Lost your marbles?
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Remember the various games mentioned and the various taws names, a really cheap china with a worn well scuffed finish was a 'stonker' and unplayable. If one shouted 'oats' before some other shouted 'no oats' the taw could be lifted to snooker bridge two finger height or even up to Knee height, otherwise knuckles flat back to the ground had to be played. Gullies in the cobbles were played to advantage. I think taws was replaced by cardboard milk bottle tops that had a real cheesy stink about them.
Touch not but the glove
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Phill_dvsn wrote: raveydavey wrote: Phill, what you called 'Chinese' marbles, we used to call 'Chinas'.It's a long time ago now, but I assume it's because they looked like they were made of China, (like crockery)? Yes long time ago indeed, about 35 years or more for me I think the rules (and names) of marbles depended very much on the area where you lived. No doubt it was different in North and East Leeds to South Leeds. In 50's Hunslet & Belle Isle your 'chinas' were called Knucks. The ordinary glass ones were taws. The rules seem the same though.
Tom
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- Steve Jones
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The games we played over in Blackpool when I was at school were similar.One thing though ,we had a "marble season" which had no real defined start or finish.Usually some time around March people started for a few weeks and then stopped.We never played all year round and people trying to start a game when it wasn't the season were laughed at!anyone else have a certain time to play them in?
Steve JonesI don't know everything, I just like to give that impression!
- blackprince
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Steve Jones wrote: The games we played over in Blackpool when I was at school were similar.One thing though ,we had a "marble season" which had no real defined start or finish.Usually some time around March people started for a few weeks and then stopped.We never played all year round and people trying to start a game when it wasn't the season were laughed at!anyone else have a certain time to play them in? Steve, I don't remember marbles having a definite season. if memory serves me correctly I think we played it any time from about Easter to late summer, when the conkers season took over. It is remarkable how the rules and customs for playing these street and playground games got passed on by word of mouth from one generation of children to the next without the rules ever being written down . These weren't games that "grown ups" taught you or you learnt from a book you just learned from your peers.
It used to be said that the statue of the Black Prince had been placed in City Square , near the station, pointing South to tell all the southerners who've just got off the train to b****r off back down south!
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- Leodian
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Caron wrote: As a youngster I also enjoyed playing with marbles but the best of all was my ......... Whip n Top I don't remember boys playing it though??? I played those, at least when I was a youngster some millenia back (so it sometimes seems!). Chalking the top of the top with different colours to create effects was good fun. Simple times.
A rainbow is a ribbon that Nature puts on when she washes her hair.
- tilly
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Caron wrote: As a youngster I also enjoyed playing with marbles but the best of all was my ......... Whip n Top I don't remember boys playing it though??? Hi Caron I have played whip and top when i was a kid. Do you remember the big ones about four times the size of the normal ones then there was the ones with the long thin body.It took a lot of skill to get some of them upright.What about the tanks we made from cotton bobbins i think this has been talked about on another thread.Every thing we played with cost pence my grandaughter who would be the same age has i would have been at the time i am talking obout plays on an i pad. i pod. laptop.x box 360.I would not swop my childhood for hers for a million pounds.
No matter were i end my days im an Hunslet lad with Hunslet ways.