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Thread: Childhood toys

  1. #1

    Default Childhood toys

    The recent TG&Y thread got me to thinking about this. What were your favorite toys growing up? Any fond memories of them? Their pros and cons?

    My Favorites: Hot wheels...
    Legos
    Army men
    Radio flyer wagon
    My Scrambler bike
    Daisy red rider BB Gun
    Lincoln logs
    Lite Brite
    Jacks and marbles
    Monopoly
    Life
    Soaring Sam (styrofoam glider)

    Their cons: Hot wheels...the track made a good weapon
    Legos....sharp corners..you ever step on one?
    Army men...cheap, cheap, cheap..a lot of mine had "war injuries"
    Radio flyer wagon....how many times did we crash?
    My Scrambler bike....crashing, the sissy bar, shoestrings-n-chain
    Daisy red rider BB Gun..never shot my eye out but close
    Lincoln logs...We'd built forts then bomb them with golf balls
    Lite Brite...how many things could go wrong here? burns, choking
    Jacks and marbles....you ever step on a jack?
    Monopoly....someone always got pissed and tossed the board
    Life..I like kids; but when you need two cars thats 2 many
    Soaring Sam.....broke on its maiden flight

  2. #2

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    One of the best "toys" my folks ever gave my brother and me was 50' of rope and a pulley. lol We used it to make zip lines between any two structures that would hold our weight or else we'd tie the rope to a tall tree over a creek bed and use it to swing on.

  3. Default Re: Childhood toys

    That is too funny, I'm currently online buying a ZipLine for Christmas! and an Umbrella policy..lol.

    My favorite toy?

    Hands Down, Barbies and all of their accessories!

    I'll never forget when one of them became pregnant years ago and OK was one of the states to protest.
    " You've Been Thunder Struck ! "

  4. #4

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    Barbie!!....I started to mention her earlier. My sister had several, and my brother and I always got into trouble for smashing her chest in to tease our sister. So many accessories (my sister had hundreds) I think Barbie had a shopping problem.

    The zipline reminded me of our slide when I was a kid......it had wood rails!! wtf were they thinking? Not to metion the killer jungle qym 2 man deathtrap swing. <---also a wasp haven for added fun.

  5. Default Re: Childhood toys

    lol, I don't know how we survived!

    One of our favorite things to do was blow up a waterbed mattress with air and then lay on it... the other kid would run and jump and the one laying down would be airborne!

    ha.ha.. I did the jumping.
    " You've Been Thunder Struck ! "

  6. #6

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    Creepy Crawlers. You baked plastic critters. Burnt myself so many times I lost count. It would raise blisters. They don't sell 'em like that, anymore. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creepy_Crawlers

    Wham-O - the big magnet.

    Superballs

    Mousetrap - the board game.

    Ouiji Board - scared the crap out of me.

    Easy bake oven. It didn't have nearly the power that the creepy crawlers had. Don't recall ever burning myself with it. It cooked with a light bulb for the love of god.

    B B gun (my husband's choice)

    Sorry - board game

    Yahoo - board game

    Bicycle. I didn't have a schwinn but that didn't stop me from loving my bike.

    Hotwheels

    Ball, bat and glove for sandlot ball. As a girl, I wasn't allowed to play on a league because I could get hit in the chest and get cancer. Yes, I am serious.

  7. Default Re: Childhood toys

    I blame my entry into the design & architecture profession on my affection for Legos. I built nearly everything imaginable from castles to a spring-powered cannon that would destroy any Lego creation in its path.

    We had a 150' rope and a pulley. We would jump from tree branch 30' in the air and cross two backyards to the next tree.

    My BMX and later mountain bike left me with many a scar from huge ramp jumps gone wrong.

    My sandbox was also the source of many fun hours. My sand cities had everything from expressways to power lines (sticks and kite strings) to canal and flood control systems that I would test with a 100-year flood (waterhose).

    I hated board games and still do to this day.

    Kites, most of which ended up in trees.

  8. Default Re: Childhood toys

    I collected Transformers, particularly the sets that went together to create one huge robot.

  9. #9

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    Don't forget the rock sockem robots

    And those cheap wood gliders planes they never lasted very long but they where cheap enough to just buy news once the old plane fell apart.

  10. #10

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    Quote Originally Posted by CuatrodeMayo View Post

    My sandbox was also the source of many fun hours. My sand cities had everything from expressways to power lines (sticks and kite strings) to canal and flood control systems that I would test with a 100-year flood (waterhose).
    Scary...We did almost the same thing. Either we built elaborate golf ball runs on our sand mountain with tunnels and sticks for bridges, or we would build (sometimes taking days to complete) whole towns in our sand box. They had streets made of cement (wet sand), buildings hollowed out with popsicle stick frames for support, and we used branch clippings for trees. Factories with cardboard papertowel holder smokestacks. We even learned to build fires in our buildings to bake the sand and make it more sturdy. Of course we used army men and sometimes blew up our buildings with black cat fireworks. And yes, at the corner of the sandbox (the highest part of town) there was always a lake with a hardened sand dam. We left the water hose on a trickle and eventually the lake would fill up and break the dam and destroy the town. My parents were sometimes very proud of our creations and sometime very worried by them.

    Quote Originally Posted by GuyB View Post
    And those cheap wood gliders planes they never lasted very long but they where cheap enough to just buy news once the old plane fell apart.
    I always bought several at a time. They were so cheap, but they actually lasted better than some toys. Went through a lot of rubber bands with those. Got in trouble alot for flying them in the house too. I may have to go buy some for my brother as a gag gift this christmas. They still have them at Hobby Lobby.

  11. #11

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    Yard Darts, Silly Puddy, Water Wiggle, YoYo, wooden top.

  12. #12

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    Evel Knievel Stunt cycle

    AFX Slot Car Set

  13. Default Re: Childhood toys

    Quote Originally Posted by westsidesooner View Post
    Scary...We did almost the same thing. Either we built elaborate golf ball runs on our sand mountain with tunnels and sticks for bridges, or we would build (sometimes taking days to complete) whole towns in our sand box. They had streets made of cement (wet sand), buildings hollowed out with popsicle stick frames for support, and we used branch clippings for trees. Factories with cardboard papertowel holder smokestacks. We even learned to build fires in our buildings to bake the sand and make it more sturdy. Of course we used army men and sometimes blew up our buildings with black cat fireworks. And yes, at the corner of the sandbox (the highest part of town) there was always a lake with a hardened sand dam. We left the water hose on a trickle and eventually the lake would fill up and break the dam and destroy the town. My parents were sometimes very proud of our creations and sometime very worried by them.
    Holy crap...it's as if you were there with me.

  14. #14

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    I also had the big wheel bike me and my friends would make ramps and see how many coke cans we could jump or just use what ever we could find to jump over.

  15. #15

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    a pulley .... dang, that woulda saved sooooooo many belts from an early death.

  16. #16

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    My favorites were my best friend's Ginny dolls with about a thousand assessories. It would take us hours to set it all up and then about time to be able to play it would be time to go.

    Disney cartoons were a big deal. You only saw them every few years at the movies. I still love some of the old cartoons from the 30's and 40's that you saw right before the movie.

    We played outside most of the time. Exploring the woods at Grandmas. Swimming in the creek at Granny's and pretending to be Tarzan swinging on the big vine into the pooled water on a hot Oklahoma summer day.

    In the summer standing in front of the water-cooler trying to cool down. Sleeping with the windows open all summer. Trying to warm up standing over a pot-bellied stove at Granny's during a cold Thanksgiving or Christmas. You'd burn on your front and still freeze your behind.

  17. #17

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    PONG, and those electronic science fair projects from Radio Shack. Not to mention the rockets you would build, (we shot may toads into orbit)
    My sister had a Mrs. Beasly doll. And easy bake
    The NFL replica helmet and shoulder pads, we would recreate the Dallas Cowboys beating the Packers on the frozen goal line stand. (revisionist history at an early age)

  18. #18

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    Quote Originally Posted by CuatrodeMayo View Post
    Holy crap...it's as if you were there with me.
    Spooky huh? I think the sandbox and the placing of the twigs got me interested in landscape design. To bad the golfball trails didn't make me a golf pro.....I bet it'd pay better.

    Couple of more toys I thought of...the original Mattel ( I think) electronic football game....where the players were just blips on a screen. I loved that thing. And maybe someone can help me out with this one. We had a wooden gameboard/maze that had a top attached to a string you pulled then the top would wind through the maze and knock over pins (mini wooden bowling pins?) for points. The gameboard was probably about 18" X 48". I dont remeber its name.

  19. #19

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    It wasn't a toy really, but the coolest Christmas present I ever got was a unicycle that my uncle built. He took the front forks off a bicycle, straightened them out, then put a tricycle wheel and seat on it. That started a bit of a trend in our family because my brother and my cousin also learned to ride unicycles.


  20. #21

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    my childhood toy was the ninja turtles pizza gun. And anything race car track by hot wheels..

  21. #22

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    the gyro, lincoln logs, hot wheels, yard darts, slinky, bag of green army men, car and plane models, erector sets made of metal, evil water wiggle, rat fink, and others i know i have forgot.

  22. Default Re: Childhood toys

    We played with a lot of Mainway toys like Pretty Peggy Ear-Piercing Set, Mr. Skin-Grafter, General Tron's Secret Police Confession Kit, and Doggie Dentist. My brother had a Johnny Switchblade doll but our favorite toy was the Bag O' Glass.

  23. #24

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    Quote Originally Posted by CuatrodeMayo View Post
    I blame my entry into the design & architecture profession on my affection for Legos.
    I would say that is probably a true statement for most of us in our age range that are in this profession. I know that Lego's and Matchbox/Hot Wheels were my favorites, I also spent a lot of time drawing and on the drafting board well before I started my drafting classes in 8th grade.

  24. #25

    Default Re: Childhood toys

    Atari 2600 or the Commodore 64

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