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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 00:31
Thor wrote:
Very unusual for this time of the year.. what next? Is the rain ever going to stop?
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 00:38
Thor wrote:
What a LOUD bang!
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 07:29
Annette Curtin-Twitcher wrote:
It was so bad that one of my dogs was crapping herself - on the bathroom floor!
Just what you want at that time of night.
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 08:37
william wrote:
I think thunderstorms should be banned, they are too louder than bonfire night and my animals got scared, at least with bonfire I have a whole year to arrange somewhere else for my animals to go.
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 09:55
Smiler wrote:
You arrange for your animals to go somewhere else on bonfire!!!!
What an absolutely fantastic idea, you should tell everyone so that they could do it next year.

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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 10:08
spongebob wrote:
But should we have to Smiler ?

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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 10:48
ere be monsters wrote:
Bonfire has been here longer than you or your animals
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 11:14
spongebob wrote:
Another classic example of why bonfire people are so far up their own ar$es. What about elderly or disabled people who have no family but rely on their pets for comfort and companionship.
Well f**k the elderly and disabled etc....bonfire rules so stuff everyone else.
Nice
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 12:22
Prick Stein wrote:
How about euthanasia for the elderley and all people named after a yellow cartoon character?!
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 12:31
spongebob wrote:
I gather from your post in "late night drinks in the volley" thread that you're Cliffe.
Now i understand why you would make a comment like your previous post. As said...up your own ar$es.
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 13:36
Mrs De Vere wrote:
Ooh Spongebob, don't say that to your neighbours!!! By the way, are you going to the Waterloo dinner with your other half this year?
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 14:06
spongebob wrote:
Waterloo dinner ? what like i did last year, and the year before and the year before that....???? Has my other half ever been to a waterloo dinner ?
Exactly, there's your answer.
Are you Mrs De Vere, the teacher at St pancras school ?
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 17:07
Annette Curtin-Twitcher wrote:
I don't see what's wrong with sending pets away if they're really scared of bonfire. I do it, so do loads of people I know. It's only one night, after all (well 2 if you want them out of harm's way on badge night as well).
I send myself away with them the weekend of Nevill, now you can't you trust them to finish before the pubs are shut.
Although it's not ideal, I accept it as the price I have to pay for living in a town that has such a great tradition. Seaford starts to look temtping at this time of year though, when I'm thoroughly sick of it.
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 18:16
SG wrote:
Annette - I moved here from Seaford. Lewes is worth the odd bang in November!
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 19:23
Annette Curtin-Twitcher wrote:
Lol. But then there's the temptation of a bigger house and no mortgage.......
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 19:27
I dont live in lewes... wrote:
*Least We Forget.*
'Seaford - I like the sound of the word.
It means people can live free, talk free, park free, go or come, buy or sell, be drunk or sober, however they choose.
Some words give you a feeling. Seaford is one of those words that makes me tight in the throat - the same tightness a man gets when his baby takes his first step or his son shaves or makes his first sound like a man.
Some words can give you a feeling that makes your heart warm.
Seaford is one of those words.
PhilX
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0 On Thu 26 Nov 2009 at: 23:45
Vale Road wrote:
Careful - you are beginning to soung like DFE!
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0 On Fri 27 Nov 2009 at: 08:47
i dont live in lewes... wrote:
LOL.
Have no fear, I'll never be like that.
ACT is right. If she was to sell up in Lewes she may well find herself in the position of either clearing the mortgage or getting a bigger house (maybe both), with a nice garden + instantly ridding herself of parking and flooding problems.
Seaford is also a good place to live if you're a dog owner which I think she is. There's lots of great walks + Bonfire Night/month+ + + is no big deal here.
I miss Lewes as it was but don't particularly like it as it is. Sadly you can't turn the clock back.
I still use a Lewes dentist and go to the Farmers Market, it's only a short drive.
Best of both worlds I guess!
PhilX
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0 On Fri 27 Nov 2009 at: 14:38
Chuck wrote:
Yes, you can buy a big house in Seaford, but whoopy doo, the rest of the place is a cr@phole (apart from the exit).
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0 On Fri 27 Nov 2009 at: 15:59
I dont live in lewes... wrote:
Yes your right Chucky, it's horrible here, I don't know how I stand it. Please please don't ever move here.
TY
PhilX
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0 On Fri 27 Nov 2009 at: 19:09
Chuck wrote:
Why would I want to live somewhere, where the average resident smells of wee
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0 On Fri 27 Nov 2009 at: 19:25
i dont live in lewes... wrote:
I don't know?
Why would Chucky want to live somewhere where the average resident smells of wee?
Do we get any clues?
How many guesses do we get? ??
PhilX
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0 On Fri 27 Nov 2009 at: 19:58
NCG wrote:
wee?! nobody i interacted with smelled like wee while i was in Lewes! "maybe", just "maybe".......Chuck needs to find different friends?!

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0 On Sun 29 Nov 2009 at: 23:42
Brixtonbelle wrote:
Talking of wee and thunderstorms...it's pissing down outside