presta
Legendary Member
Me too. My mother was in labour for 63 hours before they decided to do a caesarian.I had a difficult entry into this world
Me too. My mother was in labour for 63 hours before they decided to do a caesarian.I had a difficult entry into this world
First 19 years, lived on Merseyside, Prescot, with family. My dad worked for BICC, as I did for a year, then my dad was transferred to the Erith site in Kent, so we all moved south.

Born in Leicester, then Lived in Enderby bought a house in Narborough then when my Fiance and I split I was forced to move into town. Been with Maz 30 years now on the edge of Glenfield.
My father worked for BICC (British Incorporated Calendar Cables or Construction - unclear memory!) based at the Erith site. Used to work on electricity pylons and underground connections, etc. Used to drive a BICC van. Later became Balfour Kilpatrick and Balfour Beaty if I remember correctly.
He used to earn a huge amount of money leading an emergency response team. One year when I was 14/15 so 1970/71 he earned over £30k which was an awful lot of money then.
I had a difficult entry into this world, hence me being born in two places! I'm registered as being born in Whalley near Clitheroe Lancashire, but I actually popped out in Accrington Lancashire. According to my late mother, I refused to come out due to umbilical cord problems, so I was rushed to 7 miles away Accrington Victoria Hospital which in those days had a fully operational maternity unit. On arrival and after some serious inducing, my mother dropped me, so technically I was born in Accrington, though on my birth certificate it has 'Clitheroe in the county of Lancashire' 🤔 🧐
In our family, dad had an identical twin (now both gone bless em). I had three brothers, two of them are identical twins, ironically one born in Huntingdon, the other, after some complications was born in Cambridge...different counties back then (and perhaps still are)
One of my twin brothers, the still surviving one, had twin children (one of those died of SIDS when around 2.
Three consecutive generations of twins in our family, thats going some...