Things we used to do

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Dirk

If 6 Was 9
Location
Watchet
It was called "Infadraw method". Keynsham that's spelt. K E Y N S H A M.
TMN to me, I think.:okay:
 

Profpointy

Legendary Member
Watching the Benny Hill Show and thinking there was nothing inappropriate about a middle aged man in a dirty mac chasing after scantily dressed young girls.
My, how we all laughed.

mmm, but the dirty mac character he was portrayed as a a something of a pathetic loser, a figure of contempt who would never actually get the girl, so perhaps not so bad morally? maybe?
 

sight-pin

Veteran
Saturday morning pictures.....cheap as chips and a good time
 

Padraig

Active Member
I can remember going to the sports shop in the town and buying Keilkraft balsa aeroplanes, making them and stinking the house out with the lovely smell of dope.

Takes me back to the sixties, when I had a radio control licence. I was seriously into substance misuse. That dope was excellent, as was fuel proofer, which you painted on as the final coat. Another favourite was Radiospares switch cleaner, used to correct noisy variable resistors and deposits of oxide in valveholder sockets. That stuff was the absolute business. The rest of the decade passed in a haze.
 
D

Deleted member 1258

Guest
Do you remember what his "System" was called? Radio Luxembourg was on AM, I think, and it was always fading in and out in a fog of heterodyne whistle.

Yes I remember Radio Luxembourg, and Radio Caroline, Radio London and a few others the names of which I've forgotten, wasn't there one on a Fort offshore, Themes estuary somewhere?
 

Padraig

Active Member
No sawn off bit from the end of one of the candles your mum kept in case of power cuts (in your case, an altar candle perhaps...)? Nah, doesn't count...

My mother was a part-time housekeeper at our local presbytery. They had a full-time live-in housekeeper in those days, but she filled in on days off, as well as counting all the Sunday collections. The candles used on the altar were very high quality. It was specified that they should contain a certain percentage of beeswax, and they were very aromatic as they burnt. When they'd been partly used up, they were replaced with new ones, and we got to take them home, where they were useful during the frequent power cuts in those days. There was one really bad series of power cuts, during some crisis or other. To supplement the ex-church candles, we tried to buy some more, but the shops had completely sold out because of the demand. On the corner nearby was a butcher's shop. We bought packs of their own beef dripping in wax paper. These were pierced with a knitting needle, and a length of string inserted down the middle. During power cuts, they burnt very well, but with a strong beefy odour. Dripping was not as refined in those days as it is now, and it had a much stronger yellow colour than the present-day product. It was much better in your chip pan too.
 
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