Message 1090 of 5231

Independence Day

How did you all celebrate the 4th growing up?

Media, the town a mile from us outside Philadelphia, had a big parade every 4th of July. At least, we thought it was big.

Between three houses: our house and the houses on either side, there were 17 children. The younger kids marched in the parade every year.

Politically, my parents were conservative Republicans and my neighbors were very liberal Democrats. But differences didn’t spill onto the kids.

One year we dressed as signers of the Declaration of Independence in white shirts and black peddle pushers, hair tied back. Another year we did the Spirit of '76. I limped barefoot and played Yankee Doodle on a flute.

In 1959, we did a special float—somebody’s red Radio Flyer wagon with a poster on it—to celebrate Hawaii's and Alaska's statehood.

After the parade there were competitions at Media HS field—everything from running to pie eating. I ran fast although never fast enough to win.

At night the whole family went to a park in Media, spread out blankets and watched fireworks.
HAE's profile
Replies 21 - 26 of 26
Last night it rained and stormed in Central Oklahoma. So we didn't see any professional shows. But it was a spectacular lightning show, with a greenish sky, and gusts and big cracks of thunder. And it was so hot, when the rain came with the cool front, steam starting rising from the roads. And everything was misty at the darkest part of twilight. We loaded the kids in the car and drove the back country roads and watched as our neighbors shot big rockets off, as impressive as just about anything you see in a big town show. And you could see them for miles sometimes against the backdrop of storm clouds and incredible lightning.

We drove home through the mist and the drizzle and the smoke---deliciously stinky firecracker smoke! And we got the safety goggles out for the kids, and let them have sparklers, and pop its, and we lit Roman Candles and Fountains and a couple of fancy rockets, ground bloom flowers and the like.

The kids had a great time. Our neighbors were out in force doing their thing, It was quite a show.

Today its beautiful, cool, a little overcast and a perfect day to get a little yard work done.
OrangePOP33's profile

5 months ago
I've now got a flatmate who was recently busted by the cops for having in his possession a fountain. They tried to call it 'an explosive device'. Fireworks are illegal to own by private citizens over here. What a load of codswallop. I grew up in OK and against everyones' better judgement even owned a fireworks stand when I was 14. We came close to blowing each other to smithereens on the night of 4 July, 1966 but it was a night I'll never forget. Bottle rockets chased cars down the road and Roman Candles were the weapon of choice. I took refuge in the ammo dump, firing balls of flame at anyone visible. Jerry Hobbs, before he got a hole burned into his head, fired a roman candle into my sanctuary. The fireball exploded on impact againt the back wall of corrugated iron and I thought at the time as I hunkered down."I'm gone"

Kids just don't know how to have fun anymore. .
JoyBoy55's profile

5 months ago
Ha ha, JB. You're probably the reason towns have curfews for kids. And child labor laws.

Nice description, Orange.
HAE's profile

5 months ago
Halloween was always fun too. I'll tell ya a coupla stories in October.
JoyBoy55's profile

5 months ago
Like Joyboy, I too have created havoc on the 4th and Halloween. But honestly that was just the inexperience and inconsideration of youth.

I did all that stuff because I had no parental supervision. My kids don't have that *problem.

For every 10 people who are responsible, there is always 1 who is beyond stupid

Doesnt matter if its a car, firecrackers, guns, 911 lines, pitbulls, or boats.

Dumbasses abound. And the only way to combat them is to make it difficult for them to acquire these objects, or to make it expensive to fuck up with them.
OrangePOP33's profile

5 months ago
October 30th was Mischief Night when I was a kid but our main mischief was soaping windows, toilet papering trees and once we put a toilet in someone's front yard.

Others did cherry bombs in mailboxes. I never had the fire power.

WalMart was advertising a fireworks packet for $235 this week. I wonder how many put that on a credit card after a couple beers yesterday?
HAE's profile

5 months ago
Replies 21 - 26 of 26