prv
Well-Known Member
In a way this thread is a bit sad. I remember all the things mentioned from my own youth - Meccano, Mamod, Jetex plus all the little engines taken to bits and the knackered Minis that got souped up in the garage. But my own son, 30 years later, did none of these. They had all gone. Along with the cowboy and indians games and the air rifles. And even decent sized bangers you could throw at female relatives. And mischief night terrorising the neighbours. Or making back yard explosives with weedkiller.
How old is he? I'm 31, so grew up in the 80s and 90s, and most of the things you mention were still around. Estes rockets replaced Jetex, and I never got into cars but probably could have done. Don't think we played cowboys and indians specifically - probably just a reflection of the prevalence of westerns in 50s and 60s telly and films - but plenty of similar things. I had (still have) an air pistol. Bangers, yes, couldn't buy those in this country, but any trip to France and they were the number one commodity - at least until old enough that booze and fags replaced them (but even at 18 I still bought some impressive specimens, one of which got thrown out of a car window at a teacher's house...)
I think Mischief Night was a Northern thing, so wouldn't have had that in our part of the world anyway.
Backyard explosives I did - remote-detonated landmines and a sort of half-inch-bore cannon being the highlights. This was with crushed-up rocket motors as powder rather than a weedkiller mix. Before discovering that, we used to make fireballs on the chip-pan-and-water principle, by melting tealights (in their little metal cups) over a flame and then spraying water at them. A friend used to set up scenes in which toy plastic soldiers got immolated, the biggest of which also took off his eyebrows in cartoon fashion (but lucky it wasn't anything more). I made a remote-activated version using a pottery model lighthouse, with a "boiler room" in the bottom that melted paraffin wax in an old air-gun pellet tin mounted part-way up, and a pipe connected to the pump from a waterpistol to spray the water that triggered the fireball out of the hole in the top.
Perhaps it's significant that I was never that into sport?
Pete