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  • Limehouse
    replied
    Originally posted by DrummondStreet View Post
    I found an article on the "big freeze" of '62. It has several great photos.
    Half a century ago the UK was in the grip of a brutal winter. How did they cope then and how does it compare with now?


    Does this bring back any memories for you guys ?
    Thanks Drummond. That's exactlyhow I remember it! My dad was a milk delivery man back then but I am sure he didn't wear skis!

    The thing is, back then, women went shopping every day (on foot) and life just went on. Nothing stopped or ground to a halt - and if it did, you had to find resourceful ways of getting over the problem.

    Leave a comment:


  • Limehouse
    replied
    Originally posted by Robert View Post
    1962-3 was huge fun. Lots of snow, ice and slush. Kids don't feel the cold.
    Oh yes! I remember the boys making a huge long slide across the playground. If you were brave enough, you gave it a bit of a run-up and then woooooshshshsh - off you slid - and if you were lucky you didn't land on your backside!

    Leave a comment:


  • Robert
    replied
    Oh yes, it's true, as late as March there was unmelted ice in the gutters.

    My parents had a new-born baby to keep warm. They used to get an old pair of trousers, or something like that, stuff the legs with warm material and put them down at the bottoms of doors to keep out the draught.

    I don't remember feeling cold.

    I'm afraid today's weather forecasts seem to be done with tea leaves.

    Leave a comment:


  • DrummondStreet
    replied
    I found an article on the "big freeze" of '62. It has several great photos.
    Half a century ago the UK was in the grip of a brutal winter. How did they cope then and how does it compare with now?


    Does this bring back any memories for you guys ?

    Leave a comment:


  • Robert
    replied
    1962-3 was huge fun. Lots of snow, ice and slush. Kids don't feel the cold.

    Leave a comment:


  • Limehouse
    replied
    Originally posted by DrummondStreet View Post
    Julie: did you ever have snow for Christmas when you were a child? I lived in London several years ago and was so disappointed when the natives informed me that London had not had a white Christmas in a very long time. Just rain. The switch from snow to rain must be a 20th Century development. I've looked at Victorian photos of England that depict snow covered cities and landscapes, but that seems so uncommon nowadays.

    Might any of our older British Casebook participants remember when the White Christmas was placed on the endangered species list?

    Anyway, I already have cabin fever and I've been trapped indoors for less than a day. My lights were flickering; I really hope I don't lose electricity. Can't wait to get out tomorrow when everything has been cleared.

    Hi Drummond,

    Well, when I was five years old, and living in London with my parents, we experienced the coldest winter on record (1962). I don't think it actually snowed on Christmas Day, but soon afterwards snow covered the country for months. It was very cold indeed - and we had only a coal fire in the main family room - no heating anywhere else in the house!

    Of course, we all went to school, and when the school heating broke down (school heated by a kind of furnace that warmed water and piped it round the building) we sat in our coats, hats and gloves and carried on learning!

    We had a white Christmas here in Cambridgeshire about three years or so back. It snowed a few days before Christmas and was, for this region, quite thick (about 20 cms) - but i know that can't compete with parts of the USA!

    Hope you can get out and about today!

    Leave a comment:


  • yen_powell
    replied
    Yesterday I rode to work in London in that 'snow' that soaks you through! My bike gear is still dripping this morning.

    The only white about this christmas is the white bloom that appears on my boots from the repeated wetting and drying they are currently being treated to.

    Leave a comment:


  • DrummondStreet
    replied
    sdreid: I'm north of you in Wisconsin and in the midst of winter storm "Draco." We're expected to get 12-20 inches.

    It ended our record of 291 days without any snow.
    Last winter was absolutely pitiful for us, too. We didn't even get a proper snow storm until mid January.
    Last edited by DrummondStreet; 12-21-2012, 03:09 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • sdreid
    replied
    We had some here in Illinois today. It ended our record of 291 days without any snow.

    Leave a comment:


  • DrummondStreet
    replied
    Julie: did you ever have snow for Christmas when you were a child? I lived in London several years ago and was so disappointed when the natives informed me that London had not had a white Christmas in a very long time. Just rain. The switch from snow to rain must be a 20th Century development. I've looked at Victorian photos of England that depict snow covered cities and landscapes, but that seems so uncommon nowadays.

    Might any of our older British Casebook participants remember when the White Christmas was placed on the endangered species list?

    Anyway, I already have cabin fever and I've been trapped indoors for less than a day. My lights were flickering; I really hope I don't lose electricity. Can't wait to get out tomorrow when everything has been cleared.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bridewell
    replied
    Originally posted by Cogidubnus View Post
    No snow in Bognor so far...plenty of bloody floodwater (again) but no snow...

    All the best

    Dave
    Non-stop rain in Leicestershire. There's standing water at the end of the road here and the Winterbeck, which is normally a meandering brook is once again close to the top of its banks. If there's a snowman around here it will be made of sandbags.

    Regards, Bridewell.

    Leave a comment:


  • Cogidubnus
    replied
    No snow in Bognor so far...plenty of bloody floodwater (again) but no snow...

    All the best

    Dave

    Leave a comment:


  • Limehouse
    replied
    I'd like a white Christmas if I could just look out at it and not have to go shopping or go to work! Snow is never cleared from the paths or roads where I live, so if I have to walk to work, it's a terrifying experience trying to dodge the slippery bits.

    A sunny and dry Christmas would be strange. Some of my family are visitng Australia right now and they tell me (via Facebook) how odd it is to be in the middle of summer in December!

    Leave a comment:


  • DrummondStreet
    replied
    Hi Julie,

    Many thanks for your concern. Luckily, I went grocery shopping yesterday and have plenty to eat. I also picked up the second season of Downton Abbey on DVD from the library, so I have something to pass the time.

    Everything should be back to normal by Friday. In fact, I can hear the snow plows on the street right now. Heavy snowfall is a common occurrence in my part of the country, so everyone is always well prepared. It is very, very rare that the university should close, however. The students are in the midst of finals, but exams were cancelled for the day.

    Would you enjoy a white Christmas across the pond or do you prefer it sunny and dry?

    Happy holidays to you (and everyone else), too!

    Leave a comment:


  • Limehouse
    replied
    Hi Drummond,

    There was snowfall in and around London a week or two back but today it's very wet everywhere. It rained all night here (Peterborough - about 100 miles north east of London) and has rained all day. My husband, who is one of the famous 'London Cabbies' tells me it's very wet down there too at the moment.

    Hope you have all the supplies you need for Christmas if you have been 'snowed in'.

    have a great holiday.

    Julie

    Leave a comment:

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