News0 min ago
The Good Old Days.
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Does anyone else sometimes wish we could go back to the days when you went to your corner shop for six egges and when you cooked them for breakfast they were nearly always double yolkers,the bacon came with rind on, that you cooked then cut off for the wild birds, and if you wanted to make a phone call you used a red telephone box, or is it just me? Im sure it was a much slower pace of life too.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There was also no central heating or double glazing. I woke up to ice on the inside of my bedroom window every winter.
Baths were rationed because putting the immersion heating on was expensive.
From the age of 8 it was my job to lay the coal fire. I would be there with my numb, chill-blained fingers fumbling with cinders every morning.
A salad consisted of half a hard boiled egg, a tomato, lettuce leaf and a radish, smothered in salad cream.
No thanks.
Baths were rationed because putting the immersion heating on was expensive.
From the age of 8 it was my job to lay the coal fire. I would be there with my numb, chill-blained fingers fumbling with cinders every morning.
A salad consisted of half a hard boiled egg, a tomato, lettuce leaf and a radish, smothered in salad cream.
No thanks.
-- answer removed --
Putting your gloves on the fire guard to warm them before you put them on to go to school
hot porage for breakfast with condensed milk.
lovely school milk. Sometimes it had ice on the top.
Grocery shops that had a smell of their own.
Gathering wood for the fire from driftwood off the beach. My dad lighting his cigarette using a spill.
hot porage for breakfast with condensed milk.
lovely school milk. Sometimes it had ice on the top.
Grocery shops that had a smell of their own.
Gathering wood for the fire from driftwood off the beach. My dad lighting his cigarette using a spill.