If you want to know my grandparents’ dangerous lives were in their childhoods, they lived through the 1918 influenza pandemic: father’s parents were early teenagers whereas mother’s parents were roughly toddlers; stepmother’s parents were born years after it was over.
In the 50’s we had concrete playgrounds. I still have a sensitive spot on my elbow from falling off the teeter totter onto it. I wonder how many landed on their head before they switched to sand or dirt.
Playing on farm equipment, building tunnels in the haymow, catching minnows and tadpoles in the crick, making a hut and a tree house out of scrap wood, making a snow fort … good times.
I’m in my late sixties. When I was in kindergarten, the playground equipment was set up on a pavement lot. Child safety was not a big concern in the late ’50’s.
When I worked for the testing company in the early eighties, we did extensive testing of playground surfaces (rubber mats, foam, sand, etc). We used all kinds of de-celerometers and such to measure fall impact from various heights with likelihood of concussion and broken bones. Turns out about the safest surface was 10 inches of mulch (or more). It’s cheap and easy to do, even for homeowners with backyard swing sets.
My younger cousins and I used to follow the cow herd on foot when we moved the herd from the salt grass pasture up to my uncle’s house to work them. The older boys got to ride horses. The bulls weren’t ever a problem, but once in a while we’d get charged by a cow with calf. We were armed with big sticks, and would just dance out of the way and give them a whack. We all loved that stuff. By age 12, I rode a horse for the move. It was a blast. Took about half a day to move them 3 miles.
My playground had monkey bars, they taught us how to fall 6 feet, banging off pipes, and survive. Swings with cast iron seats, if they hit you in the head, take it clean off. Mom used to send us down to play in the tar pits. We had it rough. But, we were happy then.
This is true! We never wore helmets, knee pads, etc….we lived and learned…unlike the generation of today….they don’t even play outside anymore…too busy on the Xbox, cell or hanging out at the malls….I blame the parents…..
We played in huge abandoned artillery bunkers. Pitch black. Occasional encounters with roaming gangs of feral girls. Used slingshots to fire ricin-filled spiky castor beans at each other. Or used quarter dynamite stick fireworks to see which trees could resist being split in two by them. Then there was riding bikes behind the DDT mosquito fogging truck.
When I was a kid ,my friends and I would spend the day out in the woods with tools ( saws ,axes, hammers, nails ,etc.) building tree houses and forts. All my parents said was be home for dinner. No one ever got hurt and we had a lot of fun.
When I was a kid we had to walk 5 miles to school, up hill, both ways, in the snow year round. We had to kill our own food, drag it home, skin it and clean it before we could cook it and eat it, with our bare hands no less. We worked the fields 26 hours a day seven days a week, even while going to school.
It is a wonder some of us survived the stupid stuff we did, and yes, I jumped off a bridge like the others. We were using a thick hemp rope like on ships, but you still had to leave go to hit the water. Never did that again.
Loved this…reminded me of a story our friend told his young children about walking miles to school through winter blizzards, hands warmed by baked potatoes in his pocket that he ate for lunch without butter, when the teacher made them kneel on raw rice kernels if they misbehaved. He was born and raised in New Orleans. still makes me ROFLOL
When I was growing up in the 50s and 60s we were allowed to go and enjoy being a kid with no adult supervision. When I was 12, 5 of us rode our bikes 27 miles around a local lake, I walked everywhere, took shortcuts thru woods except during deer hunting season. Our 4 kids were raised the same, we allowed them freedom to be a kid. Now days, kids are scheduled for every sport or activity and parents are always nearby. I can’t remember how many years its been since I saw a group of kids by themselves, playing a pick up game of Baseball or Football. Kids aren’t allowed to go off by themselves and play unstructured games anymore.
When polio was raging, it was common to see long lines of families waiting for the vaccines even though they knew the risks of the very early polio vaccines. You know, back when people cared about not only their families but other people as well, and weren’t just a bunch of crybabies and drama queens? Yeah, in those days.
Do you commonly see cases of polio these days? Or how about smallpox? No? Oh…
Im 74 and wouldnt trade it for today! Played outside all day till dinner. Got hurt lots of times.No big deal…Hitch hiked sometimes. Rode my bike for miles..Loved all of it. Miss those great days.
When I was 6 the swings in the playground had thick wooden seats with big metal corners. I was walking across the playground one day and didn’t see the kid on the swing because he was so high up. He came down and I caught the metal corner on the head. It knocked me out. A mother was there and brought me around . I told her I could walk home because it was only a half block. I passed out in the street on the way and a neighbor saw me out there and brought me in. I had a concussion with a 106 fever and spent the night throwing up. The doctor said to throw me into a bath with a lot of ice. I spent the next two hours hallucinating badly until the fever broke. Yes, I remember the old playgrounds
(I also played on the railroad tracks and with Daddy’s John Deere tractor. He didn’t worry about it at first because he didn’t think I could get it to crank. I showed him!
Good times.
I also swam in the gravel lakes and Escambia River with the gators, moccasins, gars, and other interesting critters.
Concretionist over 2 years ago
“Too soon old, too late smart”?
Templo S.U.D. over 2 years ago
If you want to know my grandparents’ dangerous lives were in their childhoods, they lived through the 1918 influenza pandemic: father’s parents were early teenagers whereas mother’s parents were roughly toddlers; stepmother’s parents were born years after it was over.
Lucy Rudy over 2 years ago
In the 50’s we had concrete playgrounds. I still have a sensitive spot on my elbow from falling off the teeter totter onto it. I wonder how many landed on their head before they switched to sand or dirt.
iggyman over 2 years ago
And NOBOBY wore helmets when they rode their bike!
iggyman over 2 years ago
My brother and I found an old boat and took it down to the stream , we got in trouble that time!
twstd over 2 years ago
Haha
Doug K over 2 years ago
Playing on farm equipment, building tunnels in the haymow, catching minnows and tadpoles in the crick, making a hut and a tree house out of scrap wood, making a snow fort … good times.
nicka93 over 2 years ago
You do what you can, with what you achieve
juicebruce over 2 years ago
Each generation has it’s own hill to climb ;-)
JudithStocker Premium Member over 2 years ago
I think Earl means maturity. Not age in numbers. In Earl’s time it was important to mature as soon as you could – or else.
WaitingMan over 2 years ago
I’m in my late sixties. When I was in kindergarten, the playground equipment was set up on a pavement lot. Child safety was not a big concern in the late ’50’s.
Ichabod Ferguson over 2 years ago
When I worked for the testing company in the early eighties, we did extensive testing of playground surfaces (rubber mats, foam, sand, etc). We used all kinds of de-celerometers and such to measure fall impact from various heights with likelihood of concussion and broken bones. Turns out about the safest surface was 10 inches of mulch (or more). It’s cheap and easy to do, even for homeowners with backyard swing sets.
Pete.Keillor over 2 years ago
My younger cousins and I used to follow the cow herd on foot when we moved the herd from the salt grass pasture up to my uncle’s house to work them. The older boys got to ride horses. The bulls weren’t ever a problem, but once in a while we’d get charged by a cow with calf. We were armed with big sticks, and would just dance out of the way and give them a whack. We all loved that stuff. By age 12, I rode a horse for the move. It was a blast. Took about half a day to move them 3 miles.
Redd Panda over 2 years ago
My playground had monkey bars, they taught us how to fall 6 feet, banging off pipes, and survive. Swings with cast iron seats, if they hit you in the head, take it clean off. Mom used to send us down to play in the tar pits. We had it rough. But, we were happy then.
Zebrastripes over 2 years ago
This is true! We never wore helmets, knee pads, etc….we lived and learned…unlike the generation of today….they don’t even play outside anymore…too busy on the Xbox, cell or hanging out at the malls….I blame the parents…..
BOO HISS
notjimothy over 2 years ago
Cute
MeGoNow Premium Member over 2 years ago
We played in huge abandoned artillery bunkers. Pitch black. Occasional encounters with roaming gangs of feral girls. Used slingshots to fire ricin-filled spiky castor beans at each other. Or used quarter dynamite stick fireworks to see which trees could resist being split in two by them. Then there was riding bikes behind the DDT mosquito fogging truck.
Wichita1.0 over 2 years ago
I recall red hot metal slides.
oakie817 over 2 years ago
if Yogi Berra were alive to read this, he’d be rolling over in his grave
Kawasaki Cat over 2 years ago
When I was a kid ,my friends and I would spend the day out in the woods with tools ( saws ,axes, hammers, nails ,etc.) building tree houses and forts. All my parents said was be home for dinner. No one ever got hurt and we had a lot of fun.
Daltongang Premium Member over 2 years ago
When I was a kid we had to walk 5 miles to school, up hill, both ways, in the snow year round. We had to kill our own food, drag it home, skin it and clean it before we could cook it and eat it, with our bare hands no less. We worked the fields 26 hours a day seven days a week, even while going to school.
jhpeanut over 2 years ago
It is a wonder some of us survived the stupid stuff we did, and yes, I jumped off a bridge like the others. We were using a thick hemp rope like on ships, but you still had to leave go to hit the water. Never did that again.
MuddyUSA Premium Member over 2 years ago
Good ole Earl!
ANIMAL over 2 years ago
Yeah……… sure……. right……..uh huh…….. ok…….
Pgalden1 Premium Member over 2 years ago
Loved this…reminded me of a story our friend told his young children about walking miles to school through winter blizzards, hands warmed by baked potatoes in his pocket that he ate for lunch without butter, when the teacher made them kneel on raw rice kernels if they misbehaved. He was born and raised in New Orleans. still makes me ROFLOL
timbob2313 Premium Member over 2 years ago
When I was growing up in the 50s and 60s we were allowed to go and enjoy being a kid with no adult supervision. When I was 12, 5 of us rode our bikes 27 miles around a local lake, I walked everywhere, took shortcuts thru woods except during deer hunting season. Our 4 kids were raised the same, we allowed them freedom to be a kid. Now days, kids are scheduled for every sport or activity and parents are always nearby. I can’t remember how many years its been since I saw a group of kids by themselves, playing a pick up game of Baseball or Football. Kids aren’t allowed to go off by themselves and play unstructured games anymore.
zeexenon over 2 years ago
Stifle, old man … you know nothing. Now, I have to go study my text book written by someone called Professor Emeritus.
Lady loves a joke over 2 years ago
The truly wonderful wisdom and humor of our elders. I love that!
jimmeh over 2 years ago
And he had to walk to and from school…uphill both ways…
Display over 2 years ago
When polio was raging, it was common to see long lines of families waiting for the vaccines even though they knew the risks of the very early polio vaccines. You know, back when people cared about not only their families but other people as well, and weren’t just a bunch of crybabies and drama queens? Yeah, in those days.
Do you commonly see cases of polio these days? Or how about smallpox? No? Oh…
You’re welcome!
- from all of us who got vaccinated.
d edwin over 2 years ago
Im 74 and wouldnt trade it for today! Played outside all day till dinner. Got hurt lots of times.No big deal…Hitch hiked sometimes. Rode my bike for miles..Loved all of it. Miss those great days.
SNVBD over 2 years ago
a nice case of “Survivor bias”
Miss Buttinsky Premium Member over 2 years ago
Lucky are the kids nowadays who live near an empty lot, and if it’s filled with trees, Heaven!
icmodivah over 2 years ago
When I was 6 the swings in the playground had thick wooden seats with big metal corners. I was walking across the playground one day and didn’t see the kid on the swing because he was so high up. He came down and I caught the metal corner on the head. It knocked me out. A mother was there and brought me around . I told her I could walk home because it was only a half block. I passed out in the street on the way and a neighbor saw me out there and brought me in. I had a concussion with a 106 fever and spent the night throwing up. The doctor said to throw me into a bath with a lot of ice. I spent the next two hours hallucinating badly until the fever broke. Yes, I remember the old playgrounds
daddo52 over 2 years ago
Sorry Grandpa, it doesn’t work that way. Are you the watched pot that doesn’t boil?
David Huie Green LoveJoyAndPeace over 2 years ago
Gotta love Earl.
(I also played on the railroad tracks and with Daddy’s John Deere tractor. He didn’t worry about it at first because he didn’t think I could get it to crank. I showed him!
Good times.
I also swam in the gravel lakes and Escambia River with the gators, moccasins, gars, and other interesting critters.
Achieving adulthood is a wonder indeed.
The Orange Mailman over 2 years ago
And that’s in dog years!
kab2rb over 2 years ago
Yet you was feisty as a kid Grandpa.
edeloriea14 over 2 years ago
I think Earl meant when he started out doing those things, he was a child.
harebell over 2 years ago
Monkey bars no longer allowed. Too dangerous.