katyjay

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Posts posted by katyjay

  1. How about 'A finger of fudge is just enough to give your kids a treat, a finger of fudge is just enough until it's time to eat. Full of Cadbury's goodness and very small and neat, a finger of fudge is just enough to give your kids a treat.

    Any fruit gums and fruit pastilles in tubes. There was a round caramel in tubes too, I loved them. Fruit gums lasted forever as they stuck to all your back teeth! Aniseed balls were a cheap buy, by the quarter. Same for mint imperials.

    Fry's Turkish Delight. Yuk, couldn't stand the stuff [neither could I stand soft centered chocs in a box] Fry's Peppermint Cream bar, and 5 fruit bar were popular.

  2. I don't know if this has been touched on before, but here goes.

    When I was a kid, I'd eat liquorice imps, spanish root, flying saucers, kali [you wet your finger and dipped it in] tuffy fags, 1d liqourice [pipe, shoelaces, catherine wheel, all lovely and soft]

    Anymore, anyone?.

  3. I can't remember my dad having any sayings, but he did call his nose his ookumsnifter. He also used to ask me to pull his finger! I thought it was so clever when he let one rip. [well we didn't have a telly then, so, easily entertained] He did use quite a few words picked up in India and Burma during the war. The newspaper was the coggage, to look was to take a dekko. Also he called rice pudding, chinese wedding cake.

  4. Our rum stick a bum wasn't as dangerous as the school playing ground one. I remember that 1 person bent over and grabbed the fence, another ran up behind and jumped on their back [much like mounting a horse!] then someone else bent down behind, hanging on to the first person, and so on. I can't ever remember forming a pyramid.

    Who remembers conkers? Lethal little buggers, they were. We used to either soak, or boil them in vinegar to make that like concrete. I used to close my eyes when the lads tried to whack mine, as I knew my knuckles were in for it.

    • Upvote 1
  5. In the winter, the locals lads would get a tin can, poke holes in it, put string through 2 at the top, then fill it with bits of paper and wood, light it and swing it round. We called it a winter warmer. We'd also get 2 cans, put 2 holes near the top, tie string in a loop, and walk on them, holding onto the string. I think there was also a game called Bulldog.

  6. Yes, we played that too. Also played Queenie, Queenie, who's got the ball. What time is it Mr. Wolf. Whip and top, around pancake day [chalk your design on the top]. Rump stick a bum, here I come. Leapfrog. Two balls up against a wall, always reciting a rhyme while you did this. Skipping rope. [again reciting a rhyme] Hedge hopping. Hide and seek. Spirit tapping.

    • Like 1
  7. Every now and again, something happens to remind me of things my parents, especially my mam, used to say all the time. At the time, we never thought them peculiar, they were always there in conversation.

    For instance, if you were going out, she'd say 'Have you got your gasmask?' and you'd reply, yeah, I've got it on. I guess this harked back to the war years, but we kept it up for years afterwards.

    Any more sayings?

  8. I worked at Raleigh from Jan 62 to July 67. I was in the Gradual Payments dept, in the computer room. I was a punch card operator there. My first 3 months were in the training school on Lenton Blvd, then down to Triumph Rd for the rest of the time. Anyone else work there?

    Kath

    • Like 1
  9. Thanks Caz. I hope it's warmer too Mick. It's supposed to snow here either tonight or tomorrow, 12 inches they say.

    We are getting the ship in Houston and going down to Belize, via 3 ports in Mexico. So hopefully it will be much warmer down there. I can but hope.

    Kath