ian_in_the_midlands
Established Member
Also, as kids of 14 (or less) we were out on our own with airguns.
Ha ha, yes, it was quite a common birthday present. But only if you had good grades at school.Also, as kids of 14 (or less) we were out on our own with airguns.
A TV you had to go and change channel on the TV itself, or you had a bit of bamboo with something soft taped to the end so you didn't have to get up.
Oh and only 4 channels.
Also, as kids of 14 (or less) we were out on our own with airguns.
We all carried knives, and a few of my friends at ten or twelve years old owned their own shotguns. I've carried a knife all my life.I was going to add about a pocket knife. As a 10 year old, I considered it a tool, not a weapon.
Forgot 208mw?4 Channels! Luxury!!!! We had 2 Oh and the Home Service, Light Programme and the Third Programme. Happy Days
Never had coke as a kid. Best we got was a Britvic orange and a packet of Crisps, with blue twist of salt, sat in the car in the pub car park, no kids in pubs. Tizer was the special occasion drink at home. The milkman delivered it. Thinking about the pubs, we moved to Australia in the 60’s and us kids could go in the pub but women couldn’t. Different culturesI never had a whole can of coke, I had to share it with my sister, only had it on holiday, real special treat.
Oh and did anyone else to the receiver rest tapping routine in old phone boxes to get free calls? (It worked too).
I still do that. Cheese is made of mould anyway, at least thats my logic (still alive so far). Not doing it on bread though.
I miss proper milk with cream on the top too.
Another one is people smoking basically everywhere all the time, I remember not really being able to see through the fog on the top deck of the bus.
Ollie
I was just thinking of some of the things from when I was younger that people would have difficulty believing today, but it's not really all that long ago. First one was when some people from the military came to school and told us what to do in the event of a nuclear bomb being dropped. The best advice they offered was to get down as flat as possible on the ground bury your face in the ground, hands over the top,
Second one, my wife reminded me a couple of days ago...'Remember when there were two mail deliveries a day?'
Not 3” but -8 here last night and pushed the top off.What? You still don’t do that? Ha ha, mind you I draw the line at mouldy bread. I remember the old, what to do in the event of a nuclear attack advice, something about removing all the doors and building a shelter under the stairs, perhaps somebody can remind me – all total b-llocks of course. Ian
I remember the milk being left on the doorstep in very cold weather and the foil top would be stood on the top of 3 inches of frozen solid cream that had ejected out of the top of the bottle. Memories. Before you know it we’ll be on to Monty Python. Ian
Radio. The powers that be threatened to cut my father's licence regularly for using obscene language over the airwavs. The unit in the boot was the size on a suitcase.A car phone in 1967? Must have had a very long cord?
It doesn't freeze like it used to as it's homogenised. It was the cream that expanded dramatically.Not 3” but -8 here last night and pushed the top off.
I don't think they would believe it nowadays?Radio Luxembourg
I'll see your 208, and up you Radio Caroline.
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