I watched a video about making motorcycle parts in India and apparently bare feet are fine for industrial processes like welding these days. So I figured it’s OK for something as basic as brewing. ps The caustic melted the crocs.Bare feet and boiling liquids where are your crocks ?
Yes but it doesn't need to be on a sign in 6' letters, it needs merely to be "visible to visitors" or something like that, hence the traditional brass plaques.Isn't it a requirement to display the company name at your official address?
I've a relative that lives in the middle of nowhere, about a mile from the centre of their postcode. My solution is to just put the latitude/longitude either in the address or in the "comments" section - all delivery drivers have a satnav.Lost van drivers and very erratic postal staff are the main problem.
It's always a tradeoff - the small incremental publicity benefit versus the possibility of a catastrophic breakin. I'd have thought you're better off waiting til Easter and then doing a deal with either a boat or somewhere on the tow-path, to swap some beer (leftover test beer?) for the right to put a sign somewhere on the canal. At the moment you want people to know the name Four Priests, the address - beyond "somewhere in Middlewich" - is not important and in fact a risk.And I want customers coming out of the Big Lock to see this beer they can't buy there, and head down the road to the Kings Lock or the Newton to see what it's all about :)
Often the problem with industrial estates is that units don't even have a number visible as you drive round - that should be enough for most deliveries.
Coordinates are so accurate they'll put you in a 3 micrometre square if you have enough decimal places....The What3words app is so accurate it'll put you in a 3-meter square
W3W has its place, but takes more characters than coordinates
Depends what countryside you're in - it sounds like you're describing more a problem with mountains getting in the way of line-of-sight to GPS satellites so the driver doesn't know where he is. That's a problem for W3W and coordinates equally, not just coordinates.We often have problems with sat-nav here in the lakes they are fine for town and city but hit and miss when you get into the countryside people who know delivery drivers often struggle to find them give us the W3W code instead.
53.1969,-2.4489Try - Stunt.upset.stunning
Whereas although I'm aware of W3W I've never known anyone use it in anger. So don't assume something is "popular" just because you know people who use it (and the same applies the other way to me of course).I have never used latitude/longitude i wouldn't have a clue how to do it and have never heard of any other drivers or customers that do W3W is simple to use i guess that's why it is so popular.
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