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Showing posts from October, 2016

Winter tyres vs. all season tyres?

Life is too short to worry about tyres. So let’s just clear up the whole winter tyres v all-season tyres conundrum. (And at the same time, point out that tyres are exactly that, not tires as our friends across the pond refer to them!) Do I need winter tyres? Well. Here’s the thing. Is it cold outside baby? Experts say that if the winter temps are regularly below 7 degrees celcius, you should start thinking about winter tyres. But if you live somewhere it rarely snows and winter temps are relatively mild, your all-season tyres are probably fine. What’s the difference between winter tyres and all-season tyres? It’s kind of what it says on the box. All-season tyres are built to handle nearly all road conditions - dry, wet and even light snow. Winter tyres are designed to perform in wintery conditions – low temperatures, ice, slush, and snow. Sometimes the tread of all-season tyres can harden in low temperatures, meaning there's less traction. Winter tyres have special rubber compound

Proud to have a defibrillator on site

Not that I want to start this post on a complete downer or anything… but did you know that there are more than 30,000 cardiac arrests a year? And that fewer than one in ten people survive? Today is Restart a Heart day. It’s a European wide initiative that takes place every 16 October, and it’s why I ate my breakfast this morning whilst watching a couple on breakfast tv tell their amazing story. Whilst walking down the street one day, the girl dropped to the floor, started fitting and then stopped breathing. Passers-by, not sure what to do, kept on going. Thankfully the girl’s boyfriend knew how to give CPR and saved her life. The girl couldn’t have been more than about 20 years old. So you never know who may have a cardiac arrest and when. And with statistics also estimating that 5% of all cardiac arrests will occur in the workplace, the first thing I did this morning was go and check that our workplace defibrillator was where it should be. Along with CPR, defibrillators can make a hug