Uh-oh! Snow!

I encountered a few flakes of snow a couple of nights ago as I was driving to a lesson through Cotgrave. But, so far, the Met Office warnings for the East Midlands hadn’t yielded any results.

Snow - November 2010Until this morning.

It’s not a lot, but this is the scene out of the back of the house this morning. And I’ve already had one pupil text me asking if the lesson is still on! Yes, it is – it’s only a dusting!

Perhaps more worryingly, there was an alert from the Met Office last night – two, in fact, with the second being issued about 10 minutes before it actually fell –  about heavy snow for the East Midlands.

There are exisiting warnings for today, tomorrow, and Monday. And this one is a bit more concerning if it comes to anything (you can never be sure with the Met Office):

ADVISORY of Blizzards for East Midlands valid from 0001 Tue 30 Nov to 2359 Tue 30 Nov

I heard on the news yesterday that this is the earliest snow for something like 20 years.

Driving Tests & Bad Weather

An email alert from the DSA (prompted by the forecast for heavy snow):

Driving tests and bad weather

Some driving tests may be affected by winter weather over the next few days.

The Met Office has forecast colder weather with snow showers becoming increasingly likely. Some parts of the country may have significant snowfall. 

Your driving test

If you’re due to take your practical test, follow the advice given on your appointment email or letter. You should call your test centre only if there is snow or ice in your local area on the day of your test.

DSA do not conduct tests in bad light or bad weather conditions for the safety of the candidate and the examiner. Another appointment will be arranged automatically at no further cost, but compensation is not payable.

A new appointment date is usually sent within three working days. This may take longer when there’s a period of prolonged bad weather.

If you haven’t heard about a new appointment within seven working days, you can check the status of your booking online at direct.gov.uk/drivingtest.

If your test hasn’t been rebooked at that time, you should call our customer service centre.

Rush Time Machine Tour 2011: More Dates

More dates are planned for the European leg of the Time Machine Tour (from the Rush Official Site):

Three new dates in Europe announced – On sale date Nov 30, see the tour page for more details.

May 4  Helsinki, Finland
May 6  Stockholm, Sweden
May 8  Malmo, Sweden

Rush in Germany

Rush will include Frankfurt on Sunday, May 29 at Festhalle as part of the Time Machine Europe 2011 Tour.
General on-sale will commence Friday, November 26th.

Listening to Planet Rock today, the show is apparently 3½ hours long! You get your money’s worth with Rush.

Test Pass: Clean Sheet

The Perfect Result!The Holy Grail of the driving instructor!

No faults at all committed during the test – well done to SG who achieved this on her test today!

I’ve never seen so many tears, either. Normally, pupils cry when they fail – but when they pass…? Well, it just goes to show how much being able to drive really means to people, and how satisying this job is once you realise that.

The examiner said she hadn’t had one for quite a while, and it was a perfect drive.

Winter Warnings

Snowflake ImagesI noticed there are three weather warnings from the Met Office in my inbox.

In order, they say:

ADVISORY of Heavy Snow for East Midlands valid from 0001 Thu 25 Nov to 2359 Thu 25 Nov

ADVISORY of Heavy Snow for East Midlands valid from 0000 Thu 25 Nov to 2359 Thu 25 Nov

ADVISORY of Heavy Snow for East Midlands valid from 0000 Sat 27 Nov to 2359 Sat 27 Nov

A further email links to a news story which suggests Nottingham might see up to 10cm of snow! This is not good – not this early in the season, anyway.

I’ve already had tests cancelled due to examiner illness, but last year all tests were cancelled for an entire 3-4 week period due to the snow.

EDIT: And now one for Sunday:

ADVISORY of Heavy Snow for East Midlands valid from 0001 Sun 28 Nov to 2359 Sun 28 Nov

Rush Tickets On Pre-sale

Rush Time Machine TourWell, I checked out the pre-sale and there aren’t many decent seating locations available. The best was 29 rows back!

Planet Rock puts them on pre-sale from tomorrow, but I can’t see the choice being any better.

Looks like I’m going to have to stick with my original plan: I have a ticket agent who gets them for me. I want somewhere in the first five rows, ideally centre stage.

It costs me a lot more than face value, but I’m prepared to pay it.

EDIT 25/11/2010: Note that tickets go on general sale from Friday 26th November at 9am. And according to Planet Rock, these have been the biggest moving pre-sales they’ve ever had.

In-car DAB Radio

I’ve been getting more and more annoyed at the radio stations I can receive on my car stereo.

Smooth RadioI used to listen to Smooth Radio, mainly because they used to play some classic rock, but its appalling technical problems drive me to distraction. Smooth specialises in dead silences, songs jumping from one to another, music and news playing at the same time, news just being 60 seconds of dead silence when you were specifically waiting for it (followed by adverts as if nothing untoward had just happened), and many many more besides.

Smooth’s other claim to fame was that it didn’t just keep playing the same songs over and over. Well, that’s only part true. Admittedly, it doesn’t do it like most local radio stations do – a playlist of about 30 songs that just get repeated throughout the day – but  there’s really only so much Michael Bublé and Rod Stewart you can stomach. Then they got rid of a load of half-decent presenters when they recently went national and replaced them with people who are not good DJs and who tried to pretend they were “local” – you could hear the joins a mile off as they switched to the news.

BBC Radio 5 LiveAs a result of this I started spending more time listening to BBC 5 Live. No music on there, but good for sport (when you want it) and listening to idiots on phone-in shows. But being on medium wave (MW) means you lose it if you go under a bridge, or find yourself listening to Radio Seychelles if you go near an overhead power cable. And it sounds like someone’s shooting at you with a machine gun if you go near a tramline or electrical substation (amazing how many of those there are hidden behind houses and other buildings).

5 Live on MW has a big drawback. It’s run by the BBC, and that means what I consider to be “balanced coverage” (i.e. every Arsenal match live) is not the same as what the BBC does (i.e. golf, rugby, and football matches involving Man Utd., Chelsea, and other teams). This means that 5 Live Extra is a must-have – it’s the place where the stuff displaced by golf and rugby gets relegated to

One other drawback to 5 Live is that once the sun goes down the only station you can’t receive on 693 medium wave is 5 Live! How do those foreign stations get so much power to be able to do that?

Pure Evoke-2XT DAB RadioNow, I’ve had a DAB radio at home for a couple of years. I don’t listen to radio much except in the car, but the Pure Evoke-2XT is excellent at getting me up in the morning. It is loud, and has an alarm. And it has Planet Rock.

Planet Rock is brilliant. It plays proper rock music, and apart from bands like Pearl Jam or the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, there is no NO RAP. Rush gets played more times in a single day on Planet Rock than they have on all other stations put together over the whole of the last 35 years!Planet Rock Logo and Link

A couple of years ago,  DAB was hit and miss. Reception was patchy at best, and certainly not something that would work in the car. But times have changed, and you can now buy DAB radios for cars – some even have it fitted as standard.

Pure Highway Dab RadioI did some research, and in the end plumped for the Pure Highway DAB Radio and an  external magnetic aerial (you get a stick on windscreen mounted one with the radio as standard). It also works as a portable DAB radio.

Performance in-car is superb. I’ve got wall-to-wall coverage throughout Nottinghamshire, and when I’ve travelled through the Cotswolds down to Wiltshire I’ve not found any dead areas at all. And it’s already paid for itself by giving me advance warning of the Rush tour next year, which I wouldn’t have found out about for weeks otherwise!

I got mine from Amazon. It costs just over £60. I’d recommend it to anyone (DAB signal permitting in your area). It fits in ANY car.

Test Fail

I had a pupil fail her test this morning – it wasn’t pretty: 2 serious and 16 driver faults (that is definitely the most I’ve ever had). She missed mirror checks around 10 times! She also told me she knew she’d failed because she felt the car labouring a bit up a hill, tried to change it to 2nd, got 4th, and stalled. Aaargh!

But the funny part was what she told me in the pre-test lesson. I’d suggested that she go out in her own car to practice driving in Nottingham City Centre following her last full lesson on Wednesday. This was because she’d said she was nervous about that area.

Today’s conversation went like this:

Me: Did you go out in your own car after our last lesson?

She: Yes, we went to Loughborough.

Me: Loughborough? That’s useful. You said you were worried about Nottingham City Centre.

She: Well, my mum doesn’t know how to drive in Nottingham City Centre. We’d get lost.

Me: [head in hands] How can you get lost when you’re inside something? All you have to do is find a road you recognise and you’re not lost any more. The thing is you said you were worried about the City Centre.

She: Well, we did Loughborough City Centre.

Me: No you didn’t! You drove down to Loughborough Uni and back on the A60, didn’t you?

She: [grins] Well, yes.

Me: You didn’t go anywhere near the Centre, did you?

She: [grins] No.

It’s more or less a straight drive down to Lougborough Uni, round a roundabout, and straight back – along a quiet road at that time of night. And Loughborough is not a “city” by any stretch of the imagination, nor is it anywhere near where the test is likely to be conducted (though that is not particularly relevant). Nottingham City Centre, on the other hand, is a tricky one-way system with lanes branching off left, right, and centre – and very busy most of the time. And it is on the test routes.

By her own admission, she was nervous and stalled going up a hill when she “dropped” it from 3rd to 4th instead of 2nd. After that, she said she knew she’d failed and went to pieces.

She’s actually a good driver. I could have killed her, but nerves can really screw some people up.

Rush Time Machine Tour To Hit UK: 2011

Note: Look under the Music category for reviews of all the gigs I went to. This story was written before the tour. Way before.

Rush In Hollywood

All right! Rush are touring the UK in May 2011 – just as I have predicted several times this year (smug, eh?)

I heard it on Planet Rock this morning, and it is also featured over at the Official Rush Website, plus there’s even an article about them in The Sun today which mentions it!

Well, I’ve already got my tickets on order via my usual source – must be in the front five rows, and tickets for every gig in the UK.

There’s no mention anywhere yet of the new album, Clockwork Angels, but Planet Rock suggest this will be released just after the tour finishes (OK, so I was slightly wrong about that – I thought they’d tour to promote the album!).

Here’s the official news release:

TIME MACHINE TOUR 2011

Rush has confirmed they will be extending the Time Machine Tour and coming to Europe this spring.

The following dates are confirmed, including Rush performing in Ireland for the first time ever.

More additional European announcements to come.

  • Thursday, May 12th Dublin O2
  • Saturday, May 14th Glasgow SECC
  • Monday, May 16th Sheffield Motorpoint Arena
  • Thursday, May 19th Manchester MEN Arena
  • Saturday, May 21st Newcastle Metro Radio Arena
  • Sunday, May 22nd Birmingham LG Arena
  • Wednesday, May 25th London O2

Rush.com members will be receiving a pre-sale notification on Monday, November 22nd that begins on Tuesday, November 23rd.

Tickets for the Time Machine Tour in Ireland & UK general on sale will commence at 9AM GMT on Friday, November 26th, 2010. Ticket links and details will be posted shortly.

Additional European dates will be announced shortly!

Also confirmed today, the Time Machine tour will return to North America for a selection of dates between March and July, primarily with Rush performing in markets not played on the previous tour run this summer.

Stay tuned to rush.com for more details!

BSM On BBC’s Watchdog: Review

For the cerebrally out there, this is an old, old, OLD story from 2010. BSM is now owned by the AA.


Well, I watched the segment which dealt with the BSM complaints – and I should also point out that the hits to the stories on this blog concerning BSM have gone into orbit!

It was a total non-event in the end. It was simply three complaints by three people about the service they’d received from BSM (with the distinct impression that certain details had been suppressed to keep the story as juicy as possible). Of course, those people had valid points on the surface of it all, but if BSM is teaching around 10,000 to 20,000 people at any single time (or 120,000 a year, as BSM claims) then three complaints is absolutely insignificant.

You can watch the segment by clicking the Watchdog image above, then by viewing the latest programme (11/11/2010, available for 7 days). The BSM bit starts at 27:53 into the show. [The video expired years ago.]

It begins by introducing BSM as the largest driving school in the country, nearly 100 years old, 120,000 pupils a year, higher-than-average pass rates, and so on. Then it does some contrived stuff about hill starts and parking. Finally, it starts on the complaints:

  • one guy paid £1,700 for 70 hours of lessons and absolutely wanted and needed to pass.

So, you immediately think that this is going to be about people not being trained properly. However, at no point is his training questioned. It turns out that the car’s tax was out of date when he turned up at the test centre and the test couldn’t go ahead. Cue: a didactic lecture from the presenter about the law regarding road tax, and indignation (“shock and disbelief”) from the candidate for the camera about how you don’t expect this.

At the end of that complaint the presenter makes the comment about BSM “at least sending a car to the test centre on the day” (i.e. everything got sorted out). This led on to the next complaint, where the candidate apparently had to turn up at the test centre on their own.

  • A young lad had a test booked (by his mum) and when he turned up there was no instructor or car.

The guy called his girlfriend, took the test in her car, and passed. BSM said that the instructor had texted to say he couldn’t make it and that another car would be there instead. The programme does not pursue this in any way whatsoever. Instead, it goes on about his mum, who apparently “had a hard time” getting her money back (she did get it back, albeit with an administration fee charged).

After a few wise words from his mum about BSM not caring and being arrogant, we are then informed that “many drivers don’t actually work for [BSM]” and that maybe this is why BSM “refuse to take responsibility”.

They suggest this may be why they have received other complaints – like the next one.

  • A woman had had three instructors.

She argued that this was a problem because “he needed to understand her, and she needed to understand him” and that there were “breaks in her learning”. Her husband sits alongside nodding sagely as she talks about styles of learning.

This then leads on to the claim BSM made on its website that someone passes “every 6 seconds” with them – something they have already admitted was a mistake and is not correct. That doesn’t prevent Watchdog from calling in a fully qualified mathematician and whiteboard to prove that this claim is impossible (I say again: BSM had already acknowledged that fact). In any case, the mathematics the “expert” used was flawed on a number of fronts – not least because BSM might be the biggest single school, but it only represents about 6% (at best) of the total number of ADIs out there. Pushing that to one side though, even if BSM represented 100% of all ADIs then the claim was shown to be impossible (one more time: BSM had already admitted that this claim was in error).

At the end of the segment, it appeared that the first guy took his test – with BSM – and he passed. BSM said that they do dispute some of the details of the other claims made. I’ll bet they do. What with Watchdog geeing people up for the cameras.

BSM certainly isn’t perfect, but no one else is either. It is not uncommon for ADIs (whether they are independent or franchised) to screw up. The car breaks down, they have an accident, a family member is ill or dies, they wrote something incorrectly into their diary… it happens to anyone and everyone at some stage.

Car tax out of date? It was a mistake, and one I’m sure BSM doesn’t do deliberately – or regularly.

Having pupils turn up to test separately is unforgiveable – unless that’s what the pupil wanted, or if the pupil booked the test against the instructor’s wishes. I had one once who wanted to turn up at the test centre because he couldn’t afford the extra hour before his test! And more than once I have had pupils book tests against my advice, and then find themselves looking for another instructor. I wonder what they’d say if Watchdog got on to them?

Pupils having more than one instructor? Well, the woman in the Watchdog showobviously considered herself an expert in the training field and wasn’t ashamed to say so. It is common to find serial instructor-hopping pupils who fail to see that the problem is with them, not the ADI. Occasionally, a pupil just won’t gel with you and they’ll go elsewhere – they often can’t handle not being perfect and look to blame their instructor for their own weaknesses. You wouldn’t believe some of the tales you hear from them about “my last instructor”, but very few identify themselves as the issue. The woman in that clip would probably find herself looking for instructor #4 if she was one of mine. She’d have driven me mad. I reserve the right not to have to put up with complete arseholes, and if I get a pupil who repeatedly thinks they know better than me, and if I can’t stop them doing it (and believe me, I can be blunt), then they’ll find themselves looking for another instructor!

I think the “6 second” claim was pathetic. BSM admitted it was wrong before the show aired, and Watchdog gloated “but it took us to point it out”.

None of the complaints were absolutely specific to BSM. They could (and do) potentially happen to any ADI. Mistakes, mistaken claims, lying pupils, know-it-alls… all of them.