Your tea, madam
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Re: Your tea, madam
You can't beat Yorkshire Gold leaf tea, freshly picked from the hills overlooking Cleckheaton.
Kudu
Kudu
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Re: Your tea, madam
And brought to market in a sidecar pulled by a Panther.kudu wrote:You can't beat Yorkshire Gold leaf tea, freshly picked from the hills overlooking Cleckheaton.
Kudu
Hi interested in the area served by 52D. also researching colliery wagonways from same area.
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- GER D14 4-4-0 'Claud Hamilton'
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Re: Your tea, madam
In early diesel days our men used brand new cylinder oil bottles from out of the stores and uased them as kettles.
They drank tea quick in West Hartlepool as they didn't like hanging about.
We'r North Easterners and we like cups and saucers!!!
Jim Brodie
They drank tea quick in West Hartlepool as they didn't like hanging about.
We'r North Easterners and we like cups and saucers!!!
Jim Brodie
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Re: Your tea, madam
I have a couple of Ringtons Tea caddys and a picture frame made by Maling, worth a few bob these days.
Re: Your tea, madam
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Last edited by Mickey on Tue Apr 29, 2014 5:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- GER D14 4-4-0 'Claud Hamilton'
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Re: Your tea, madam
Hi Jim
Ignore them. My grandad (a shipyard worker) always had a cup and saucer. When he wanted to drink he would pour the tea from the cup, into the saucer, and SLURP.
Takes all sorts
Prat
Ignore them. My grandad (a shipyard worker) always had a cup and saucer. When he wanted to drink he would pour the tea from the cup, into the saucer, and SLURP.
Takes all sorts
Prat
PP
The light at the end of the tunnel is probably a train coming towards you!!
The light at the end of the tunnel is probably a train coming towards you!!
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Re: Your tea, madam
I cant believe that statement coming from the mouth of a Darnall lad, what about the whole bag of mashings?(Me from the NE telling a Sheffield lad )Boris wrote:And in Lancashire they "brew" a pot of tea
Hi interested in the area served by 52D. also researching colliery wagonways from same area.
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Re: Your tea, madam
IIRC, my nan in Wales used to say "wet the tea".
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Re: Your tea, madam
Allus thort it wer' 'Uddersfild, lad. Ne'er mind, it's near enuff.kudu wrote:You can't beat Yorkshire Gold leaf tea, freshly picked from the hills overlooking Cleckheaton.
Kudu
In Dewsbury, we always referred to it as "mashing the tea." I used to drive my father to distraction, looking for the Tea Masher. After all, we used a Taty Masher for the spuds!
As was once said in Haworth Loco - "There's yer tea, ne'er mind the grease stains they're only on t'outside o' t'cup." I worried about those guys. They used to eat chips with black, oily, greasy fingers which were clean AFTER they'd finished the chips. Put me off 'em I can tell you!
If I ain't here, I'm in Bilston, scoffing decent chips at last!!!!
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- GER D14 4-4-0 'Claud Hamilton'
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Re: Your tea, madam
Hi Blink Bonny
Shouldn't let it put you off. While serving in the Grey Funnel Line we always maintained that 'you eat more than a shovel full of s... before you die!!'
Shouldn't let it put you off. While serving in the Grey Funnel Line we always maintained that 'you eat more than a shovel full of s... before you die!!'
PP
The light at the end of the tunnel is probably a train coming towards you!!
The light at the end of the tunnel is probably a train coming towards you!!
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Re: Your tea, madam
There are two problems with my current location:
a) all the chippies here seem to serve battered or "orange" chips rather than frying them for a few seconds more to cook 'em properly and they are SO GREASY!!!
b) see my sign-off. Best part of fish 'n' chips, the bits.
Oh, there is one chippie that serves proper chips, cooked in beef dripping and with bits. But that's in the Black Country Museum and its seven quid in. So over 8 quid for a decent bag of chips.
Weakening. weakening....
a) all the chippies here seem to serve battered or "orange" chips rather than frying them for a few seconds more to cook 'em properly and they are SO GREASY!!!
b) see my sign-off. Best part of fish 'n' chips, the bits.
Oh, there is one chippie that serves proper chips, cooked in beef dripping and with bits. But that's in the Black Country Museum and its seven quid in. So over 8 quid for a decent bag of chips.
Weakening. weakening....
If I ain't here, I'm in Bilston, scoffing decent chips at last!!!!
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Re: Your tea, madam
Bet they never got arthritis.Blink Bonny wrote:They used to eat chips with black, oily, greasy fingers which were clean AFTER they'd finished the chips. Put me off 'em I can tell you!
Re: Your tea, madam
bit's Blink Bonny ??? , around here we call's 'em "scraps" , also when the chap from Ringtons called t'other day he kindly informed me that their brand's had gone up .
mr b
mr b