What happened to having a bonfire in the back garden or the nearest bit of open ground like everyone used to do when I was a kid ?....everywhere little kids dragging trees home down the street and chopping up furniture and anything else that would burn.
We all used to have a a big black bare patch 10 feet across on the back garden the next day and all dad's 'spare wood' had gone missing.
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me husband told me they used to buy their own fireworks and sparklers and have a party in the garden for the bonfire night when he was a kid.
Good pics all
I'd like to go to one of these big Kent/Sussex displays where they burn effigies - there was one a few years ago where it was a Pikey caravan
Personally I believe Guy Fawkes was born 400 years too soon
Our weekend bonfire pictures
''Don't be serious..Be Sincere''
..with a view like this from our window, why would we purchased our own fireworks??
''Don't be serious..Be Sincere''
We always have our bonfire every night inside the house.
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UKBA,UKBA I am dreading to hear from you...
UKBA, a BRP for Christmas will do...
Some nice pics there jlags, thanks
Of course nothing much can compare with the Phils New Year mayhem...
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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2080899/New-Year-firework-celebrations-leave-454-injured-Philippines.html
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Remember remember the fifth of November
Gunpowder, treason and plot.
I see no reason why gunpowder, treason
Should ever be forgot...
V for Vendetta
Hackivists set up Guy Fawkes protest
A series of website hacks over the past 24 hours has been attributed to the online hacktivist group Anonymous.
The websites of US broadcaster NBC, pop singer Lady Gaga and the Australian government have all been attacked.
Some of the hacked websites displayed a rhyme about 5 November, when Guy Fawkes's attempt to destroy Parliament in 1605 is marked in the UK.
Paypal and security firm Symantec said they were investigating whether they had also been compromised.
Both companies have been linked to the latest attacks, in various online reports.
Paypal said it had "no evidence" of a security breach, but a list of nearly 28,000 passwords claiming to belong to Paypal accounts was posted online overnight.
"Paypal hacked by Anonymous as part of our November 5th protest," read a tweet by the collective, along with a link to the passwords, which has now been taken down.
Symantec said it took "each and every claim" of an attack on its systems seriously.
"Our first priority is to make sure that any customer information remains protected," it said in a statement.
Read more here
I wonder if people today (well especially the young ones) know the story of this Guy Fawkes thing.. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_Fawkes_Night I find the celebration weird though..
-=rayna.keith=-
...When you realize you want to spend the rest of your life with somebody, you want the rest of your life to start as soon as possible...
We used to like burning people.
Looks like they burn an effigy of the Pope in Lewes
http://www.theargus.co.uk/yourargus/...fire/?ref=fetp
As the nights draw in and the autumn temperature drops, the night sky will soon be aglow with the flames and sparks of Bonfire Night.
Bonfires and parades will be taking place all over Sussex, but on Monday, November 5, the usually peaceful town of Lewes will be at the heart of the country’s anniversary celebrations marking the night in 1605 when Guy Fawkes and his co-conspirators hatched the Gunpowder Plot and attempted to blow up Parliament at the Palace of Westminster.
Its legendary parades mark far more than the Gunpowder Plot. The Lewes Bonfire Night Celebrations also commemorate the 17 Protestant martyrs burnt at the stake in Lewes between 1555 and 1557 as the country struggled with the swing from the Protestantism of Henry VIII to the devout intention of his daughter, Queen Mary I, to restore Catholicism to England. Medieval heresy laws were reintroduced, which advocated burning as punishment, and “Bloody Mary”, as she became known, ignited the flames of hatred as she began her persecution of Protestants in 1555.
Over the next two years, about 275 people were killed, 17 of them in Lewes. The first was Deryk Carver, from Brighton, who was burnt in a barrel in 1555, and the last of the Martyrs of Sussex, Stephen Gratwick, also from Brighton, was burnt at the stake at St George’s Fields.
Those incendiary events from Tudor times are recalled each year in Lewes as 17 burning crosses, one for each of the Sussex Martyrs, are held aloft during the parade, along with an effigy of the Pope. Bonfire Society members create their own tableaux and costumes and the parade attracts thousands of visitors.
Well, that's one way of staying warm: Torchbearers light up Lewes in anti-papist parade on the coldest Guy Fawkes Night in 14 years
- Thousands line the streets to watch annual procession of flaming torches in event which traces its roots to the 16th century
- Just one of thousands of fireworks displays and events up and down the country
- But wrap up warm - forecasters say tonight will be the coldest Guy Fawkes Night in 14 years
- Disappointment for some in Essex, the Westcountry and Wales as torrential rain washes out events
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...#ixzz2BO9A0l2M
Very cold in Wimbledon Park tonight but Merton Council laid on a good display to warm the crowd up. Little bit stiff at £8 a ticket though.
Went to the west brom v southampton game last night. Not many fireworks there. 3 points though. Free ticket courtesy of one of the players. Free food and drink. Cant complain much.
Thanks for participating Guys! I am very delighted on the outcome!
Its good to know that I aint the only one who has an interest on witnessing UK's festivities.
It is a great album and its a good remembrance of the Bonfire Night for us this year.
Well done to everybody and thanks for sharing the experiences!
Keep the photos coming!
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