Oztalgian

Members
  • Content Count

    6,306
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    49

Posts posted by Oztalgian

  1. Little Chef, mainly on the A roads and much better value than Fortes or the others on the motorways, after the Olympic breakfast you never needed lunch.

    If memory serves me correctly there was quite a few along the A1. The one at Doncaster was always a good breakfast after an early start heading north.

  2. Back in the 80's I was at Heathrow airport waiting for a flight to OZ and going through security the baggage was scanned by a rather bored looking operative whilst those people taking an El Al flight had every bag opened and physically searched by the airline security staff, despite the obvious delays no one seemed upset and understood why it was happening.

    4 hours ago, loppylugs said:

    First flight was on a BOAC

    Given that many of its' flights were to the increasingly important "Middle East" the industry joke was that BOAC stood for Better On A Camel

    • Like 1
  3. 5 hours ago, DJ360 said:

    l"Oooh 'Ello Mister 'Orne.. lovely to varda yer jolly old eek agen.

    "Round The Horne" absolutely brilliant radio, way ahead of its time.

    Who can forget Rambling Syd Rumpo and J. Peasmold Gruntfuttock and Douglas Smith the announcer.

    Charles and Fiona "I know you know I know"

    Dr. Chou en Ginsberg MA (Failed)

    Oh hello,  I'm Julian and this is my friend Sandy with their Poari slang and companies called "Bona"

     

    Its predecessor Beyond our Ken was brilliant too along with I'm Sorry I'll Read That Again"

    I still listen to them on digital radio and they are just as funny as they were when originally broadcast. Classic British radio

    • Like 1
  4. After a very long run up his bowling action was a little unusual in that it was very front on.

    Looking at his career stats it was very effective.

    Like Ben I remember his 8fer against Australia. A great servant of English cricket RIP Bob

  5. On 11/30/2019 at 9:33 PM, philmayfield said:

    Star and Garter

    A great riverside pub. We often used to swim across the Trent to Hazelford Island.

    The Bromley arms at Fiskerton and the Unicorn at Gunthorpe were great riverside pubs too.

    As kids we often played on the little fairground at Gunthorpe. I loved the swingboats

  6. 7 hours ago, loppylugs said:

    Ours just throws it high enough for a Beagle to catch on the way down. 

    When we had our German Shepherd and had a BBQ he used to come outside and sit next to me in the hope that a sausage would fall off the hotplate. When one did it would never reach the floor and he would then go around all day licking his chops because the hot sausage had burnt his mouth. Never stopped him though, the next BBQ he'd be right alongside you hoping for another suicidal sausage.

    • Like 3
  7. 11 hours ago, philmayfield said:

    If turkey was that good we’d eat it a lot more often.

    As kids we never had turkey for Christmas lunch/dinner it was always a large chicken or cockerel that was bought "fresh" from the butchers. It had to be plucked, the giblets taken out and dressed, whatever that was and of course stuffed with the obligatory Paxo sage and onion stuffing.

    Only really started to eat turkey when we came to OZ. 

  8. On 11/28/2019 at 1:13 AM, philmayfield said:

    At least you didn't have to guess where the decimal point went! 

    Using a slide rule helped you get an idea of the order of magnitude of a calculation.

    I remember once whist mentoring some young engineers I asked one to do some stress calculations to help design a test rig. When he came back to me with the result from his scientific calculator I immediately told him something was not right, not the actual numbers in the answer but the magnitude of the number and asked him to go and check what he had done. He came back later and rather sheepishly said he had got the decimal place wrong in one of the inputs. Still have my Thornton Comprehensive slide rule somewhere and if I thought really hard I could probably do a simple multiplication.

  9. 3 hours ago, DJ360 said:

    we had it pretty rough and uncertain through the 70s,80s and 90s.

    Whilst I wasn't in the UK from 75 onwards I still class my generation (baby boomers) as the lucky generation. When I left school in the sixties we had no difficulties getting employment and many chopped and changed jobs for a few pence an hour more. There were no major conflicts that really affected us in the UK and Australia had just finished in the Vietnam war when we arrived.

    I really feel for those just setting out in life after school today, minimal job security, zero hours contracts, the expectations of extended, often unpaid hours. The way technology is changing the way we live and work and of course the cost of housing, and don't get me started on anti-social media and what it s doing to our society.

    If I had my time over again I would want it to start from when I was born and could relive the sixties and certainly not starting from today.

     

    • Like 3
  10. I can only comment on the death of the boy from Kogarah, I can only back up what Terry and Jill have said, a sad loss.

     

    Adding to what Deepdene Boy said I wonder which celebrities Nottstalgians would have round for dinner, either living or departed?

  11. Our new car has so many safety aids and fancy dodads to "help" your driving.

    It is the first car I have had with an electric handbrake it just comes on when you put the gearbox in park and off when you put it into reverse or drive.

    For the first few weeks I still kept going to put the handbrake on before getting out of the car. All is good now except that the older car we have has a conventional handbrake and guess what? ……………………………. I now have to make a conscious effort to remember to put it on.

    The new car has a constantly variable transmission and at the weekend we did a 500km round trip on country roads at high speed and returned 53 mpg

  12. 9 hours ago, Brew said:

    Here it's not closures that are killing the High St it's the opening of big stores out of town.

    The closing of the stores in the town centres has left the centre of many towns empty hulks. Yes, it is happening here too particularly in the CBD as parking charges increase and the council reduces spaces and time available for free parking. Joe public has voted with their feet and gone to the out of town shopping centres where parking is free.

  13. A number of posts mention Woolworths here in Australia.

     

    There is no link to F.W.Woolworth and Co in the UK. It started off here as Wallworths Bazaar Ltd, a rather obvious play on the UK and US company name.

    Having found that the Woolworths name was not registered in Australia they adopted the name Woolworths Limited in 1924.

    As many have said, they along with Coles have the lions share of the fresh food and dry goods market. 

    Aldi have aggressively entered the Australian market, LIDL/Kaufland are also planning to increase their presence in the Australian Market.

     

    The shopping streets of many towns and cities have been decimated by the closure of Woolworths and many other of the other chain stores such as BHS and M&S, as shopping habits change.