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  #31   Report Post  
Old March 6th 05, 01:30 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Largest flakes I can remember seeing.

Elaine Jones wrote:
Quoting from message
posted on 5 Mar 2005 by Gianna Stefani
I would like to add:

When were toddlers we were told when it was snowing that it was
"Mother Goose shaking her feather-beds".

Featherbeds belong to the days when one had to breath on the windows on
a frosty morning, then scrape the "ice ferns" off.


Ah yes ... those were very comfortable ... if only they still existed.

--
Gianna Stefani

www.buchan-meteo.org.uk

  #32   Report Post  
Old March 6th 05, 01:30 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Mar 2005
Posts: 432
Default Largest flakes I can remember seeing.

Elaine Jones wrote:
Quoting from message
posted on 5 Mar 2005 by Gianna Stefani
I would like to add:

When were toddlers we were told when it was snowing that it was
"Mother Goose shaking her feather-beds".

Featherbeds belong to the days when one had to breath on the windows on
a frosty morning, then scrape the "ice ferns" off.


Ah yes ... those were very comfortable ... if only they still existed.

--
Gianna Stefani

www.buchan-meteo.org.uk
  #33   Report Post  
Old March 6th 05, 01:30 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Mar 2005
Posts: 432
Default Largest flakes I can remember seeing.

Elaine Jones wrote:
Quoting from message
posted on 5 Mar 2005 by Gianna Stefani
I would like to add:

When were toddlers we were told when it was snowing that it was
"Mother Goose shaking her feather-beds".

Featherbeds belong to the days when one had to breath on the windows on
a frosty morning, then scrape the "ice ferns" off.


Ah yes ... those were very comfortable ... if only they still existed.

--
Gianna Stefani

www.buchan-meteo.org.uk
  #34   Report Post  
Old March 6th 05, 02:34 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jan 2005
Posts: 427
Default Largest flakes I can remember seeing.

Quoting from message
posted on 6 Mar 2005 by Gianna Stefani
I would like to add:

Elaine Jones wrote:
Quoting from message
posted on 5 Mar 2005 by Gianna Stefani
I would like to add:

When were toddlers we were told when it was snowing that it was
"Mother Goose shaking her feather-beds".

Featherbeds belong to the days when one had to breath on the windows on
a frosty morning, then scrape the "ice ferns" off.


Ah yes ... those were very comfortable ... if only they still existed.


A featherbed under and an eiderdown over beats a duvet any day.

The last featherbed I remember was that of Great Aunty Gladys; she died
1990/91. There were gales between Christmas and New Year and Dad said to
me (parents had moved to N. Wales) "You'd better go - there's a new moon
coming."

So I went, with high winds over the M62 to Howden, N. Humberside; other
members of the family had arrived before me and others immediately after.

She departed as the year changed, on a dark moon and an ebb tide.

Superstition? Fact.

G-A.G. in an earlier century would have been a "witch" or a "wise-woman";
she knew the (local) weather and managed her large garden accordingly,
and in her 80s worked part-time for a local market-gardener.


--
....ElaineJ... Briallen Gifts/Cards catalogue at http://www.briallen.co.uk
....Kinetic... Corn Dollies, Cards, Coasters, Mousemats, Kids' Tshirts
...StrongArm.. Jones' Pages at http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/ejones
....RISC PC... Corwen, North Wales; Steam Traction;CMMGB&Yukon Volunteers.
  #35   Report Post  
Old March 6th 05, 02:34 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jan 2005
Posts: 427
Default Largest flakes I can remember seeing.

Quoting from message
posted on 6 Mar 2005 by Gianna Stefani
I would like to add:

Elaine Jones wrote:
Quoting from message
posted on 5 Mar 2005 by Gianna Stefani
I would like to add:

When were toddlers we were told when it was snowing that it was
"Mother Goose shaking her feather-beds".

Featherbeds belong to the days when one had to breath on the windows on
a frosty morning, then scrape the "ice ferns" off.


Ah yes ... those were very comfortable ... if only they still existed.


A featherbed under and an eiderdown over beats a duvet any day.

The last featherbed I remember was that of Great Aunty Gladys; she died
1990/91. There were gales between Christmas and New Year and Dad said to
me (parents had moved to N. Wales) "You'd better go - there's a new moon
coming."

So I went, with high winds over the M62 to Howden, N. Humberside; other
members of the family had arrived before me and others immediately after.

She departed as the year changed, on a dark moon and an ebb tide.

Superstition? Fact.

G-A.G. in an earlier century would have been a "witch" or a "wise-woman";
she knew the (local) weather and managed her large garden accordingly,
and in her 80s worked part-time for a local market-gardener.


--
....ElaineJ... Briallen Gifts/Cards catalogue at http://www.briallen.co.uk
....Kinetic... Corn Dollies, Cards, Coasters, Mousemats, Kids' Tshirts
...StrongArm.. Jones' Pages at http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/ejones
....RISC PC... Corwen, North Wales; Steam Traction;CMMGB&Yukon Volunteers.


  #36   Report Post  
Old March 6th 05, 02:34 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jan 2005
Posts: 427
Default Largest flakes I can remember seeing.

Quoting from message
posted on 6 Mar 2005 by Gianna Stefani
I would like to add:

Elaine Jones wrote:
Quoting from message
posted on 5 Mar 2005 by Gianna Stefani
I would like to add:

When were toddlers we were told when it was snowing that it was
"Mother Goose shaking her feather-beds".

Featherbeds belong to the days when one had to breath on the windows on
a frosty morning, then scrape the "ice ferns" off.


Ah yes ... those were very comfortable ... if only they still existed.


A featherbed under and an eiderdown over beats a duvet any day.

The last featherbed I remember was that of Great Aunty Gladys; she died
1990/91. There were gales between Christmas and New Year and Dad said to
me (parents had moved to N. Wales) "You'd better go - there's a new moon
coming."

So I went, with high winds over the M62 to Howden, N. Humberside; other
members of the family had arrived before me and others immediately after.

She departed as the year changed, on a dark moon and an ebb tide.

Superstition? Fact.

G-A.G. in an earlier century would have been a "witch" or a "wise-woman";
she knew the (local) weather and managed her large garden accordingly,
and in her 80s worked part-time for a local market-gardener.


--
....ElaineJ... Briallen Gifts/Cards catalogue at http://www.briallen.co.uk
....Kinetic... Corn Dollies, Cards, Coasters, Mousemats, Kids' Tshirts
...StrongArm.. Jones' Pages at http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/ejones
....RISC PC... Corwen, North Wales; Steam Traction;CMMGB&Yukon Volunteers.
  #37   Report Post  
Old March 6th 05, 02:34 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jan 2005
Posts: 427
Default Largest flakes I can remember seeing.

Quoting from message
posted on 6 Mar 2005 by Gianna Stefani
I would like to add:

Elaine Jones wrote:
Quoting from message
posted on 5 Mar 2005 by Gianna Stefani
I would like to add:

When were toddlers we were told when it was snowing that it was
"Mother Goose shaking her feather-beds".

Featherbeds belong to the days when one had to breath on the windows on
a frosty morning, then scrape the "ice ferns" off.


Ah yes ... those were very comfortable ... if only they still existed.


A featherbed under and an eiderdown over beats a duvet any day.

The last featherbed I remember was that of Great Aunty Gladys; she died
1990/91. There were gales between Christmas and New Year and Dad said to
me (parents had moved to N. Wales) "You'd better go - there's a new moon
coming."

So I went, with high winds over the M62 to Howden, N. Humberside; other
members of the family had arrived before me and others immediately after.

She departed as the year changed, on a dark moon and an ebb tide.

Superstition? Fact.

G-A.G. in an earlier century would have been a "witch" or a "wise-woman";
she knew the (local) weather and managed her large garden accordingly,
and in her 80s worked part-time for a local market-gardener.


--
....ElaineJ... Briallen Gifts/Cards catalogue at http://www.briallen.co.uk
....Kinetic... Corn Dollies, Cards, Coasters, Mousemats, Kids' Tshirts
...StrongArm.. Jones' Pages at http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/ejones
....RISC PC... Corwen, North Wales; Steam Traction;CMMGB&Yukon Volunteers.
  #38   Report Post  
Old March 6th 05, 02:36 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Posts: 2,359
Default Largest flakes I can remember seeing.

"Gianna Stefani" wrote in message


Elaine Jones wrote:
Quoting from message


Featherbeds belong to the days when one had to breath on the windows on
a frosty morning, then scrape the "ice ferns" off.


Ah yes ... those were very comfortable ... if only they still existed.


I don't know about comfortable but you can still get them on windows
that are not double glazed.


--
Posted via Mailgate.ORG Server - http://www.Mailgate.ORG
  #39   Report Post  
Old March 6th 05, 02:36 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jul 2003
Posts: 2,359
Default Largest flakes I can remember seeing.

"Gianna Stefani" wrote in message


Elaine Jones wrote:
Quoting from message


Featherbeds belong to the days when one had to breath on the windows on
a frosty morning, then scrape the "ice ferns" off.


Ah yes ... those were very comfortable ... if only they still existed.


I don't know about comfortable but you can still get them on windows
that are not double glazed.


--
Posted via Mailgate.ORG Server - http://www.Mailgate.ORG
  #40   Report Post  
Old March 6th 05, 02:36 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jul 2003
Posts: 2,359
Default Largest flakes I can remember seeing.

"Gianna Stefani" wrote in message


Elaine Jones wrote:
Quoting from message


Featherbeds belong to the days when one had to breath on the windows on
a frosty morning, then scrape the "ice ferns" off.


Ah yes ... those were very comfortable ... if only they still existed.


I don't know about comfortable but you can still get them on windows
that are not double glazed.


--
Posted via Mailgate.ORG Server - http://www.Mailgate.ORG


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