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    TheGuardian

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      HMRC owes me £2,200 but says it could be 33 weeks before it pays me back

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 December 2025

    A reader says they overpaid their national insurance, but seem to be lending the government money with no interest

    I have two roles within the NHS, which has resulted in overpayments of national insurance each year.

    Since Covid, the refund system has slowly ground to a halt. I was told in October that I am owed £2,200 and that it could take 33 weeks to receive the payment.

    Continue reading...
    • tagmoney tagmoney tagmoney taghmrc taghmrc taghmrc tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagtax tagtax tagtax tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights taguk news taguk news taguk news tagmoney tagmoney tagmoney taghmrc taghmrc taghmrc tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagtax tagtax tagtax tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights taguk news taguk news taguk news tagmoney tagmoney tagmoney taghmrc taghmrc taghmrc tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagtax tagtax tagtax tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights taguk news taguk news taguk news

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      Back to their roots: a brief history of trees – in pictures

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 December 2025

    Over 120 years ago, a monumental work recording more than 500 species of tree in Britain and Ireland was published. A new version focuses on the pioneering images it contained

    Continue reading...
    • tagphotography tagphotography tagphotography tagculture tagculture tagculture tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design books tagart and design books tagart and design books tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagphotography tagphotography tagphotography tagculture tagculture tagculture tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design books tagart and design books tagart and design books tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagphotography tagphotography tagphotography tagculture tagculture tagculture tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design books tagart and design books tagart and design books tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks

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      ‘This is the real Santa’s workshop’: a trip to Germany’s toy village

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 December 2025 • 1 minute

    You don’t have to be a child to enjoy Seiffen, the magical ‘home of Christmas’ where they’ve been making traditional wooden toys for hundreds of years

    I feel terrible … I’ve left the children at home and Seiffen, nicknamed Spielzeugdorf (The Toy Village), is literally a Christmas wonderland. Every street is alive with sparkling fairy lights and soft candlelight. There are thousands of tiny wooden figurines, train sets and toy animals displayed in shop windows, wooden pyramids taller than doorframes and colourful nutcracker characters. Forget elves in the north pole, this is the real Santa’s workshop. For hundreds of years, here in the village of Seiffen, wood turners and carvers have created classic wooden Christmas toys and sold them around the world.

    Near the border of the Czech Republic, Seiffen may be well known in the German-speaking world as the “home of Christmas”, but so far it has been largely missed by English-speaking seasonal tourists. Tucked away in the Ore Mountains, about an hour and a half south of Dresden, it is not the easiest place to get to by public transport – the nearest train station is in Olbernhau, nearly 7 miles (11km) away. Buses are available, but we opt for a hire car and make our way into the hills, arriving the day after the first snowfall of the year. The roads are cleared quickly, but snow clings to the branches of the spruce trees. We half expect to see the Gruffalo’s child, but only spot a rust-coloured fox making its way through a fresh field of snow.

    Continue reading...
    • taggermany holidays taggermany holidays taggermany holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tagtoys tagtoys tagtoys taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagtravel tagtravel tagtravel taggermany holidays taggermany holidays taggermany holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tagtoys tagtoys tagtoys taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagtravel tagtravel tagtravel taggermany holidays taggermany holidays taggermany holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tagtoys tagtoys tagtoys taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagtravel tagtravel tagtravel

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    • Th chevron_right

      HMRC owes me £2,200 but says it could be 33 weeks before it pays me back

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 December 2025

    A reader says they overpaid their national insurance, but seem to be lending the government money with no interest

    I have two roles within the NHS, which has resulted in overpayments of national insurance each year.

    Since Covid, the refund system has slowly ground to a halt. I was told in October that I am owed £2,200 and that it could take 33 weeks to receive the payment.

    Continue reading...
    • tagmoney tagmoney tagmoney taghmrc taghmrc taghmrc tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagtax tagtax tagtax tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights taguk news taguk news taguk news tagmoney tagmoney tagmoney taghmrc taghmrc taghmrc tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagtax tagtax tagtax tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights taguk news taguk news taguk news tagmoney tagmoney tagmoney taghmrc taghmrc taghmrc tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagnational insurance tagtax tagtax tagtax tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer affairs tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights tagconsumer rights taguk news taguk news taguk news

    • Th chevron_right

      Back to their roots: a brief history of trees – in pictures

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 December 2025

    Over 120 years ago, a monumental work recording more than 500 species of tree in Britain and Ireland was published. A new version focuses on the pioneering images it contained

    Continue reading...
    • tagphotography tagphotography tagphotography tagculture tagculture tagculture tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design books tagart and design books tagart and design books tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagphotography tagphotography tagphotography tagculture tagculture tagculture tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design books tagart and design books tagart and design books tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagphotography tagphotography tagphotography tagculture tagculture tagculture tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagtrees and forests tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design books tagart and design books tagart and design books tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks

    • Th chevron_right

      ‘This is the real Santa’s workshop’: a trip to Germany’s toy village

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 December 2025 • 1 minute

    You don’t have to be a child to enjoy Seiffen, the magical ‘home of Christmas’ where they’ve been making traditional wooden toys for hundreds of years

    I feel terrible … I’ve left the children at home and Seiffen, nicknamed Spielzeugdorf (The Toy Village), is literally a Christmas wonderland. Every street is alive with sparkling fairy lights and soft candlelight. There are thousands of tiny wooden figurines, train sets and toy animals displayed in shop windows, wooden pyramids taller than doorframes and colourful nutcracker characters. Forget elves in the north pole, this is the real Santa’s workshop. For hundreds of years, here in the village of Seiffen, wood turners and carvers have created classic wooden Christmas toys and sold them around the world.

    Near the border of the Czech Republic, Seiffen may be well known in the German-speaking world as the “home of Christmas”, but so far it has been largely missed by English-speaking seasonal tourists. Tucked away in the Ore Mountains, about an hour and a half south of Dresden, it is not the easiest place to get to by public transport – the nearest train station is in Olbernhau, nearly 7 miles (11km) away. Buses are available, but we opt for a hire car and make our way into the hills, arriving the day after the first snowfall of the year. The roads are cleared quickly, but snow clings to the branches of the spruce trees. We half expect to see the Gruffalo’s child, but only spot a rust-coloured fox making its way through a fresh field of snow.

    Continue reading...
    • taggermany holidays taggermany holidays taggermany holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tagtoys tagtoys tagtoys taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagtravel tagtravel tagtravel taggermany holidays taggermany holidays taggermany holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tagtoys tagtoys tagtoys taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagtravel tagtravel tagtravel taggermany holidays taggermany holidays taggermany holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tagchristmas and new year holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tageurope holidays tagtoys tagtoys tagtoys taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagtravel tagtravel tagtravel

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      On the Calculation of Volume III by Solvej Balle review – how to make a timeloop endlessly interesting

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 December 2025 • 1 minute

    The hypnotic third novel in the hit Danish series grapples with the philosophical realities of being stuck on repeat in 18 November

    The time loop story, in which characters repeatedly relive the same span of time, has become synonymous with the 1993 film Groundhog Day, but the idea has much older roots. In PD Ouspensky’s 1915 novel Strange Life of Ivan Osokin, the feckless Osokin is given the chance to live his life over again, only to find himself making all the same mistakes. Like Groundhog Day’s insufferable Phil Connors, Osokin can change nothing without changing himself.

    Solvej Balle’s much-lauded series On the Calculation of Volume takes a very different approach. She first began working on the idea decades ago, several years before Groundhog Day was released. The film, she says, “helped me with research by trying out some of the roads I did not want to take”. The books, five so far with two more planned, have proved a literary sensation in her native Denmark, with the first three volumes together scooping the 2022 Nordic Council Literature prize, the highest literary honour in Scandinavia. This is the third to be published in English this year; the first was shortlisted for the 2025 International Booker prize.

    Continue reading...
    • tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction tagfiction tagfiction tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagculture tagculture tagculture tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction tagfiction tagfiction tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagculture tagculture tagculture tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction tagfiction tagfiction tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagculture tagculture tagculture

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    • Th chevron_right

      On the Calculation of Volume III by Solvej Balle review – how to make a timeloop endlessly interesting

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 December 2025 • 1 minute

    The hypnotic third novel in the hit Danish series grapples with the philosophical realities of being stuck on repeat in 18 November

    The time loop story, in which characters repeatedly relive the same span of time, has become synonymous with the 1993 film Groundhog Day, but the idea has much older roots. In PD Ouspensky’s 1915 novel Strange Life of Ivan Osokin, the feckless Osokin is given the chance to live his life over again, only to find himself making all the same mistakes. Like Groundhog Day’s insufferable Phil Connors, Osokin can change nothing without changing himself.

    Solvej Balle’s much-lauded series On the Calculation of Volume takes a very different approach. She first began working on the idea decades ago, several years before Groundhog Day was released. The film, she says, “helped me with research by trying out some of the roads I did not want to take”. The books, five so far with two more planned, have proved a literary sensation in her native Denmark, with the first three volumes together scooping the 2022 Nordic Council Literature prize, the highest literary honour in Scandinavia. This is the third to be published in English this year; the first was shortlisted for the 2025 International Booker prize.

    Continue reading...
    • tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction tagfiction tagfiction tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagculture tagculture tagculture tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction tagfiction tagfiction tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagculture tagculture tagculture tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction tagfiction tagfiction tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagculture tagculture tagculture

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    • Th chevron_right

      On the Calculation of Volume III by Solvej Balle review – how to make a timeloop endlessly interesting

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 December 2025 • 1 minute

    The hypnotic third novel in the hit Danish series grapples with the philosophical realities of being stuck on repeat in 18 November

    The time loop story, in which characters repeatedly relive the same span of time, has become synonymous with the 1993 film Groundhog Day, but the idea has much older roots. In PD Ouspensky’s 1915 novel Strange Life of Ivan Osokin, the feckless Osokin is given the chance to live his life over again, only to find himself making all the same mistakes. Like Groundhog Day’s insufferable Phil Connors, Osokin can change nothing without changing himself.

    Solvej Balle’s much-lauded series On the Calculation of Volume takes a very different approach. She first began working on the idea decades ago, several years before Groundhog Day was released. The film, she says, “helped me with research by trying out some of the roads I did not want to take”. The books, five so far with two more planned, have proved a literary sensation in her native Denmark, with the first three volumes together scooping the 2022 Nordic Council Literature prize, the highest literary honour in Scandinavia. This is the third to be published in English this year; the first was shortlisted for the 2025 International Booker prize.

    Continue reading...
    • tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction tagfiction tagfiction tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagculture tagculture tagculture tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction tagfiction tagfiction tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagculture tagculture tagculture tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction in translation tagfiction tagfiction tagfiction tagbooks tagbooks tagbooks tagculture tagculture tagculture

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