Ashley Posted 10 September 2011 Posted 10 September 2011 I've always called Roosters. Heard it be called Venom also.
rico Posted 10 September 2011 Posted 10 September 2011 Sardines - was great snogging 16 year old birds when i was only 13
Bugg Posted 10 September 2011 Posted 10 September 2011 It's quite clearly Tan Arse, not Raw Arse, Red Arse or Roosters.
rico Posted 10 September 2011 Posted 10 September 2011 It's quite clearly Tan Arse, not Raw Arse, Red Arse or Roosters. or baboons arse...
The Doctor Posted 10 September 2011 Posted 10 September 2011 Sock Golf, Sock Tennis, Sock Cricket - well pretty much any sport except rugby with a rolled up sock for a ball.
hebangsthedrums Posted 10 September 2011 Posted 10 September 2011 When I was in year 6 we were in a lesson one day, when a personalised pen was found (pen that had the owners name printed onto it). The name on it was that of a fairly 'nerdy/square/spoddy/insert relevant term for unpopular kid from your youth, from the year above. Over the course of the lesson, this pen no longer was a writing implement, but took on a new identity. Somehow we contrived that anyone who touched the pen was 'gay', and therefore the pen was chucked between us and much hilarity ensued. The pen became the 'object of homo', and a game that occupied us for the next 6 months was born. Rules; Whoever touched the pen last (later any agreed object after the original was lost) when the ball rang was deemed 'gay', and would be mocked as such until the next 'winner' was found. Later this evolved into league tables etc to decide who would be crowned 'lesbian seagull' (don't ask) at the end of term. Surely this would just mean you play for the five minutes immediately before the bell you ask? Risky, as the beauty was that our school rang a 'caretaker bell' to summon said to reception. These were a wildcard and so ensured a fairly frenetic pace all day, in every lesson. Even history with the nasty teacher. The ruleset evolved over time, so much so that we had a rulebook. which all parties had to agree on, and was consulted and modified as debatable incidents occurred. Homework diaries were immune, so you could bat the object away, but otherwise any part of you or your clothes counted. Common tactic was to battle near the fence next to the (out of bounds) park, score a hit then try to scoop the object into the field with your homework diary, meaning an unrescuable loss for the victim. Alliances were made and broken, with more skullduggery than you'd find in the House of Commons (the pinnacle of such was when a fake pen lid was used for a whole day with 2 participants unaware, until it was revealed the real object was one of their pockets until lunch and the other guys after, and they had amassed a weighty haul of gay points). The final week shoot out led to a fight, and we all got failry shite reports that year so it died over the summer and only made sporadic returns the next term. Great 6 months or so though. I was pretty cool at school.
SOCCERROO FOX Posted 10 September 2011 Posted 10 September 2011 If we were to play kiss-chasey in this day and age you would probably get arrested for sexual assault. At primary school we used to have a thing called Marble season when for about 2 weeks and you would play marbles for keeps. Used to remember the big tense games when you played with your biggest marbles. Generally it was footy during the winter and Cricket during the summer with a little bit of kick ball thrown in for good measure.
BrummieFOX Posted 11 September 2011 Posted 11 September 2011 Most the classics have been mentioned. However in our playground we used to have a method of determine who wanted to play any particular game. It normally started as a group of 3 or 4 lads who wanted to play a game, normally British Bulldog, and they would all form a line by putting arms over each others shoulders and walking round the playground chanting, "Whoo wants to play, British Bulldog?" If you wanted to play you had to join the either end of the line and join the chant. We did this until there were around 20 odd kids in the line, then we'd begin. Anyone do anything similar?
DANGEROUS TIGER Posted 11 September 2011 Posted 11 September 2011 Used to make my own bows and arrows, with a sharpened flint for the point. The axe was another favourite, made from a length of tree branch, with a sharpened piece of slate, forced into a slit, and then tied on. Dangerous? Not really. Used to frighten some of the kids though, as they really thought I was going to scalp them!
FoxesAreBlue Posted 11 September 2011 Posted 11 September 2011 When I was in primary school they showed us the film "Cool Runnings" for some reason(best movie ever) Anyway after that the whole year were huge bobsled fans and we all used practice "bobsledding" on skateboards on the street Feel the Rythm
Narborough_fox Posted 11 September 2011 Posted 11 September 2011 Most the classics have been mentioned. However in our playground we used to have a method of determine who wanted to play any particular game. It normally started as a group of 3 or 4 lads who wanted to play a game, normally British Bulldog, and they would all form a line by putting arms over each others shoulders and walking round the playground chanting, "Whoo wants to play, British Bulldog?" If you wanted to play you had to join the either end of the line and join the chant. We did this until there were around 20 odd kids in the line, then we'd begin. Anyone do anything similar? Yep I did the same but it went... "all join up for playing stuck in the mud"
OriginalRobboFOX Posted 11 September 2011 Posted 11 September 2011 Tick Tick off ground Tick bob down Tick rugby Cuppies World Cup cuppies Headers and Volleys 60 seconds One touch one bounce British Bulldog What's the time Mr Wolf Pontoon/Blackjack Pogs Pro set
SOCCERROO FOX Posted 12 September 2011 Posted 12 September 2011 I was thinking today about starting a similar topic when I was reminded of a game we played - cricket but with dice. We used to list two sides and one person would bat whilst the other bowled. To score runs you rolled the dice 1 to 4 & 6 if you rolled a 5 you were out, the other dice was then rolled to determine how you were out as in 1 = Bowled, 2 = Caught etc if you rolled a 5 it was classed as a no ball and you carried on. We used to keep a proper score card with the player batting changing on odd numbers in fact it was all done and recorded in the most exacting detail and could last for hours but then we had none of electronic gadgets you get these days and TV was considered a luxury. The hide and seek game we called it Pod. Used to to the same also reminded me of this gem of a cricket game.
boring_jester Posted 12 September 2011 Posted 12 September 2011 Rainbow Party! Wish I did it as a teenager.
Saxondale Posted 12 September 2011 Posted 12 September 2011 Kiss Chase!! Yep! I remember running away very half-heartedly when the pretty girls were chasing. Kerby was the dogs, though. Better if you played it with a basketball for extra bounce.
DANGEROUS TIGER Posted 12 September 2011 Posted 12 September 2011 Doctors and nurses! Oh, happy days! :rolleyes: :rolleyes:
Wymsey Posted 12 September 2011 Posted 12 September 2011 Headers and Volleys 'Tig' - The nature of this game would seem wrong in this day and age.. 21 Dares.
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