeting and so far the impression I get is that
there was supposed to be a big save Manston airport demonstration outside but
only about 100 demonstrators turned up.
I am yet to be convinced that there is strong local support
for the TDC cpo it does seem that less than 50 TDC council taxpayers turned up,
I am still convinced that TDC shouldn’t be going down the cpo path without
first holding some sort of public consultation to find out what it is that the
people who finance TDC through their taxes actually want.
This is a bit like the Pleasurama problem inasmuch as no one
has convinced me that either the RiverOak plans for an airfreight hub or the
Discovery Park plans for a fairly high proportion of industrial use are
actually viable due to the physical limitations of the site.
Personally I am not that good on political ramifications,
but when someone says they want to engage in developing something that doesn’t
make sense, like building igloos on the beach, then I do look for an ulterior
motive.
In Victorian times seaside towns had piers so that people
could get on and off of paddle steamers. Here in Ramsgate there was a – well
still is in a derelict – sort of way a paddle steamer quay ant the end of the
harbour wall, so we didn’t need a pier.
Back to the books, I bought a reasonably large collection of industrial archeology books last Thursday, loosely described as my day off, interesting because most of had been bought secondhand during the last thirty years and most of it still has the prices penciled in the front.
Now in the days before the internet, which is when the book
collector put this collection together, you could only really do this by a
mixture of travelling from bookshop to bookshop buying books on this subject
and getting specialist catalogues from booksellers that specialised in books on
history, engineering and crafts.
There wasn’t very much money in all of this but everyone
seemed to enjoy it and the prices of the books settled around making sure that
the booksellers involved didn’t go bankrupt.
By this I mean that a books the size of an ordinary hardback
novel about say the industrial archaeology of East Anglia would first come out
new at a price around £25 at today’s values. The print run would have been
pretty short and I would doubt the author or the publisher made a large amount
of money.
When it turned up in a general secondhand bookshop it was
probably priced at around half price, about £12, but in practice this type of
book was mostly sold on to a specialist bookseller. Usually for a price
somewhere in the £8 to £10 ball park who then put it in his catalogue and sold
it for around £15 to £25. Mostly depending on whether it was out of print or
not.
Now the internet means that all of this has gone and for the
most part you could buy a great many industrial archaeology books at less that
£3 with very few costing more than £10 each including postage, so I have spent all day rubbing out prices from ten
fifteen or twenty years ago and writing in mostly much lower ones.
I will add to this post as I get the time.
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Comments, since I started writing this blog in 2007 the way the internet works has changed a lot, comments and dialogue here were once viable in an open and anonymous sense. Now if you comment here I will only allow the comment if it seems to make sense and be related to what the post is about. I link the majority of my posts to the main local Facebook groups and to my Facebook account, “Michael Child” I guess the main Ramsgate Facebook group is We Love Ramsgate. For the most part the comments and dialogue related to the posts here goes on there. As for the rest of it, well this blog handles images better than Facebook, which is why I don’t post directly to my Facebook account, although if I take a lot of photos I am so lazy that I paste them directly from my camera card to my bookshop website and put a link on this blog.