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Re: Bonfire Night
Originally Posted by Tuppence
(Post 8955995)
The infamous Chipman incident! Don't think we made the news :rofl:
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Re: Bonfire Night
Given Souvette's previous form with explosives and fires, I'm glad she has no interest in celebrating Bonfire Night.
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Re: Bonfire Night
Originally Posted by Novocastrian
(Post 8956009)
Fair enough. But this toffee apple thing? We never did that in Geordieland.
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Re: Bonfire Night
1 Attachment(s)
Having only recently discovered when and what Bonfire Night is, I am quite looking forward to setting off fireworks.
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Re: Bonfire Night
Originally Posted by ireland2canada
(Post 8957048)
Having only recently discovered when and what Bonfire Night is, I am quite looking forward to setting off fireworks.
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Re: Bonfire Night
In town we are not allowed them (though you do occasionally see them going off) out at the village where we have the lake house you can have them. But it is usually too cold by now to even think of standing there going oooh aaaah. So we tend to give it a miss, sometimes I miss it, sometimes I don't.
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Guy Fawkes Night
Not sure if this is the correct place to post this but just wanted to let the newcomers to Nova Scotia know that we are holding a Guy Fawkes Bonfire Night at Boulderwood Farm this Friday 5th November .
www.boulderwood.com its not far from Mount Uniake ..If you would like more info please contact me....thanks :thumbsup: |
Re: Bonfire Night
Originally Posted by ireland2canada
(Post 8957048)
Having only recently discovered when and what Bonfire Night is, I am quite looking forward to setting off fireworks.
http://www.fireworkmuseum.co.uk/tit11.jpg |
Re: Bonfire Night
Originally Posted by Novocastrian
(Post 8956009)
Fair enough. But this toffee apple thing? We never did that in Geordieland.
Originally Posted by el_richo
(Post 8956014)
Loved them as a kid. Preferred the hot dogs and a Styrofoam cup of hot tomato soup, and little burn marks randomly found on my body after sparkler "sword" fights.
Brings back fond memories |
Re: Bonfire Night
Originally Posted by Bali2010
(Post 8957879)
Pie & peas followed by parkin pigs:thumbup:
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Re: Bonfire Night
Originally Posted by Oink
(Post 8958049)
Cheesy peas?
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Re: Bonfire Night
Originally Posted by Oink
(Post 8957577)
THis more like it. Jumping jacks ere brilliant, they had a rather chaotic pattern. One landed in my Dad's wellies.
http://www.fireworkmuseum.co.uk/tit11.jpg http://www.blackcatfireworks.co.uk/index.htm |
Re: Bonfire Night
Rip raps, parkin cake, air bombs, baked spuds (peel off the charcoal first), treacle toffee, bengal matches and watching out for the scally who sticks a 3-2-1 Zero in a dog turd.
Halloween: whatever. |
Re: Bonfire Night
Originally Posted by Oink
(Post 8955295)
Anyone do anything for Bonfire Night or has cultural assimilation and local by-laws long since snuffed out this tradition?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_Faw...Global_customs |
Re: Bonfire Night
All this reminissing is lovely
As a kid, we went to a small village called Fringford to celebrate Fireworks night. Did a parade of burning torches, to light the stack of wood that had some dummy(and i dont mean a politician) in a chair strapped to the top, we would then go and get a jacket spud with beans from the village hall, and a hot(scalding) squash drink, sit on the wet grass, and wait for the fireworks to start, and when they did we were given sparklers, shown how to hold them and draw with them, while the parents went ooo and arrr. We then would toast marshmellows, eat toffee apples and head home ...cold wet, high on sugar but very happy!! :D We are going through the paperwork at present to emigrate to canada, i do hope we can celebrate this there...its one thing i would personally miss. |
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