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- Jul 30, 2019
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Morning woke up at 5 am to a covering of snow , is this winter going to be like the winter of 2017/18 ?
Someone else’s yellow snow?nothing worse than yellow snow
Maybe even 1963Morning woke up at 5 am to a covering of snow , is this winter going to be like the winter of 2017/18 ?
Any year starting 20** hasn't been a problem weather wiseas was 1982
and 1979
Not as bad as 1947 - with a miners' strike at the same time.1981 was bad As was 1959 and 1963.
63 was bitterly cold. Water pipes froze underground but fortunately most were still lead so Yorkshire Water toured the consumers with an oxford welder, two loooong cables and clamps. By clipping onto the street stop tap and the inside pipes they could pass a heavy current through the lead pipe, causing it to warm up. Once a trickle started they switched off the current and the trickle became a proper flow. They would tidy up and move on to the next frozen supply.Maybe even 1963
It lasted so long63 was bitterly cold.
I remember the winter of 1947.. We lived in a mining village in the top end of the Rhondda Fach.. The snow on the roads was over 24 inches thick. The older lads made a "fortress" wall across the road complete with watch towers..Not as bad as 1947 - with a miners' strike at the same time.
I was on leave over Christmas '63 when I was stationed at RAF Locking, WSM. My home village (Maerdy RCT) was completely cut off. I had to walk, carrying my kit bag, down to Porth approx 6 miles, caught a train to Cardiff. The Severn Tunnel was closed. So had to take a train to Bristol via Gloucester. Changed train and got a "local" train to WSM. It stopped at Milton Halt. Then I started to hoof it up to Locking Camp. A 3 tonner came along and picked us up and dropped us off at the guardroom.. Took me 14 hours from home to camp..It lasted so long
I had just turned 12. Still had to trudge to school though.
I remember seeing servicemen in uniform with their kitbags travelling on the trains. Not allowed in uniform any moreA 3 tonner came along and picked us up and dropped us off at the guardroom.. Took me 14 hours from home to camp..
Yes, they started to ban us from wearing uniforms off camp in the middle '60s.. Some of my mates were beaten up by a mob of "Ban the Bomb" idiots.. Then the IRA started to really increase their campaign for independance. I was at Odiham in '65 when they tried to steal armaments from the armoury, they were armed with rifles and pistols. I was on "Fire Piquet" that night and we were given "pickaxe" handles to patrol the airfield.. We were called to the armoury and we laid into the morons with the staves.. It was next morning we were told about the guns they had on them.I remember seeing servicemen in uniform with their kitbags travelling on the trains. Not allowed in uniform any more
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