on โ28-04-2015 04:25 AM
on โ28-04-2015 06:32 PM
This is the old Perth Swan Brewery at night. The lights changed to a couple of different ships. It looked impressive from the other side of the Swan river.
on โ28-04-2015 06:50 PM
@poddster wrote:
@am*3 wrote:My sister (7 yrs older than me) had purple hotpants and purple knee- hi boots. My neice has the boots now and my sister most likely still has those hot pants.
Would she be game to wear them now?
What one wears as an 18-20 yo is suitable for a old person LOL?
on โ28-04-2015 06:51 PM
@am*3 wrote:
@poddster wrote:
@am*3 wrote:My sister (7 yrs older than me) had purple hotpants and purple knee- hi boots. My neice has the boots now and my sister most likely still has those hot pants.
Would she be game to wear them now?
What one wears as an 18-20 yo is suitable for a old person LOL?
if you wait long enough it comes back into fashion anyway.
on โ28-04-2015 06:53 PM
@lionrose.7 wrote:I remember in Auckland many years ago the only place your could get some thing to eat after hours was the Pie cart, off Queen street.
In Wellington we used to drive into the city late evening to the Pie Cart, near the Railway Stn.. Then came Mcdonalds...
on โ28-04-2015 06:55 PM
@rabbitearbandicoot wrote:
@am*3 wrote:
@poddster wrote:
@am*3 wrote:My sister (7 yrs older than me) had purple hotpants and purple knee- hi boots. My neice has the boots now and my sister most likely still has those hot pants.
Would she be game to wear them now?
What one wears as an 18-20 yo is suitable for a old person LOL?
if you wait long enough it comes back into fashion anyway.
Yeah, I thinks she works on that principle (not sure about the hot pants though).
on โ28-04-2015 06:55 PM
I remember the 'night carts'. We used to make jokes about their wages - "30 quid a week and all you can eat". Sorry.
โ28-04-2015 06:56 PM - edited โ28-04-2015 06:57 PM
And for chinese take-away, you had to supply your own saucepans.
Reheat it when you got home because the shop was too far away
edit: just read rabbits post................it's all in the timing!!
on โ28-04-2015 08:27 PM
Warm school milk:
First video recorder. I thought it was the greatest thing since sliced bread. Blank tapes were $25 and membership of a video library could set you back $300 p.a. plus hire charges.
on โ28-04-2015 09:01 PM
And the 'remote control' for that video machine had a 3 metre cord attached
to it
on โ28-04-2015 09:23 PM
Yes! And what a remote it was, with a grand total of one function - pause.