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Beemer
21st August 2006, 11:40
And, unlike the person who sent it to me, I took out all the >>> and extra spaces! Bit long...but definitely brought back some memories :-) A good read!!

GROWING UP IN NEW ZEALAND
I'm talking about hide and seek/spotlight in the park. The corner dairy, hopscotch, four square, go carts, cricket in front of the garbage bin and inviting everyone on your street to join in, skipping (double dutch), gutterball, handstands, elastics, bullrush, catch and kiss, footy on the best lawn in the street, slip'n'slides, the trampoline with water on it (or a sprinkler under it), hula hoops, jumping in puddles with gumboots on, mud pies and building dams in the gutter. The smell of the sun and fresh cut grass.

'Big bubbles no troubles' with Hubba Bubba bubble gum. A topsy. Mr Whippy cones on a warm summer night after you've chased him round the block. 20 cents worth of mixed lollies lasted a week and pretending to smoke "fags" (the lollies) was really cool! A dollars' worth of chips from the corner take-away fed two people (AND the sauce was free!!).

Being upset when you botched putting on the temporary tattoo from the bubblegum packet, but still wearing it proudly. Watching Saturday morning cartoons: 'The Smurfs', 'AstroBoy', 'He-man', 'Captain Caveman', 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles', 'Jem' (trulyoutrageous!!), and 'Heeeey heeeeey heeeeeeey it's faaaaaaat Albert'. Or staying up late and sneaking a look at the "AO" on the second telly, being amazed when you watched TV right up until the 'Goodnight Kiwi!' When After School with Jason Gunn & Thingie had a cult following and What Now was on Saturday mornings!

When around the corner seemed a long way, and going into town seemed like going somewhere. Where running away meant you did laps of the block because you weren't allowed to cross the road! A million mozzie bites, wasp and bee stings (stee bings!).

Sticky fingers, goodies & baddies, cops and robbers, cowboys and Indians, riding bikes 'til the streetlights came on and catching tadpoles in horse troughs. Going down to the school swimming pool when you didn't have a key and your friends letting you in, drawing all over the road and driveway with chalk. Climbing trees and building huts out of every sheet your mum had in the cupboard (and never putting them back folded). Walking to school in bare feet, no matter what the weather.

When writing 'I love....? on your pencil case, really did mean it was true love. "He loves me? he loves me not?" and daisy chains on the front lawn. Stealing other people's flowers from their gardens and then selling them back to them... Running till you were out of breath. Laughing so hard that your stomach hurt. Pitching the tent in the back/front yard (and never being able to find all the pegs). Jumping on the bed. Singing into your hairbrush in front of the mirror, making mix tapes... Sleepovers and ghosts stories with the next door neighbours. Pillowfights, spinning round, getting dizzy and falling down was cause for the giggles. The worst embarrassment was being picked last for a team.

Water balloons were the ultimate weapon. Weetbix cards pegged on the spokes transformed any bike into a motorcycle. Collecting WWF and garbage pail kids cards. Eating raw jelly and Raro, making homemade lemonade and sucking on a Rad, a traffic light popsicle, or a Paddle Pop... blurple, yollange and prink!

You knew everyone in your street - and so did your parents! It wasn't odd to have two or three "best friends" and you would ask them by sending a note asking them to be your best friend. You didn't sleep a wink on Christmas eve and tried (and failed) to wait up for the tooth fairy. When nobody owned a pure-bred dog. When 50c was decent pocket money. When you'd reach into a muddy gutter for 10c. When nearly everyone's mum was there when the kids got home from school. It was magic when dad would "remove" his thumb.

When it was considered a great privilege to be taken out to dinner at the local Chinese restaurant (or Cobb'n'Co.) with your family.

When any parent could discipline any kid, or feed her or use him to carry groceries and nobody, not even the kid, thought a thing of it. When being sent to the principal's office was nothing compared to the fate that awaited a misbehaving student at home.

Basically, we were in fear for our lives, but it wasn't because of drive-by shootings, drugs, gangs, etc. Our parents and grandparents were a much bigger threat! Some of us are still afraid of them!!!

Remember when decisions were made by going "eeny-meeny-miney-mo" or dib dib's-scissors, paper, rock. "Race issue" meant arguing about who ran the fastest. Money issues were handled by whoever was the banker in Monopoly.

Terrorism was when the older kids were at the end of your street with pea-shooters waiting to ambush you, or the neighbourhood rottie chased you up a tree!

The worst thing you could catch from the opposite sex was boy/girl germs, and the worst thing in your day was having to sit next to one. Where bluelight discos were the equivalent to a Rave, and asking a boy out meant writing a 'polite' note getting them to tick 'yes' or 'no'. When there was always that one 'HOT' guy/girl.

Having a weapon in school meant being caught with a slingshot. Your biggest danger at school was accidentally walking through the middle of a heated game of "brandies".

Birthday beats meant you didn't want to go to school on your birthday!

Scrapes and bruises were kissed and made better. Taking drugs meant scoffing orange-flavoured chewable vitamin Cs, or swallowing half a Panadol. Ice cream was considered a basic food group. Going to the beach and catching a wave was a dream come true. Boogie boarding in the white wash made you the next Kelly Slater. Abilities were discovered because of a "double- dare".

Older siblings were the worst tormentors, but also the fiercest protectors.

Now, didn't that bring back some fond memories??If you can remember most of these, you're a Kiwi legend!!! Pass this on to another Kiwi legend who may need a break from their "grown up" life... I DOUBLE-DARE YA!!!!!

Zukin
21st August 2006, 11:53
That is very good!!

I had forgotten about some of those games and things we used to do :yes:

Cheers

Dooly
21st August 2006, 11:57
Ahh...the old days.:yes:

MSTRS
21st August 2006, 12:03
Oh dear....our kids grew up that way!!! *shuffles off to his comfy chair*

Beemer
21st August 2006, 12:04
Anyone been watching that Perfect Age programme? We sort of fall between the two - although technically born in the Baby Boomer era (the very last year of it!), I relate more to the Generation X crowd. Last night's was a shocker, two of the BBs let that older guy walk all over them and his ideas for raising money (spouting Shakespeare in the city...) were crap! The Millenium ones had some interesting ideas - they bough a Polaroid camera and took photos of a bikini-clad woman rubbing suntan lotion on guys!

frogfeaturesFZR
21st August 2006, 12:16
The kids today should be so lucky .......great memories !

Devil
21st August 2006, 12:28
Aww man, I want to go play in the mud!
:rockon:

Swoop
21st August 2006, 12:32
Where was the "Keep cool till after school" and "Nice one Stu!":2thumbsup (Had to use that smilie 'cause I couldn't find one with 1 thumb up...)

Colapop
21st August 2006, 12:33
Can't do that now - PC police and OSH would have ya!

Motu
21st August 2006, 12:41
My childhood was spent in the pounds shillings and pence era,I think I fit in the Baby Boomer bracket.TT2's were 4p and we could go to the flicks in Queens St on 2 bob - 6p each way on the bus,6p for the movie and 6p for Jaffa;s....but if we cheated and took the train it was 6p return and could buy Snifters too.Going by train meant we could run around the Cental Station and turn the lights out in the carriges in the tunnels.

We lived in a No Exit street and we all played on the road.In some spooky connection to a time warp - one day we found ourselves making skateboards (must of seen them on someones TV,we didn't have one),using our mates sister's steel wheel skates and nailing them to rough sawn planks cut to suit.But our road was corse chip and full of holes (we had filled some with concrete).But as we were doing the finishing touches a road crew appeared and layed down new tarseal - we were using it the same day! We would make chalk roads all the way down the hill to follow with our trolley's and skateboards.....um,someones chalk spanniel got a pounding,then were moved onto someone elses chalk animal - at least they served some useful purpose afterall.

Flyingpony
21st August 2006, 15:43
Now, didn't that bring back some fond memories?? If you can remember most of these, you're a Kiwi legend!!!
Sounds like I had a normal childhood :rockon:

yungatart
21st August 2006, 16:16
I got the same thing sent to me too... it made for a pleasant bit of reminiscing, I think my childhood was great compared to what so many kids get today, quite sad when you think about it really.

Robbo
21st August 2006, 17:07
My childhood was spent in the pounds shillings and pence era,I think I fit in the Baby Boomer bracket.TT2's were 4p and we could go to the flicks in Queens St on 2 bob - 6p each way on the bus,6p for the movie and 6p for Jaffa;s....but if we cheated and took the train it was 6p return and could buy Snifters too.Going by train meant we could run around the Cental Station and turn the lights out in the carriges in the tunnels.

We lived in a No Exit street and we all played on the road.In some spooky connection to a time warp - one day we found ourselves making skateboards (must of seen them on someones TV,we didn't have one),using our mates sister's steel wheel skates and nailing them to rough sawn planks cut to suit.But our road was corse chip and full of holes (we had filled some with concrete).But as we were doing the finishing touches a road crew appeared and layed down new tarseal - we were using it the same day! We would make chalk roads all the way down the hill to follow with our trolley's and skateboards.....um,someones chalk spanniel got a pounding,then were moved onto someone elses chalk animal - at least they served some useful purpose afterall.

Geeze Motu
You can actually remember back that far? You're doin well. LOL What were you earning back then? I seem to remember i was on about 8 Pounds a week when i bought my first car (Mk1 zephyr) and petrol was 3 shillings & 4 pence per gallon. Hey, compared to earnings ratio, it was dearer back then than it is now. Maybe i should stop complaining about the current price. Yep! them were good times, Tree Huts, Homebuilt Trolleys, Roller Skates, Raiding Fruit Trees and Dirt Fights with the neighbours kids.

Cheers

Robbo

sunhuntin
21st August 2006, 20:30
hell, i remember a lot of that! i was born in 85....by my guess, itd be about the start of "cotton wool kids" lol.
i climbed and fell out of trees, speared my foot with huge chunk of bark when i jumped off the jungle gym at school, got belted by a boy and belted him back and we both got sent to the headmaster. also getting told by an older girl at primary that us young ones were stupid cos we couldnt spell "volcano" lol. and the swings were made out of hollowed out tyres.
i remember my favourite teacher handing out pineapple lumps and giving away stuff [now that i think about it, it must have been unclaimed stuff from lost property!] and me eyeing up a handkercheif holder for my mum. the street kid from across the road picked it and then traded me when he saw how upset i was. [we hated those kids...they threw crap in our swimming pool]
also remember another teacher who started at that school when i was about 6 or 7 and we all called her gonzo cos she had a big nose. saw her the other day. she was in her car and we both left the shop at the same time. she saw me get on the bike, and made a point of looking for me several times before she pulled out of her park, and again at the driveway. she has my respect, and i regret what we called her.
i remember sundays had no adverts and no-one left their property cos nothing was open. the lotto things used to be squares, and lotto was lotto, no strike or anything else.
bike rides with dad around the block and also long walks with the whole family, arguing over who held the dogs lead. country bike rides and being told to stay left and going so far left i fell over in the weeds. waiting at the gate for dad to come home on his motorbike....if we were lucky, hed sit us on the bike, me on the tank, and ride us around what we thought was a huge backyard. police acadamy would be rerun every couple of weeks, and never got any less funny. our amiga computer was top of the line, and everything [mouse etc] plugged in the back of the keyboard [which weighed a ton!!] and all our games were on those square disks...our favourite game was superfrog and took a whole 4 disks to complete all the levels. lemmings took 2, and mum would sit up all night to clock it and id fall asleep hearing the noise they made when they died.

*sigh* can i go back, pretty please? just for 5 mins.

onearmedbandit
21st August 2006, 20:39
I'm only 30 but grew up in a small town outside Christchurch, 95% of that list brings back the memories for me. My first experience of PC'ness was the banning of BullRush. Was the best game ever, and no one I know got hurt.

mdb
21st August 2006, 20:49
I used to hate wearing shoes and couldn't wait until it was warm enough so I could go barefoot to school (cos there was no way you'd disobey your parents). Funny thing is now when I see a kid with no shoes I think, "poor kid, I wonder if he had anything to eat today!"

Edbear
21st August 2006, 20:52
Yeah, and riding on the sled behind "Danny" the half-draught horse to feed out the hay we'd pitchforked into stacks. My older sister sticking the fork through her gumboot...!

Party-line telephones and Dad trying to load the Angus bull onto the '48 Ford Bonus whereby it stamped its foot through the deck... Going around with him in the old Bedford Cream truck and making our own butter and ice-cream in the butter churn - "Muuummm! My arms are sore!" "Okay, let your sister have a go, now!"

Got my tonsils out in the local Drs. surgery with the old Ether mask! Ghastly!

Mumdriving the old Daimler school bus with the Wilson pre-selector 'box...

Sigh! I am NOT old, I'm NOT I'm NOT!:bye:

scumdog
21st August 2006, 23:07
In my spasmodic memory: 4pence for one of those 4bit packs of chutty, a Jelly-tip cost 6pence but a Tutti-Frutti only cost 4pence, a shilling (10 cents) got you two pieces of fish and a gut-full of chips - and NO clean newsprint, it was all yesterdays newspaper - oh, and a newspaper cost 4pence, less than 4cents, likewise a pint (600ml) of milk.

Petrol was 36pence a gallon - about 7.8cents a litre.

A half-doz of Bavarian Bitter beer (BIG bottles, boy sized baby-bottles were not invented then) cost $1:98 a 1/2 doz.

Cops were to be scared of, if they kicked your arse the next worry was your dad found out - and kicked it again.

50 rounds of .22 ammo cost 7/6 (75 cents) for the good stuff.

Motu
21st August 2006, 23:54
Sunday morning,sitting on the curb outside a dairy in a small beachside town.....4c for a pint of milk,a quick shake,a thumb through the tinfoil top and chugalug 2in off the top.Make a Shake was 3c?? strawberry flavour....pour it in,a quick shake and there's a good breakfast to settle a stomach full of Lion Red....

scumdog
22nd August 2006, 00:05
Sunday morning,sitting on the curb outside a dairy in a small beachside town.....4c for a pint of milk,a quick shake,a thumb through the tinfoil top and chugalug 2in off the top.Make a Shake was 3c?? strawberry flavour....pour it in,a quick shake and there's a good breakfast to settle a stomach full of Lion Red....


Make-a Shake? Oh yeah, geat stuff - tasted great just to dip your finger into it and suck!!!

Ixion
22nd August 2006, 00:25
More to the point- beer was 1/- a jug! (1/3 for the poncy ones who could afford the lounge bar). Only woofters bought beer in bottles. Jug at the pub, flagon to take home.Take the empty flagon back, and get it refilled. (can't recall how much a flagon was , either 2/- or half a crown I think)

scumdog
22nd August 2006, 00:40
More to the point- beer was 1/- a jug! (1/3 for the poncy ones who could afford the lounge bar). Only woofters bought beer in bottles. Jug at the pub, flagon to take home.Take the empty flagon back, and get it refilled. (can't recall how much a flagon was , either 2/- or half a crown I think)

A half-gallon? two and sixpence - a half crown in 1965.

Big Dave
22nd August 2006, 00:49
Nostagia ain't what it used to be.

200hp 200kg motorcycles. Completely waterproof jackets. Mp3 players. plasma TV. Cable TV. The net. Porn on demand. Playstation.

Get over it and get with the programme.

scumdog
22nd August 2006, 00:58
Nostagia ain't what it used to be.

200hp 200kg motorcycles. Completely waterproof jackets. Mp3 players. plasma TV. Cable TV. The net. Porn on demand. Playstation.

Get over it and get with the programme.


Meh, fuggup ya twat, in 10 years or less all that crap you mentioned will be obsolete too.
Danged if I know what will be 'in' at that stage though.:bye:

Jeremy
22nd August 2006, 01:51
hell I can remember most of that. And I'm 19. I'm not ment to feel ancient at 19.

Can't remember goodnight kiwi though. Not old enough for that. However I can remember that teletext use to display at like 5am in the morning while I waited for the cartoons to start on the weekdays.

I'm annoyed Cobb & co is gone though [at least in Manukau, not sure about the rest of the country]. And the pizza hut restaurants. And most importantly Georgie Pie. Mainly cause they botched up your orders so much and if you ordered cheap stuff you were certain to get chicken pies.

I am happy the see the spaghetti pizza is gone though... And the other day I found pebbles again on a dairy on symonds street. I can remember when you never got smarties, or twix or anything like that. You'd see them at christmas when relatives from England would send them over as presents.

And there were no mobile phones.

Lias
22nd August 2006, 09:32
Can't remember goodnight kiwi though.

I'm annoyed Cobb & co is gone though [at least in Manukau, not sure about the rest of the country]. And the pizza hut restaurants.

Hamilton still has a Cobb & co, and a Pizza Hutt restaurant.

I also have a video of Goodnight Kiwi (I think possibly the final ever one, not sure) on the pc somewhere.

Str8 Jacket
22nd August 2006, 09:44
Ah the Goodnight Kiwi... I remember the very last one.
I remember the days me and my brother would chops trees down, mow the lawns, whatever the old's felt the need to make us do and then we'd get 20c each to go to the diary with, man you could buy alot of lollies with that. The old 2 for 1c lollies etc. Me and my brother were not allowed a TV when we were younger so we'd full the day's playing outside riding round and round on our bikes. I usually spent the time with my pony but sometimes the guys would let me play soccer with them, they'd make me go goalie and wind me just about everytime, I had broken all my fingers by the time I was 10. I hated wearing shoes and quite often "lost" them. I remember how much fun Bullrush was, though I do remember someone at school doing themselves a bad injury one day at school.... Damn all this PC bullshit! I often wish I could be a kid again!

Smokin
22nd August 2006, 11:13
Now all i need is a Delorean and a flux capacitor.

MikeyG
5th September 2006, 13:51
Isn’t this the TRUTH



TO ALL THE KIDS WHO WERE BORN IN THE

1930's 40's, 50's, 60's and 70's !!

First, we survived being born to mothers who smoked and/or drank while they carried us.

They took aspirin, ate blue cheese dressing, tuna from a can, and didn't get tested for diabetes.

Then after that trauma, our baby bassinettes were covered with bright coloured lead-based paints.

We had no childproof lids on medicine bottles, doors or cabinets and when we rode our bikes, we had no helmets, not to mention, the risks we took hitchhiking .

As children, we would ride in cars with no seat belts or air bags.

Riding in the back of a ute on a warm day was always a special treat.

We drank water from the garden hose and NOT from a bottle.

We shared one soft drink with four friends, from one bottle and NO ONE actually died from this.

We ate cupcakes, white bread and real butter and drank soft drinks with sugar in it, but we weren't overweight because......

WE WERE ALWAYS OUTSIDE PLAYING!!

We would leave home in the morning and play all day, as long as we were back when the street lights came on.

No one was able to reach us all day. And we were O.K.

We would spend hours building our go-carts out of scraps and then ride down the hill, only to find out we forgot the brakes. After running into the bushes a few times, we learned to solve the problem
.

We did not have Playstations, Nintendo's, X-boxes, no video games at all, no 99 channels on cable, no video tape movies, no surround sound, no mobile phones, no personal computers, no Internet or Internet chat rooms..........WE HAD FRIENDS and we went outside and found them!

We fell out of trees, got cut, broke bones and teeth and there were no lawsuits from these accidents .

We ate worms and mud pies made from dirt, and the worms did not live in us forever.

We were given BB guns for our 10th birthdays,

made up games with sticks and tennis balls and although we were told it would happen, we did not put out very many eyes.



We rode bikes or walked to a friend's house and knocked on the door or rang the bell, or just yelled for them!

Junior League had tryouts and not everyone made the team. Those who didn't had to learn to deal with disappointment. Imagine that!!

The idea of a parent bailing us out if we broke the law was unheard of. They actually sided with the law!

This generation has produced some of the best risk-takers, problem solvers and inventors ever!

The past 50 years have been an explosion of innovation and new ideas.

We had freedom, failure, success and responsibility, and we learned

HOW TO

DEAL WITH IT ALL!

And YOU are one of them!

CONGRATULATIONS!

You might want to share this with others who have had the luck to grow up as kids, before the lawyers and the government regulated our lives for our own good.

and while you are at it, forward it to your kids so they will know how brave their parents were.

Kind of makes you want to run through the house with scissors, doesn't it?!

PS - This is written in large font because your eyes are shot at your age

Beemer
5th September 2006, 14:16
Calling Sniper, your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to rid KB of reposts!

McJim
5th September 2006, 15:01
I dunno - I've read this before but not on KB - I also did a search on threads with the word 'Childhood' in it and this doesn't appear. Either the previous one was incorrectly named or it's the first time this has appeared on KB.

Sniper will know though.

Patrick
5th September 2006, 15:04
It is a repost...but a good one.:whocares:

Hitcher
5th September 2006, 15:04
Sniiiiiper!

Pumba
5th September 2006, 15:04
Yea prety sure ive read that one on here before

LilSel
5th September 2006, 16:23
:yes: I remember those things too... even the goodnight kiwi !
:Punk: BB generation indeed

Sniper
6th September 2006, 08:52
I was on days off, but as its been said, I have no need to say it again.