This page is no longer updated, and is the old forum. For new topics visit the New HOL forum.
Register | Edit Profile | Subscriptions | Forum Rules | Log In
Teddy Eagle 15 Dec 22 10.22am | |
---|---|
Originally posted by kingdowieonthewall
peardrax also, I believe? We had a bottle of Apricot brandy which like a holy relic. No idea where it came from.
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Palace Old Geezer Midhurst 15 Dec 22 12.41pm | |
---|---|
It all started for me during the year of our Lord one thousand, nine hundred and forty seven in my bedroom looking out on the railway line in Wallington. Not that I remember that year. but my early memories of Christmas are frost on the inside of the window, seeing my breath in the cold air, a xylophone, the Tiger annual and Hornby Dublo. Dad drank too much and hated the day to end. He was always the last up to bed. Mum was a port and lemon girl of if she felt really daring a Babycham. I would sneek a sip of dad's beer. We had no TV until I was about seven I think, but even after we had one it was only on for the Queen's speech. Entertainment came from a lovely old radiogram and dreadful card games like Housie Housie and Pit. I hated them and usually found a corner the read the Tiger. As an only child, Christmas when I was young wasn't exactly a bundle of fun. But now I love seeing the excited faces of my grandchildren as they cause havoc around the house. And I can have a drink without feeling guilty.
Dad and I watched games standing on the muddy slope of the Holmesdale Road end. He cheered and I rattled. |
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Slimey Toad Karsiyaka, North Cyprus 15 Dec 22 12.57pm | |
---|---|
I grew up in a part-Italian household as my stepfather was from the Amalfi coast and always had a bottle of Sambuca. Oh the joys of putting coffee beans in the glass and setting fire to them.
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Nicholas91 The Democratic Republic of Kent 15 Dec 22 1.20pm | |
---|---|
Nice P.O.G & ST! Still very much enjoying this thread
Now Zaha's got a bit of green grass ahead of him here... and finds Ambrose... not a bad effort!!!! |
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Palace Old Geezer Midhurst 15 Dec 22 6.01pm | |
---|---|
We all like a good old reminisce eh Nick? But, I'm sitting here with the central heating on (sod the cost - at my age I want to be comfortable) and can't help thinking how cold it must have been in that old house in Wallington and how much home comforts have improved. My folk never complained though. It was just accepted as the norm.
Dad and I watched games standing on the muddy slope of the Holmesdale Road end. He cheered and I rattled. |
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
becky over the moon 15 Dec 22 9.48pm | |
---|---|
Originally posted by Palace Old Geezer
It all started for me during the year of our Lord one thousand, nine hundred and forty seven in my bedroom looking out on the railway line in Wallington. Not that I remember that year. but my early memories of Christmas are frost on the inside of the window, seeing my breath in the cold air, a xylophone, the Tiger annual and Hornby Dublo. Dad drank too much and hated the day to end. He was always the last up to bed. Mum was a port and lemon girl of if she felt really daring a Babycham. I would sneek a sip of dad's beer. We had no TV until I was about seven I think, but even after we had one it was only on for the Queen's speech. Entertainment came from a lovely old radiogram and dreadful card games like Housie Housie and Pit. I hated them and usually found a corner the read the Tiger. As an only child, Christmas when I was young wasn't exactly a bundle of fun. But now I love seeing the excited faces of my grandchildren as they cause havoc around the house. And I can have a drink without feeling guilty. We played Newmarket and Thruppeny Swindle - and we were all made to stand for the national anthem when the Queen's speech came on...cold but happy days!
A stairway to Heaven and a Highway to Hell give some indication of expected traffic numbers |
|
Alert a moderator to this post | Board Moderator |
Spiderman Horsham 15 Dec 22 9.52pm | |
---|---|
Originally posted by Palace Old Geezer
We all like a good old reminisce eh Nick? But, I'm sitting here with the central heating on (sod the cost - at my age I want to be comfortable) and can't help thinking how cold it must have been in that old house in Wallington and how much home comforts have improved. My folk never complained though. It was just accepted as the norm. We have recently had a similar conversation. My family did not have central heating, so we relied on small electric heaters and open fires. It must have been cold but, honestly I cannot remember complaining about the cold. NowI sit in the LH and main about the cold.
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Spiderman Horsham 15 Dec 22 9.54pm | |
---|---|
Originally posted by kingdowieonthewall
peardrax also, I believe? We had one, the advocaat and cherries to keep mum topped up with snowballs
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Forest Hillbilly in a hidey-hole 16 Dec 22 5.56am | |
---|---|
The Christmas it started to go 5hlt. I must have been 7-ish. Parents rowing a lot as divorce was looming. When i went to school in the morning one of the kids had bad news. "Father Christmas isn't real". When dad left, the big presents were no more. Just socks and tangerines. Edited by Forest Hillbilly (16 Dec 2022 5.57am)
I disengage, I turn the page. |
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Palace Old Geezer Midhurst 16 Dec 22 8.14am | |
---|---|
Originally posted by Spiderman
We have recently had a similar conversation. My family did not have central heating, so we relied on small electric heaters and open fires. It must have been cold but, honestly I cannot remember complaining about the cold. NowI sit in the LH and main about the cold. Our central heating consisted of a paraffin stove (Valor?) which dad used to leave alight all night in the hall. The only other heating came from a coal fire in one of the two downstairs rooms that mum lit when she got home from work late afternoon.
Dad and I watched games standing on the muddy slope of the Holmesdale Road end. He cheered and I rattled. |
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Badger11 Beckenham 16 Dec 22 8.24am | |
---|---|
Originally posted by Spiderman
We have recently had a similar conversation. My family did not have central heating, so we relied on small electric heaters and open fires. It must have been cold but, honestly I cannot remember complaining about the cold. NowI sit in the LH and main about the cold. Sounds like my upbringing we had the coal man and the paraffin man house was always freezing. This was fairly typical for home in the sixties. I still maintain one of the biggest impacts on modern life is the introduction of central heating to most houses.
One more point |
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Teddy Eagle 16 Dec 22 8.49am | |
---|---|
Originally posted by Palace Old Geezer
Our central heating consisted of a paraffin stove (Valor?) which dad used to leave alight all night in the hall. The only other heating came from a coal fire in one of the two downstairs rooms that mum lit when she got home from work late afternoon. Fetching the paraffin was a real chore when it had snowed. I remember at my Nan's making "firelighters" out of tightly rolled & twisted newspaper then another sheet over the fireplace to make it draw. Our hot water came from a coal boiler in the back room so if that went out it was cold water. No recycling though because anything that would burn went into it.
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Registration is now on our new message board
To login with your existing username you will need to convert your account over to the new message board.
All images and text on this site are copyright © 1999-2024 The Holmesdale Online, unless otherwise stated.
Web Design by Guntrisoft Ltd.