The Luke and Pete Show - Climb aboard the Lukey Moore
Episode Date: May 6, 2024Luke urges Pete to kill the stowaways he's found in his Japanese car because he's is adamant that they're invasive. This prompts the lads to discuss border control as Lukey relives the moment his foot...ball boots where confiscated in New Zealand. Elsewhere, Luke educates us on the Guano Islands, which Donny insists would be better named the Bird Poo Islands, and contemplates the hierarchy of animal poop.Plus, they also talk about their upcoming holidays and Pete crowns Luke with the title of 'Big Strong Boy' after he tells us about his new holiday assignment: child carrier.Want to get in touch with the show? Email: hello@lukeandpeteshow.com or you can get in touch on Twitter or Instagram: @lukeandpeteshow. Follow us @thelukeandpeteshow.***Please take the time to rate and review us on Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your pods. It means a great deal to the show and will make it easier for other potential listeners to find us. Thanks!*** Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's the Luke and Pete Show
I'm Pete Donaldson
I was trying to perfect
before the record
the noise that the buzzer makes
in catchphrase
when you buzz in
It's a very good impression
and it's good that
whatever changes about catchphrase
the hosts, the contestants
sometimes even the graphics
the real star of the show is that noise.
Yeah.
Where do we stand on...
It's not even Bradley Walsh, is it?
Bradley Walsh is...
Stephen Mulhern now, isn't it?
Stephen Mulhern.
Who do you get if you can't afford an ore deck?
It's Mulhern.
It's Mulhern, baby.
Mulhern.
Give me the Mulhern button.
Mulhern.
One would suggest Revels in it as well.
I saw him once at a tube station door,
and that's all I've got.
A tube station door?
Yeah, and my boss looked just like him.
My ex-boss used to look like him.
So that's all I've got on Mulhern.
But when you say tube station door,
do you mean a tube train door?
No, I mean the barriers.
Oh, okay, right.
They're like little kind of,
they're like saloon doors, aren't they?
They are a bit, yeah.
Severe saloon doors.
Yeah.
I don't think they're quite so effective
like a kind of an outlaw
moseyed into a saloon in the Wild West.
After using Apple Pay.
And it went,
it's not the same thing, is it?
I'm still a paper man
because I live out in the sticks.
It's a 37 quid.
Don't be bringing paper tickets up into the commute baby
37 quid um for a for a travel card uh in and out and also single trip single single day that's my
day's transport you can travel anywhere in germany on the train for 15 euros it's a disgrace it's
there was a man who was like a was a boy. He's a kind of software developer. And he basically is this digital nomad who lives on a train.
He just gets on the train in the morning and just goes like right throughout most of Germany for a laugh.
And then he'll just get off in like Berlin and just hang out there for a bit.
And he's basically he sleeps on the train.
He eats and showers in the sort of German sort of um german rail company's kind of
lounge i think the first class lounge and i think he spends about 10 000 euros a year
on first class travel everywhere and he looks like he has a lovely life but i mean
he says he can't get used to sleeping in a bed that's not moving wow so the difference for those
people listening to this show one of the difference between you and me, Pete,
you see that as quite an aspirational, interesting story,
whereas I see that as really depressing.
Yeah, but I find travel quite... You know, like when, in the same way that, like, crackheads,
always on the move quickly.
They're always shuffling off to get something
or to move away from something.
And I just always think that's the
way to be always be moving and no one will ever but not what you've done not the crack well makes
you move faster yeah so you i've been i've talked about this a number of times but just
it is remarkable to me how difficult it is for you to stay in the same place i mean i'm quite
bad for it i don't really like pub quizzes for that reason the reason I can't get past public
I don't want to blow my own trumpet Pete because you know, it's not really my style
But as you can probably imagine because of my general knowledge I get asked to do a lot of pub quizzes, right?
I always say no because I don't I just hate the idea of
Having to sit in a pub from 730 knowing I can't get out of there till like 10.30.
I just don't want to,
I might not want to do that.
Yeah.
I might want to do it.
I might want to sit there and have a drink for a few hours.
But you like a pub.
What's wrong with you?
I like a pub,
but I don't want to be dictated to in a pub.
Right.
It's enforced fun.
The pub should be the last bastion
of people being able to do what they want.
Does, I mean,
would you ever kind of consider
doing like half a pub quiz?
I'll be like a kind of gun for hire, just kind of float around.
Bring me in for a round.
If you give me five quid, I'm in for a round.
You buy me a drink, I'm in for your round.
And just float around like a floating voter.
You give me a fiver, right, and I'll join you up to and including ITV2 series.
Right, okay, yeah.
Well, yeah, I mean, you've said you're not a big fan of all that business.
No, I'm not.
Actually, that's the worst category for me,
along with probably capital cities.
I'm not very good on geography.
Anything else, I'm all right at.
All right, okay.
Well, if my phone hadn't suddenly decided to not give me any data,
I could have given you a couple of questions there.
If you give me a few Capital City quizzes questions, I might be all right,
but it's a real weakness to my game.
So really, really modern music, geography,
and probably ITV products are going to be my biggest weaknesses.
All right.
Who wrote the book Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, The Magical Car?
Don't know.
It was Ian Fleming, was it?
Yeah, I think that's right, yeah.
Wow. That rings a bell.
What is the name of the 1976 film about the Watergate scandal starring Robert Redford
and Dustin Hoffman?
It's called All the President's Men.
All the President's Men.
Yeah.
Who was the head of state in Japan during the Second World War?
General Hirohito, is it?
Emperor Hirohito.
Was he really in charge, though?
I don't think the emperor's really in charge.
I mean, the emperor was the one who gave up,
and he was the one who gave up,
and he recorded his giving up speech.
Yeah, that's how you say it,
onto two vinyl records.
And I think part of the army were trying to make the war continue,
and they were running around his castle trying to find these two records.
Oh, what, to stop it getting out there?
To stop it getting out, to stop the message to lay down your arms.
It's fascinating.
And that time when he recorded this um uh this this this uh
speech a lot of people hadn't heard the emperor ever speak and so he had this kind of very sort
of posh um sort of language that nobody really sort of properly understood properly properly
speaking like old japanese or something he was speaking like proper like royal family like you
know um you know wrong and like really old school japanese that not many people could
understand i am i well i i've um just on that note a lot of the um a lot of the kind of mid
probably to late 20th century historical thought historiography around the dropping of the bombs
on hiroshima and nagasaki have always been like oh well you know it actually saves more lives than it killed
because longer term
it just meant that
the Japanese had to surrender
but actually
the general consensus now
as far as I understand it
is that they
were probably about
to surrender anyway
yeah
and it was completely
unnecessary to do it
but anyway
the answer is Hirohito
I knew that
right
any more questions
or was that it
well I mean to be honest two questions one about Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and one about interest. But anyway, the answer is Hirohito. I knew that. Right. Any more questions or was that it?
Well, I mean, to be honest Two questions. One about Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
and one about
Japan. Oh, and all the
progress men, which I've read. I've read the book.
The book is fantastic. What was the Turkish city of
Istanbul called before 1930?
Constantinople. Correct.
Name the coffee shop in US sitcom Friends.
Easy. Central Perk. How many
human players are there on each side in a polo match?
Oh, I'm from the working classes, so I don't know.
You can't just pull that.
I'll have a guess.
I'm going to say six.
It's four.
Four.
Yeah, horses involved.
It'd have to be a big pitch, wouldn't it?
Yeah.
That's what those horses were doing that ran across London the other day.
Yeah.
If you're a centaur, could you just get involved as like a kind of...
I also find it odd to think that centaurs have two rib cages.
Oh, nice.
I like that.
Yeah.
They would have, wouldn't they?
They have to have.
Yeah.
Big fan of...
I mean...
Is the horse part of the rib cage just empty?
Would it not...
Could you not just run a whole...
A big, long rib cage?
Yeah, because I think pervy um
artists of the centaur they kind of put the start of the pubis on the man you know what i mean
leading into the muscular kind of which is the chest of the horse yeah it's needless i think
they just wanted to for it to kind of sexier it'd be a bit sexier and muscular. So I would say that really,
if you're going to be doing centaur stuff,
the way I would go about it would be,
I'm not doing any kind of genitals on the man bit.
That's just chest.
That just basically goes...
You're not upstaging a horse in that area anyway, are you?
No, exactly.
It's embarrassing, if anything.
So you're going to go rib cage, if anything so you're going to go rib cage
stomach
then you're going to go
back into rib cage
as you get between
the horse's front legs
yeah
and then you're going to go
all the way back to stomach
and then
horse genitals
and then tail
put in another rib cage
with the legs and the arms
so there's six limbs
if we're pissing about
let's just put another
rib cage in there
but then these two
I mean, ultimately,
you're going to really undermine the very fabric of the beast
if you're not going to have a lower ribcage.
Well, exactly.
I mean, the whole idea of the ribcage is to protect,
does it have two hearts?
I don't know.
That's what I'm saying.
Presumably you'd want the horse heart to run everything, wouldn't you?
Because it would be stronger.
But you want the human heart for love.
I think you should have one rib cage,
but it basically runs down the pubis
and round into where the horse's rib cage would start.
I think it should be one gigantic rib cage,
like a fencer's mask.
I can see.
I think that's probably a great solution.
So, I mean, octopuses have three hearts, don't they?
Okay, right.
And one does the blood around the body,
and the other one does the blood through the gills, I think.
And the other one's just investing.
The other one does NFTs.
Yeah, the third one's just a spare one.
Just for the grind.
It's like a spare tyre.
It's just for the grind.
It's surrounded.
It's like in one of those defibrillator boxes.
Yeah.
You just break it open.
And I also read that cockroaches have got hearts
dotted all around their body,
but I don't know if that's true.
Why would they need that then?
Oh, like little kind of silo,
kind of mini,
like a start-stop battery on a car.
It just does one thing.
I think they've obviously just evolved like that,
but they're obviously incredibly old,
as even the evolutionary thing,
but I think they've got loads of hearts.
I've just had a horrific thought.
I was dicking about with that car in Japan,
and I opened up,
I was replacing a wing mirror gasket,
and I opened up I was replacing a wing mirror gasket and I opened up
the
under
underneath the
car
I opened up
like unscrewed
a lot of stuff
and then
opened up
like this kind of
plastic kind of
protective shell
and
a big
Japanese snail
fell on my hand
why it come all the way
from
you get in trouble
for that
I know
stowaway
I couldn't help it I didn't know it was in there.
Imported, invasive...
An invasive species. It's still alive.
An invasive species. No, it wasn't.
But, then I was
a bit weirded out by that and I felt a bit ill.
And then I pulled
the trim back in further. And then a spider went on my
hand. Now, that could have been a dangerous one.
You didn't just let that go into the wildlife,
did you? What do you want me to do?
I'm not king of the spiders, am I?
You have to kill it.
You have to, it's invasive. It was quick!
I would have killed it if I could have caught it.
Went off to, you know, start a
new south end based Japanese
spider colony. I don't know, I'd go Nelbit.
Yeah, you're mockingly saying
that now, but let's wait and see what happens in six months.
Life comes at you
fast Donaldson
you'll be first
against the wall
but the Japanese
spiders come along
do you know what
speaking of that
right
I didn't actually
know there were
any protocols
involved at the
point time
because I was like
17 and working
in Asda
but I told you
before that
my mate Lewis
he used to run
the fruit and veg bit
and we once saw a massive fucking spider
in a box of bananas.
Oh dear God.
Like massive.
And I don't know what it was.
I think the bananas came from the Caribbean at the time.
Possibly South America.
But South America is where all the main ones are.
That and Africa.
The terms of the spiders and that and
we didn't know what to do we're like what the fuck are we gonna do so we I think we ended up
just throwing the box in the bin so it was between that and play at some reggae what is wrong with
you in my defense in my defense in the last 27 years I don't think South American spiders have
taken over the whole of the South Coast so it's not
it appears to be
there's been no harm done
but it was
it was
it was a massive spider
it was furry
and it looked
fucking angry
if it's one spider though
presumably it needs
another spider
to procreate
so
you know
yeah
could have been another one
in another box
exactly
do you remember the film
Arachnophobia
I do but I don't
remember it
I don't remember
I mean I know
what it was about
but just a lot of
spiders kicking
kicking about
in it
it was great though
and it had an amazing
an amazing cameo
from John Goodman
who plays
the exterminator guy
okay yeah
it was fantastic
there was a video game
around about that time
that was just called Exterminator.
And it was quite interesting
because you just had this disembodied hand
and you just go around sort of like grabbing
and twisting and punching these horrible animals
that would arrive in your kitchen.
I remember, I just remember it being
a really, really frightening movie.
And I'm not even frightened of spiders
necessarily. But it was pretty
funny. It was massive at the time, I remember.
Yeah. Well, I mean,
I do worry that
what if that spider,
what if you're a spider? I feel like
with your one,
you were young.
And there should be protocols in place.
They should know about this stuff. They should be scanning things for this kind of thing.
Well, I mean, yeah, but these places are important stuff all the time.
So what are the chances of like a car, you know,
importing a spider like that?
But I guess with bananas, yeah, you should have been aware of the,
if you see a naughty spider.
It feels like, you know, when those, you go to,
you watch those TV shows where um people
come in to like an airport and they've got like loads of like leaves in their bag yeah and they're
like and they're like you can't have these that you just cannot have these and go oh i really need
these they always really need their leaves don't they it's always really want their leaves those
tv programs like that are always based in Australia,
who are really, really strict on it.
And they say to them every time,
that form, you've ticked that box on that form.
Why have you done that?
Why have you done that?
And they go, oh, sorry.
It's every week on that show.
It's always someone who's brought an astonishing amount of food.
And it's the kind of food that you can buy down the shops.
It's just they've just collected all of the leaves
in every jar in their house and put it in their suitcase.
And they're going, you can't have all of this.
I mean, this is insanity.
You could very easily buy all this stuff
and it would be cheaper to do it like that.
Yeah, I agree.
When I played football in New Zealand,
my football boots got impounded.
Right, okay.
Because I had grass on them.
Oh yeah, of course, yeah.
But I mean,
just grass.
I had to wait
for that to be sprayed
and like,
I had to wait for ages
for them to be like
quarantined or some shit.
Took the magic away from them.
They're very strict.
Now, I think I'm right
in saying they're very strict
in New Zealand
because of what's happened
in Australia.
Right, okay.
Because it's like a really delicate
island ecosystem.
They can't take chances. Because if you look, for example,
I think the
good example would be Hawaii.
Hawaii has been the source of a load
of back and forward between geopolitical
relations for like hundreds of years.
Obviously, relatively recently in the
grand scheme of things, they've become part of the United
States. And obviously the geographical location of it means it's a bit of an outlier. I don't think there's any
Original species left in Hawaii, right?
I've got a literally all invasive species because people didn't give a shit about that kind of stuff then I see yeah
They'd be like a guy back in the day you sent out there to be the trade envoy from so-and-so
He just take his dog with him, you know, and boy noticed the dog's killed every single native frog in hawaii like that kind of stuff is ridiculous there's also
amazing the story of um like the fight for power and diplomacy and geopolitical power in like the
south pacific is actually really interesting there was a there's a um a series of islands
have you heard of these called the Guano Islands? Right.
Where the guano eps come from?
I don't know.
I don't know.
But what I do know is that before kind of artificial fertilizer was developed as a product,
guano was a really, really precious commodity.
And so there were these islands in the South Pacific called the Guano Islands.
I'm not sure what they're called now.
But they were literally untouched and they were
100 foot deep of guano
right what is guano sorry
guano is like bird poo basically
oh okay and so they're these bird poo
islands that were
just worth better name
more descriptive
worth like an incredible amount
of money because they had so much of this
essential natural amazing fertilizer and so worth like an incredible amount of money because they had so much of this essentially natural,
amazing fertilizer.
And so they didn't quite go to war over it,
but certain countries were involved in skirmishes
around securing those islands.
Yeah.
Right.
Because there was no way,
other really effective way of kind of, you know,
fertilizing.
Synthesizing this stuff, yeah.
Like ambergris, innit?
And the US ended um taking control of
them and i think they still might even have control of them now um right but yeah so it's
all pretty interesting stuff um peter i can think of um no better person to administer
iguana island than your good self yeah i um um well yeah but would i be an invasive species
myself would i be stealing those um turds for my own uh things i can imagine you just going back
sending a letter back afterwards saying turns out these irons were completely covered in shit so i
just chucked them all in the sea i think we've got i think uh um comms has failed, and I don't think you want any of this stuff.
I don't think you need this.
I don't think you need any of this.
It's just greasy, fishy bird shit.
My late uncle was a Victorian military historian of some repute,
and he used to spend quite a lot of his time in his younger days
digging out old Victorian forts.
Okay, right.
So he would dig them out,
categorise them,
write books about them and stuff.
That was his thing.
And some of them would have been left in disrepair
for literally since the Victorian times.
And he said a lot of the time
he was going into these different chambers
and essentially spending all day
digging out pigeon shit.
It was like six feet deep.
Oh my God. So you must really love Victorian military history
to be doing that.
Yeah.
I mean, are you kind of,
it just seems like,
what, he just did it with his bare hands?
No.
I mean, he used a shovel.
He was like a team of excavators and stuff.
Right.
Okay.
Right.
Well, that just makes it sound like he was just off.
He was just on a bit of a yum.
A disrespectful view of the historian society.
No, I'm just thinking, scrambling around. They're just like probably eating some of it um no but i mean like like i'm just imagining a man a boy alone by
himself with a shovel not a team of excavators excavating with proper tools and and and i just
said he was a military a victorian historian of some repute. Right. He's got like
grants to do this stuff.
He's got access.
He's got means.
Yeah, yeah, no, but I...
I'll just save a bit of money
and do it with our hands.
Buy some lovely beers later.
What do you think
historians do?
That's how I...
Yeah, but historian
isn't an archaeologist.
So like historian
just sounds like
he's got no business
with any kind of
shovel in his hand.
That's all.
That was my concern.
That was my concern.
We should,
Pete,
we should take a break.
When we come back,
I've got something else
I want to talk to you about
and I'll be honest with you,
it is about animal shit.
We're back with a look
at Pete Shaw.
Luke, sale.
I've just realised what that says.
The Patreon Football Ramble entry has just gone up
and it says General Sarker tickets.
And I was like, I was trying to figure out what that meant
for the Palladium.
Is it a typo?
It's a typo, but it took me quite a long time to sort of go over.
They try to say sale.
General sale tickets are available.
Get yourself to footballramblerlive.com.
Good little plug.
Just a little reminder there.
Nice little contextual plug.
When I was talking to you earlier about guano and bird poo,
I don't really know where the word guano comes from.
It sounds vaguely kind of possibly Native American,
possibly South American, Spanish.
But anyway, I think it probably is South American, Spanish.
But talking about poo, what is really interesting is that there is,
whether people want to admit it or not,
a kind of hierarchy to animal poo, isn't there?
And what I mean by that is that if a bird poos on you,
or you get it on your hand,
you don't seem to mind as much.
What poo do you not want on you like there's a hierarchy of the most offensive
animal poos is what i'm saying yeah but also i think it's changed if you have access to certain
animals i would say it's a bell curve it's a bell curve because if the animal's really small
it doesn't bother you like if a rabbit dropping get lands on your hand you're not bothered if a
bird poos on your hand you're not bothered it's a bird poos on your hand, you're not bothered.
It's not ideal, but you're not going to...
I would say bird poos more offensive,
but I agree with you.
Like, rabbits to mouse droppings.
Exactly.
You see them and you're like, pathetic.
But cat, dog, fox, horrific.
Yeah.
Then, weirdly enough,
this is what I'm talking about, the bell curve.
If you imagine a bell curve,
it's like small animal inoffensive
all the way up to kind of dog, cat, fox,
really offensive.
When you're getting up towards elephant and horse,
it's actually not that bad again.
No, yeah, exactly.
Yeah, horse and then cow.
Cow pats are pretty funny.
I think cow pats is bad.
Cow pats is bad,
but it's got like a crust on the top,
so it's hard to,
you know what I mean? Does that make sense? The farmyard aspect makes it not as bad. Cowpats is bad, but it's got like a crust on the top, so it's hard to, you know what I mean?
Does that make sense?
The farmyard aspect makes it not as bad.
Yeah.
Would you rather, forget the size,
I'm talking about the general offering here.
Would you rather tread,
because I remember when I was camping once as a kid,
my mum trod barefoot in a cowpat, right?
Would you rather tread barefoot?
They don't eat meat,
and I think it's animals that eat meat
is the issue
that might be
a really interesting
yeah that could be
the angle
dog poo cat poo
is disgusting
but it's because
they eat meat
and grass fed animals
aren't quite
isn't quite as bad
I would say
like rabbit poo
is hilarious
like
yeah
and weirdly
Sammy will
if he sees
rabbit poo
he will have a crack
at eating it
it's absolutely disgusting
absolutely disgusting
yeah no well
he won't eat
like most other poos
but he'll have a go at
he'll have a go at
a rabbit poo
but
what I'm saying is
would you rather tread barefoot
in a cow pat
or a dog poo
cow pat
dog poo
cow pat
yeah
yeah
because I've done dog poo
and it's
you take that off the list I think I've done that in the Yeah, yeah. Because I've done dog poo and it's not nice.
You ticked that off the list.
I think I've done that.
In the last three months, I think I've done it three times.
It's not like visiting a holiday destination.
No, I've done that before.
Exactly.
Don't put doing that again.
I've got like a little foil covered map that I scrape off.
Yeah, you've done dog poo.
I've done every species of dog.
I want to stand in that wombat poo that's square.
Cuboid.
I'm pretty sure scientists worked out why that was.
No, they thought it was to do with the shape of the anus,
but it turns out it isn't.
Is it?
Oh, I thought it was like the law intestine doing its bidding.
I think, and I'm absolutely freestyling here,
but I think i read that scientists
have worked out that evolutionary speaking wombat droppings tend to be square because they live
almost exclusively in quite hilly environments and so they want to mark their territory and
they're much more successful at marking their territory if the droppings don't roll downhill.
Just evolution.
Like some forms of evolution, you're just like,
you're being silly.
You're being absolutely silly.
But then loads of animals live on quite hilly things.
Those goats, those mountain goats,
are they territorial animals?
I might be wrong on that.
I wouldn't take my word for it.
It's not really my area of expertise.
Nothing is really, to be honest.
Well, the animal poop pub quiz, can't wait for that one.
Looking forward to it.
How would that manifest itself, though?
Would it be like a picture round?
That's a good one for a picture round, actually.
Mainly picture round, yeah.
I think I saw a kid's book in Waterstones.
Do we still have Waterstones?
I was in a bookshop in England.
It must be Waterstones.
Like, there isn't any other, is there?
I mean, they've got to still be, you know, in there. You've got foils there isn't any other is there I mean they've got to be
still be
you know
you've got Foils
haven't you in town
you've got
Hat Charge
on Piccadilly
it's a famous old one
Foils War
yeah I think
I was in there
and I saw a kids book
and it was
like whose poop is this
yeah my niece
has got that book
I bought the game
for
Mark Hens's band
and they played it almost immediately it's quite satisfying if you give someone a gift My niece has got that book. I bought the game for Mark Hens's band,
and they played it almost immediately.
That is quite satisfying.
If you give someone a gift, they immediately start playing it.
Yeah.
There's nothing better,
even if they perhaps just take some pictures for you to say that they're doing it.
But kids are clever, and you think they'll probably just know
that that's going to make you happy, so they just do it.
Exactly.
And as soon as you leave, they just chuck it in the bin.
This is not a Nintendo Switch game. No switch game no so i'm not interested yeah um speaking of um earlier i said
about um holiday destinations are you someone who goes to holiday destinations more than once or do
you you or do you or do you like to move on somewhere completely i'm away next week and um
off to cornwall which i've been to a couple of times we're going back to the yeah
massively
because we're going back
for the second time
to that little hut
on the beach
that I explored
in the loft
oh are you really
the scene of the crime
yeah
going for a revisiting
of the crime
because that's the last
thing they'll expect
he's not going to be
stupid enough to turn up again
it can't have been
they're going to be
waiting for you mate
well they didn't wait for me last time did they but yeah um about
two years ago i put my foot through a ceiling uh in a airbnb and then we went back the next year
and then we're going back again because it's so good and um even with my foot through the ceiling
you didn't get you didn't get busted um didn't get busted. Did a bit of patched up DIY, which in every coming year just looks more and more ratty.
And they're not going to be sitting there waiting to ambush you.
No.
Maybe.
I'll tell you this.
It could be that they do know you did it.
They were so impressed with the job you did to fix it.
They can't wait for you to come back and do some more jobs for them.
Do some more bits and bobs, yeah.
Well, I lost my glasses on that beach when I fell off a jet ski,
and I'm just hoping that I'm going to find them.
They're just going to go back again.
That was like messaging a bottle.
That seems to be quite unlikely.
Yeah.
I'm going to the Lake District in July after the Euros,
a little break away after the Euros, which I'm excited for.
The Wi-Fi I have access to has already got me a hiking backpack
that my son can sit in.
Nice, yeah.
They're tidy.
Have you worn one of those before?
Because you're a tall man, so I imagine your back's quite strong.
Well, that's not true.
I've worn one without a child in it right uh and i tried to experiment with a 24 slab of pepsi max
cherry which is rough which is roughly the same weight as my son right and um about eight i think
it's about 8.3 kilos and it was fine but um what you're not factoring in there is the fact that the pepsi
max cherry 24 pack doesn't really move so the distribution of weight is affected yeah and the
thing i was found with carrying the baby in the sling and stuff like that yeah it's not the weight
obviously because they're very small when they're newborns but it's the you're not used to carrying
something on your front it feels weird yeah
and it does start to
ache your back
because your body's
not used to doing it
it's almost a bit like
when you go skiing
and you start to use
muscles that you just
you've got no course
to use anymore
because evolution
has just not caught up yet
there's one on the side
of the bath
but I've got no course
to use it
yeah exactly
exactly so
we'll see how we go
I think
it's one of those things
that like
I have to acknowledge
that the wife I have
access to
is a brilliant parent and does everything really it's one of those things that like I have to acknowledge that the wife I have access to is
a brilliant parent
and does everything
really
yet I'm still annoyed
that she's unilaterally
decided that it's me
carrying him around
all the hills
in the Lake District
when we could be better
if we could mix it up
I mean I hate to
let people through
the curtain
but I mean
she is tiny
compared to you
yeah but she's also
like a brilliant athlete.
Right.
Yeah, but you're a big, strong boy.
You've got to do the big, strong boy stuff.
No, I look big, but I'm not strong.
The power to weight ratio of me
is probably the worst of anyone you know.
I can't do a single pull-up.
It's a Nissan Leaf.
I can't even do a press-up.
Right.
I mean, could you not, like...
I mean, I'm just worried that you are going to be
in the doctor's surgery
getting injections into a 24-can pack of Pepsi Max
if that's your training.
He's been quite quiet recently.
Yeah.
Stop talking to the baby. I think it's just on paper if you if you looked at it um kind of objectively
yeah you would say this man yes he's six foot three and a lump right but he's in his mid-40s
almost now and he's not looked after himself so take that into account this person here is a lot younger used to be an enthusiastic
gymnast and cheerleader
can
can
basically turn her hand
to any sport
really well
and is American
so therefore had like
an outdoor lifestyle
and
doesn't make excuses
for herself
who are you giving
the baby to?
it ain't
it isn't going to be me
why don't you
why don't you just put
her on your back
and oh actually I forgot to ask you and the baby can walk around do you want to come to the Lake District for a week in July? why don't you, why don't you just put her on your back?
Oh, actually, I forgot to ask you. And the baby can walk around.
Do you want to come to the Lake District
for a week in July?
Strong boy.
Yeah.
Anyway, Pete, let's get out of here.
That's enough for Monday.
We'll be back on Thursday
with our batteries and our other stuff, won't we?
I'm about to climb aboard Luke Moore.
It's going to be like,
it would be the same image of Luke Skywalker
carrying around Yoda.
I'm going to climb on Luke's back
and we're going to run away into the jungle.
So you're not really as wise as Yoda?
I look as old as Yoda.
I'm as green as Yoda.
You've got a bit of the Yoda about you.
Oh God, I had a terrible,
I was sort of up half the night
worrying about some prawns I got sort of up half the night worrying about
some prawns
I got out of the freezer
I think was about
two years old
but I was fine
in the end
I shouldn't have worried
anyway
we'll be back
we'll be back
on Thursday
I'll ask you a question
but maybe I'll just
ask you that on Thursday
yeah
alright then
yeah we'll be back soon
and with more
battery brands and stuff
so get them in
at autolungapitcho.com
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