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This mainly concerns previous conversations with MD and is little more than trivia BUT......
On the local news section on breakfast TV this morning they reported a road accident and delays on the A228 between Colts Hill and Five Oaks Green which are over in west Kent.
My memory association clicked in and I remembered that my mother in law lived at Colts Hill (she actually died 21 years ago) She met her to be husband at a social event at Five Oaks Green. Details I found when doing the family history stuff.
Then I remembered that MD and I had discussed that area because my wifes cousins husband was a gamekeeper at Golden Green in that general area.
Funny thing memory and how a few words on TV can trigger memories......But as I said, trivia really
Five Oaks, Seven Oaks not very imaginative in your neck of the woods Grandad when it comes to place names although the last time I was in the area a few of the Oaks had gone, so Seven Oaks was a bit of a misnomer
We have some good names H. There is a village called Ham not far from the town of Sandwich, and yes, there is a signpost to Ham Sandwich We have Old Wives Lees, Upper Hardres, and Densole, if you let your thoughts wander a little
As mentioned, my folks in Staffs live around Draycott in the Clay, always liked that one, and Barton under Needwood, also in that area, has a certain charm about it.
I like the names, we have a couple locally that used to make me laugh as a kid when we were out in the family car in the days when you used to go out for a Sunday drive before petrol cost an arm and a leg. The two Cheshire vilages are called Upper Peover and Lower Peover, of course it is pronounced as Peever, but we kids insisted on saying Pee-Over
Horus wrote:Five Oaks, Seven Oaks not very imaginative in your neck of the woods Grandad when it comes to place names although the last time I was in the area a few of the Oaks had gone, so Seven Oaks was a bit of a misnomer
They planted some new ones
I lived in Three Elm Lane but the dreaded Dutch Elm disease finished what little was left - our village was Golden Green which I think sounds lovely - unlike Snodland which is on my early 17th century map of Kent.
I like Hall's Hole Road and Pratt's Bottom, I used to work at Badgers Mount and an obnoxious child I knew whenever he saw the signpost shouted "Indeed they do" to irritate his mother.
I was taught to tickle trout in the River Piddle in Dorset - I'm afraid I love trivia.
Trivially - here many places are named to reflect First Nation Indian Tribes and Bands. Ours here in my own direct area is the Snuneymuxw First Nation (pronounced [snʊˈneɪməxʷ]) which isn't terribly conducive to saying as a place name.
Place names make me smile, I used to live in a town called Luanshya (Loo-an-she-ah) in Zambia, I often mulled over the name and thought how beautifully it tripped off the tongue and how it conjured up an exotic place, that was shattered when a local African informed me it was the equivalent of saying "death valley"
But my favourite was Mpatamatu (Emm-pat-a- mar-too) which roughly translated as "the place in the river where the boat gets stuck"
@Horus and others ;)
I mentioned that yesterday I sorted, or rather didn't sort, a bag of old leads and bits and pieces. I came across this that I think is quite interesting.
It is a 256MB USB...
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I agree with you, Horus, but try telling DH that! :(
And finally decide on my throne for the day (or at least the morning...
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:))) - it was Google translate ;) I can speak a little bit but I'm not fluent verbally. If you escribe (write it) I'm pretty decent at reading, I'm next sort of ok at understanding what is being said...
Following from the other 'Reminiscence' thread I thought I would post this separately. I have many recollections for which I have written just a brief summary. Some day I might write them up but I...