Re: Childhood games...
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Only played Cluedo once, don't mind Monopoly if there are lots of folks playing and they're all drunk enough. |
Re: Childhood games...
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I remember being taught to play Chess by friend Charlotte's dad, Geoff -they had a board which was built into a little table with a drawer for the pieces. Never played Backgammon but I love Scrabble -I have no-one to play with either Margaret:(:rolleyes::D |
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Favourite game.
I'm in charge, and you do everything I tell you to. :D |
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Yes master:notworthy:notworthy:notworthy:worthy::D
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Yes, there was one. Sad but true. I remember at one meeting in the club house, one member wondered whether we'd ever rival the scouting movement. As membership peaked at twelve members, this seemed unlikely. Though I could always start another recruitment drive. :rolleyes::D |
Re: Childhood games...
More seriously, most games were just made up.
The landing half-way up the stairs was a stage coach. We loved that, but we had to be quiet, as we weren't really allowed to play on the stairs. Our parents did an overnight make over on the wash house, and turned it into a farm. That was great, growing crops, and looking after pigs made out of catering containers. Making dens. Either indoors if the weather was bad, under the stairs being a favourite place, or in the fields behind the house, which had dry stone walls, and thatched roofs. Digging for treasure, on archaelogical expeditions. Expeditions through 'jungles'. Which in reality were just over grown hedges, or waste land. Building sky-scrapers, when the farmer had had the combine harvester out in the fields we backed onto, but hadn't yet collected the bales of hay. Alway trying to make new means of communication. Walkie talkies fettled out of tins, invisible ink made from the juice of onions. Other favourite games, which we'd play for hours, was 'Whirlpool' in which you'd spend ages running/swimming one way round the swimming pool, until you'd got a strong current going, and then you'd let yourself get swept round when someone shouted 'Whirlpool!' Better if you had extra friends with you. 'Tidal Wave' was the same, but you got the current going length wise, as opposed to round. Board games, were the usual selection, ludo, snakes and ladders etc, though I did like Haunted House, where a ball was dropped down the chimney, and had the option of setting off various things, including traps. Everything else was arty, and involved making things. First toy I remember, which I loved was a model of Camberwick Green, with all the figures, which I got for my second birthday. Occasionally, after tea on Sunday, the best game ever, 'Bish Bash'. A rare treat we looked forward to. Which was us two, and Dad, locked in no-holds barred 'play fighting'. With Mum as referee, deciding when the contest had ended. Which was usually when tempers got frayed, and accusations of another participant not 'playing fair'. Happy days. :) |
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I'm two again.
I've just found Camberwick Green. Codeg Camberwick Green Village Set: To consist of... | Toys & Militaria | Mullock's Auctions There must have been two more sets, because mine had twelve buildings. I haven't seen it for over forty years. My eyes have misted over, with the magic it represented to me once. |
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Had completely forgotten Haunted House -though the traps rarely worked well -wasn't there a sort of basket that caught a mouse as well? Or was that another game... Don't know the Camberwick Green Game -had Rupert the Bear Annuals then and Winnie the Pooh -I always got a lot of books... Never heard of Bish-Bash -we must play it together , sounds fun -hope you won't cheat and make up the rules to suit you -i trust you implicitly, of course.:rolleyes: As a family we were big fans of "Frustration" -am a dab hand at getting Six;) Still have my old board and brought up my boys to play it. Nothing like a bit of Frustration... PS Like the idea of you playing Indiana Jones...:D |
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http://www.20thcenturylondon.org.uk/...ch_word=&catId |
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Mouse Trap (board game) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Which we didn't have. |
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