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Jim Garten
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Joined: February 02 2004
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Posted: September 25 2006 at 03:33 |
mystic fred wrote:
on the subject of fireworks ( BTW i loved playing with my cap guns, and cap bombs!!) i'm amazed you can still go into a shop and buy these things these days - the fun we used to have with bangers and rockets in the park |
Our favorite game this time of year used to be buying a couple of boxes of bangers (bear in mind we were about 10 at the time & the bangers were bought over the counter at our local toy shop), tying 2 or three together, then finding the sloppiest, rankest cow-pat we could, pushing our home made 'mine' into said cow-pat, lighting it... and seeing who had the guts to stand the closest.
...when we got bored of that, we just used to throw bangers at each other.
Incredibly, none of us were hurt; stupid, yes, but unhurt
still.. blowing up cow poo was great fun
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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mystic fred
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Posted: September 25 2006 at 06:12 |
Jim Garten wrote:
mystic fred wrote:
on the subject of fireworks ( BTW i loved playing with my cap guns, and cap bombs!!) i'm amazed you can still go into a shop and buy these things these days - the fun we used to have with bangers and rockets in the park |
Our favorite game this time of year used to be buying a couple of boxes of bangers (bear in mind we were about 10 at the time & the bangers were bought over the counter at our local toy shop), tying 2 or three together, then finding the sloppiest, rankest cow-pat we could, pushing our home made 'mine' into said cow-pat, lighting it... and seeing who had the guts to stand the closest.
...when we got bored of that, we just used to throw bangers at each other.
Incredibly, none of us were hurt; stupid, yes, but unhurt
still.. blowing up cow poo was great fun |
Edited by mystic fred - September 25 2006 at 06:12
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darksinger
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Joined: May 29 2006
Location: Durham, NC
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Points: 1091
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Posted: September 25 2006 at 07:14 |
mystic fred wrote:
darksinger wrote:
Geck0 wrote:
Erm, I don't think you'll find they all lived... I wouldn't suggest eating like your ancestors did. |
I'm not suggesting it either and I am well aware some died. My point was is that when you are exposed to bacteria and dirt that you build immunities. Our systems could not last a day eating and living like our ancestors did even in pre WW2 days. |
from mystic fred (originally posted gismo don't work sometimes!)
In pre WW2 days, i am told by my elders, nobody cared about cholesterol and stuff like that, many eat whatever they could afford, and when rationing was imposed, because food production was obviously affected for the duration, most grew their own food and many had chickens on their property. People ate what they needed, lived rough compared to now, and although diseases such as TB was rampant and other illnesses that killed children, no central heating, keeping things clean was hard work - food storage was going to the shops every day. People were very tough indeed - they say it is this toughness that got them through the hard times during the war and for years after.
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My dad talks about living near the glass plant in Bridgeton (RIP Owens Illinois) and having chickens, rabbits and vegetable gardens. If you ever see old cartoons or movies that were made during WW2, they mention "Victory Gardens", which refers to a type of garden that was used during the rationing.
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mystic fred
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Posted: September 25 2006 at 14:21 |
On the subject of WW2 (or any conflict), what did your Daddy do.....?
My Dad was busy patrolling the Atlantic in a Minesweeper searching for mines, keeping the sea lanes clear - he never talked about it, he saw some horrible events, but sometimes when i asked he'd talk about his visit to New York or the Bahamas. He never had much time for war films, but highly praised "The Cruel Sea", which was also out in book form. I still have his copy - i must read it sometime!
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Wilcey
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Posted: September 25 2006 at 14:29 |
My Dad was a pilot during WWII, like your Dad, it's not something he often spoke about,- he was not much more than a kid, losing his friends in a war.
there were a couple of "funny" stories that were told over and over, but I think the experience for him was a difficult one. I never saw the medals he won, he felt it was wrong to give baubles to survivors when families of those who lost their lives struggled.
I learned some valuable lessons from my Dad, he was a strong and honest man, and one who I miss dreadfully.
P-C
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mystic fred
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Posted: September 25 2006 at 14:46 |
prog-chick wrote:
My Dad was a pilot during WWII, like your Dad, it's not something he often spoke about,- he was not much more than a kid, losing his friends in a war.
there were a couple of "funny" stories that were told over and over, but I think the experience for him was a difficult one. I never saw the medals he won, he felt it was wrong to give baubles to survivors when families of those who lost their lives struggled.
I learned some valuable lessons from my Dad, he was a strong and honest man, and one who I miss dreadfully.
P-C |
me too! my Dad died in 1976, he loved gadgets - cameras, electronics etc, i was saying to my Mum the other day how he would have loved computers, cd players and digital cameras, his old photos were brilliant. He was always cheerful and optimistic, and always had time to take us kids out - swimming, driving lessons, everything.
Edited by mystic fred - September 25 2006 at 14:46
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glass house
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Joined: June 16 2005
Location: Netherlands
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Posted: September 25 2006 at 14:52 |
Luckily my father is still alive, he was born in 1936. I remember he had a motorcycle, a Jawa. A special machine that.
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Wilcey
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Posted: September 25 2006 at 15:06 |
mystic fred
me too! my Dad died in 1976, he loved gadgets - cameras, electronics etc, i was saying to my Mum the other day how he would have loved computers, cd players and digital cameras, his old photos were brilliant. He was always cheerful and optimistic, and always had time to take us kids out - swimming, driving lessons, everything.
[/QUOTE wrote:
Yeah, my Dad always had time for us...............Lord only knows where he found it!
It was from my Dad that my love of music came from, he played piano beautifully and everyday, as a little child I would sit beneath it and watch and listen for hours! As a teen he used to listen to my records with me |
Yeah, my Dad always had time for us...............Lord only knows where he found it!
It was from my Dad that my love of music came from, he played piano beautifully and everyday, as a little child I would sit beneath it and watch and listen for hours! As a teen he used to listen to my records with me, he loved music and had great admiration for musicians!
My Dad died 1998, he would have loved some of the music I have around me now, although I am sure he listens in!
Although he was a terrible techno-phobe........... how he managed to fly a plane I will never know!!!
P-C
Edited by prog-chick - September 25 2006 at 15:06
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Wilcey
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Posted: September 25 2006 at 15:07 |
^Sorry I have no idea how I mused up that quoting...............(must have inherited my techno-phobic genes from my Dad!!!)
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glass house
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Posted: September 25 2006 at 16:36 |
You can always edit your post.
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darksinger
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Joined: May 29 2006
Location: Durham, NC
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Posted: September 25 2006 at 21:11 |
mystic fred wrote:
On the subject of WW2 (or any conflict), what did your Daddy do.....?
My Dad was busy patrolling the Atlantic in a Minesweeper searching for mines, keeping the sea lanes clear - he never talked about it, he saw some horrible events, but sometimes when i asked he'd talk about his visit to New York or the Bahamas. He never had much time for war films, but highly praised "The Cruel Sea", which was also out in book form. I still have his copy - i must read it sometime!
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My dad was a child in WW2, but in the early 1960's, he served as part of the Berlin Defense in Germany
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Wilcey
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Posted: September 26 2006 at 03:10 |
glass house wrote:
You can always edit your post. |
Yeah...........I tried that...........I couldn't work out what I had done wrong, it all looked normal to me.............. some kind of forum gremlin I reckon, come to this room of greyness to make me feel that senility is creeping closer!
P-C
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Wilcey
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Posted: September 26 2006 at 03:22 |
There was a big age difference between my Mum and Dad too, 18 years........... but they had 40 years of a great marriage. Although I know my Mum misses him an awful lot now.
P-C
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Ivan_Melgar_M
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Posted: September 26 2006 at 03:25 |
Deleted my previous post by mistake so Prog Chick's one seems out of context.
My father is 80 and my mother is almost 20 years younger they are legally separate for some years but not divorced.
Both are alive, she is healthy (Except for the high preasure under control) but my dad has emphizema (He used to smoke 3 packages a day).
Iván
Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - September 26 2006 at 03:27
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Jim Garten
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Joined: February 02 2004
Location: South England
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Posted: September 26 2006 at 03:37 |
My father was too young to serve in WWII, but he was (of all things) an army psychiatric nurse based in Germany during the Korean War... unsurprisingly he didn't say much about those he treated for shellshock and what would now be termed 'Post Traumatic Stress Disorder', but what was probably then termed 'cowardice' .
We lost dad the day before 9/11 (at the ridiculously young age of 67) - that was a weird day; up all night trying to comfort my mother with the TV on in the background, then news coming through from New York... strangely, it helped: it was such a huge event, it even took my mother's mind off the obvious & got her talking again.
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Wilcey
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Posted: September 26 2006 at 03:43 |
Jim.................if you are the ancient noble around here, yet your Dad was younger than mine.................does that make me an old crone?
I have begun to realise that losing people we love is the big ol' downside of being "grown-ups"...............my family is shrinking year by year and I don't like it.
P-C
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Jim Garten
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Joined: February 02 2004
Location: South England
Status: Offline
Points: 14693
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Posted: September 26 2006 at 03:55 |
prog-chick wrote:
does that make me an old crone? |
Not necessarily old, P-C...
prog-chick wrote:
I have begun to realise that losing people we love is the big ol' downside of being "grown-ups"...my family is shrinking year by year and I don't like it. |
Hmmm - such is the penalty we pay for age & experience; we tend to go to more funerals than weddings.
I also remember when friends birthdays were all 21st & 25th (with the occasional 30th... )... now the average is between 45 & 50!
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Wilcey
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Posted: September 26 2006 at 03:58 |
Jim Garten wrote:
I also remember when friends birthdays were all 21st & 25th (with the occasional 30th...)... now the average is between 45 & 50! |
Aint that the truth!!!
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chopper
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Posted: September 26 2006 at 07:40 |
It sure is. It really makes you feel old when you go to your best friend's 50th birthday party!
I should point out that I have a few years to go before I get there.
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Jim Garten
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Joined: February 02 2004
Location: South England
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Posted: September 26 2006 at 07:51 |
chopper wrote:
It really makes you feel old when you go to your best friend's 50th birthday party! |
Yes and no...
When I went to a good friend's 50th last year, I ended up feeling very old; unsurprising, really, as he's a superb Psy-Trance DJ, and the party went on until 6 in the morning... then I had to play a chillout set
The next day, I felt very old...
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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