Great video,but it brings terrible sadness to my eyes.The way things have changed so horribly now.I mean everything was different back then,it look at great time to be alive.Is anyone feeling the same way I am?
Totally agree Sir, I could go on and on about the state of things today, but suffice to say the developed world has lost it's way and as for large parts of the developing world, well what's changed, shame on us all!!
Put it this way, toasters were built to last in those days, and they could be repaired if necessary, unlike today's throwaway electrical.....[etc, etc]
This is pure gold. Only watched on a random youtube surf but wow.....my grandparents out for their usual walk opposite the golf course and by the end of Broad Avenue. Unbelievable! 😁
I totally love your videos, but they REALLY tug at my heart-strings! I grew up in Southbourne and I was a teen during the 70s (best time EVER!). These clips are like time travel to me. I know there's a lot we didn't have back then, but what we did have was incredibly special. I could list The Village Bowl, The Palace Vaults, Junipers Coffee Shop, The Criterion, The Pinecliff Bars, Jumpers Tavern... shall I go on? Thank you SO much for posting these - they're absolute gold dust.
God what beautiful memories. I used to ride on that Poole Park train with my Mum, probably in exactly that time period. Also the drive over the crest of Evening Hill, heading towards Shore Road and Sandbanks. My Mum would tell me about how she saw flying boats in Poole Harbour during and just after the Second world war. Quite emotional to see such an old memories brought to life! Thank you Rod Bean for posting this.
I was surprised to see the BIC but Google says it opened in August 1984 so was a brand new attraction back then. Bring back the pool with the wave machine. I wonder if it is still there under the floor.
Happy memories for me. My aunt and uncle lived in Lower Parkstone. In the 70s and early 80s we were never away from Poole although we lived in Derbyshire. The times ive spent doing that journey along Sandbanks Rd, on the miniature railway in Poole Park, playing with my remote control boat on Poole Park Lake whilst watching the trains climbing up the bank....fabulous happy memories with mum, dad, and family all now passed on. What fun we had! If only we could live those happy times again when we hadn't a care in the world!
Brilliant, driving around Gateway at the end, with the radio on, just fantastic. I was doing my A levels at the time in another part of the country where I grew up and lived back then. Thanks for the posting, just wonderful.
Being local I enjoyed this immensely.. I was a bit sorry to see that it was post Woolco !! lol.. I was also amazed at how many Orange coloured cars there were on the roads.. lol.. Thank you for sharing this
Summer 1985,was 16 left school,shortly followed by my dad kicking me out,started a YTS scheme,lived on my own for the 1st time.Always skint & hungry but it built my resilience.Funny my dad is still alive,he's 89.Used to go to the Hampshire center a lot through my childhood,wandering around Wolco's.In my mind it was far superior than that Castlepoint rubbish,they built in it's place.Thanks for sharing this.
I remember Woolco and The Hampshire Centre as it was. It definitely had a small town feel to it. However, Castlepoint isn't bad considering what the town centre is like.
The idea of a mother or father "kicking" one's child out of the home they grew up in, would be what would possibly turn me away from them. They certainly wouldn't get my attention when they became elderly and infirm - there'd be no morale to do such a thing. Either that, or it would be as low on my list of priorities, as they'd nurtured it to become. I felt ready to leave home at the age of 14/15, but personal circumstances made that impractical until I was 19. Being "forced" out, would leave a deep scar behind that would never heal. Despise parents that do that, quite frankly.
@@peteterry2877 actually... there wouldn't have been. And I say that, owing to the method in which motor cars are constructed. Just as one aspect. In essence, human psychology has been played on to cause driving to feel like an unhealthy, and gluttonous experience (overly comfortable, leather, heated seating, automatic climate control, overly stimulating LED touch screen technology, automatic emergency braking - even things which can cause hassle if they break, such as electric windows). The physical appearance of cars can even resemble "faces" (both at front and rear) to induce certain primal reactions when "wronged". Loads of different factors at play.
@@letsdiscussitoversometea8479 It has been said that the safest ever car would have a dagger mounted pointing towards you in the middle of the steering wheel. I'm absolutely sure it wouldn't have a touchscreen.
I remember when the Poole Park train was hauled by a steam loco. Many happy days spent travelling on it, playing crazy golf, going out on the pedalos, feeding the ducks and geese and so much more including falling into the pond by the cafe and just to the right of the station. Later on I played cricket on the pitch by the park entrance. Possibly one of the best parks in the UK.
Same here. I lived in Lilliput so used to go in the park a lot. Whenever we drove through the little bridge to Whitecliff by Dad would open the windows and we would all yell "Cuckoo!" to hear the echo.
I came up with a friend from Southend On Sea to Bourneo on a day out in 1985 and bought a 1930's HMV gramophone player from a guy who was using it to prop the door open at his shop - Lol !!!!!
Arthur Scargill, who remembers the power cuts when the miners were striking...Boy those were fun times, i was 20 years young in 1986, those times will never return unfortunately.
Great video. enjoyed it very much. Looks like it was much easier to find parking spaces, and Bournemouth/Poole looked a lot tidier and you can sense a friendlier vibe back then!
No social media, no expectations of confirming, no GTA, nothing like any of that insidious rubbish. Definitely better. And more likely to make real friends.
Me too! When I stayed with my grandparents in Ringwood on holiday I always prayed for a rainy day so we could go to Woolcos for an Airfix kit. Even now my family refer to rainy summer days as ‘Woolcos days’.
One of my earliest jobs was as store manager at Freezer Fare which was the first shop on the centre's parade.In the same row was a piano shop, Fads diy and Augustus Barnett wine store. Happy memories.
Superb we are lucky people filmed everyday life, but I wonder if people in 1985 looked back to 1955 and said the same things, times changes, I agree simple times, something better, some worse?
they see Arthur Scargill,coming from a Scottish mining village,i remember the miners strike vividly,hard hard times ! love seeing the old cars in your video mate
1986 - the year I passed my driving test. The roads were a lot quieter back then ... You certainly took the long way round from Poole Park to Castlepoint!
The Hampshire Centre as stated in the title 🙂(even if it had been in Dorset ten years when this was filmed ). I bought my first ever CD there back in 1989 before they knocked it all down and built Castlepoint.
I bet most of these classic old cars were sent to the scrapyard years ago. It’s a shame how times change and not always for the better, it’s nice to see people outside and enjoying themselves without the blasted masks being worn. Great video.
Back in September when local lockdowns got announced for us here in Wales for me it had felt like a right smack in the face as we had just resumed face to face socialising a couple of days previously and having that announced was like having an office door slammed shut in my face! Anyway we had ended up doing a movie day at home that day the plans to go out were supposed to have happened after emotions had settled and had a think about how perhaps the government had accidentally done me a favour announcing those lockdowns as at home I had been spared from having to have worn those wretched masks whilst out and about and saved some cash as well!
Thanks for that. I have lived here since 1989 but had never seen the Pier Approach swimming pool. I did see a couple of films in the infamous Imax which replaced it and regularly went swimming in the BIC (the wave machine was fun). All gone now 😞
I remember that B&Q. I also remember exploring the area in Bristol where I was buying a house back in 1986 and seeing an almost completed B&Q store and thinking "I wonder what they are going to sell". They weren't sure themselves back then as along with DIY they had a place a bit like MFI selling furniture, and a place repairing cars (who did a good job on my 1980 Ford Capri).
Looks like a different world compared to what it's like now...... Ethnic diversity and multiculturalism is the reason why it's so vastly different.🇬🇧🏴
Life is life at any time, for any generation. It's how your mindset wants times to be; whether happy, positive or miserable and negative. Don't think that everything was glorious back then. There were many good bits and many bad bits. The one thing that was the same back then as now was how spoilt and lucky we are yet moan and moan and moan as if we are hard done by.
@@Sidneyyoungblood75"spoilt AND lucky"??? They mean the exact opposite thing to the other! And being told - all the time - how "lucky" one is, is going to cause unpleasant feeling. Everyone has a right to protest about something that goes against what's agreeable to them. Solving it isn't a matter of "luck" - particularly, if the solutions already existed beforehand, but were then erased from public consciousness.
I absolutely loved this video. So many memories. I forgot how popular the Ford Fiesta was. There was loads of them in that video! Also cemetery junction looked a bit different then but couldn’t work it out....I didn’t realise the old swimming baths were as big as that. Not sure what all the fuss about the IMAX was about. It must have been a similar size to the old baths?
I spent one summer holiday working at the Hotel Romantica at cemetery junction. A very unglamorous address for a hotel with that name! It was demolished when the junction was upgraded and expanded.
The old swimming baths were a elegant building, as you drove down the hill you got your first view of the sea, magical for a little lad, then they put up a ugly building no more sea views, I'm 55 still remember my old man driving down the hill and seeing the sea, lovely
The problem with the Imax was that the side facing Bath Hill was a blank wall made using Breeze Blocks. It also didn't help that the actual Cinema was years late opening. A Trojan Horse to get some restaurants built ?
Bournemouth used to be the best kept secret now with so called progress its starting to look like Croydon by the sea with all the office blocks and sprawling uni campus shame :(
Bournemouth town sadly has gone to the dogs! Lots of shops have shut down and gone to castle point. The gardens and the Bourne stream are great though!
@@joannesaltfleet2071 I wonder how many beggars there were in the town centre back then. In my memories you were more likely to find a guy selling "Socialist Worker".
I’m 21 so I wasn’t even alive then, but it does make me sad to think about how abandoned the train is now, it’s not as popular as it used to be. When I was a kid it definitely was. But.. now it seems to be a lot less so, it still runs I know though.
Thanks for the replies, we stayed a flat opposite side of road near the entrance and I went in every morning with my cousin, great time feeding the birds. On one occasion a Spider monkey caught a Sparrow and took a bite out of it.
Probably rusted away. That was the fate of most 1970s cars. The Japanese ones were worst. I recall seeing a Datsun 280Z less than ten years old full of holes.
all those British cars made here lots of jobs ! not just making them but keeping them on the road not just mechanical but body wise ,yes i worked in a body shop
Yes and the 70's were even better. Everyone outside doing something. Appalling country now full of freeloaders and assorted scumbags. Despicable little jobsworths etc etc
People say future is bright but I say passed was much brighter then what it is today, today is more in darks and it getting darker more every day. I wish I was back then in the 80s and 90s when every one was happy together and enjoyed time and less trouble also nice cars today's cars are shit wholes really no style no strength at all just show off. And so much traffic because young people buying cars on finance which I hate.
Around this time a colleague moonlighted as a doorman at a Bristol Nightclub "Romeo and Juliet's" enforcing their policy of "No Jeans, No Trainers, No Tattoos". He said that he would occasionally suggest to couple that if the guy put on the girls cardigan then he could let them in without breaking company rules. I don't think girls having Tattoos was even a thing back then.
Where are all the healthy at any size people .... not a single mobility scooter in sight - how terrible that they were obviously ignored and not filmed - or potentially they didn’t exist then ... 🙄🙄🙄
Great video,but it brings terrible sadness to my eyes.The way things have changed so horribly now.I mean everything was different back then,it look at great time to be alive.Is anyone feeling the same way I am?
Why? Because society has been changed so much by globalisation, social media, mass immigration, political correctnes and identity politics?
Yes, I think I know exactly what you mean and what you're feeling Richard.....
Totally agree Sir, I could go on and on about the state of things today, but suffice to say the developed world has lost it's way and as for large parts of the developing world, well what's changed, shame on us all!!
Put it this way, toasters were built to last in those days, and they could be repaired if necessary, unlike today's throwaway electrical.....[etc, etc]
Absolutely, back then you could at least pretend to have freedom.
This is pure gold. Only watched on a random youtube surf but wow.....my grandparents out for their usual walk opposite the golf course and by the end of Broad Avenue. Unbelievable! 😁
I totally love your videos, but they REALLY tug at my heart-strings! I grew up in Southbourne and I was a teen during the 70s (best time EVER!). These clips are like time travel to me. I know there's a lot we didn't have back then, but what we did have was incredibly special. I could list The Village Bowl, The Palace Vaults, Junipers Coffee Shop, The Criterion, The Pinecliff Bars, Jumpers Tavern... shall I go on? Thank you SO much for posting these - they're absolute gold dust.
God what beautiful memories. I used to ride on that Poole Park train with my Mum, probably in exactly that time period. Also the drive over the crest of Evening Hill, heading towards Shore Road and Sandbanks. My Mum would tell me about how she saw flying boats in Poole Harbour during and just after the Second world war. Quite emotional to see such an old memories brought to life! Thank you Rod Bean for posting this.
Brought back lovely memories of how Bournemouth and Poole looked when my late husband David and I enjoyed many holidays in that area. What a treat .
It is definitely 1985/86 as my 2 sons are on the train and they are now 36 and 38 years old. 👍
I was surprised to see the BIC but Google says it opened in August 1984 so was a brand new attraction back then. Bring back the pool with the wave machine. I wonder if it is still there under the floor.
Takes me back, I was at Seldown Boys when you filmed this in the mid 80's. Now live in London, get home sick alot. Thanks for posting.
Happy memories for me. My aunt and uncle lived in Lower Parkstone. In the 70s and early 80s we were never away from Poole although we lived in Derbyshire. The times ive spent doing that journey along Sandbanks Rd, on the miniature railway in Poole Park, playing with my remote control boat on Poole Park Lake whilst watching the trains climbing up the bank....fabulous happy memories with mum, dad, and family all now passed on. What fun we had! If only we could live those happy times again when we hadn't a care in the world!
sorry about loss for most people cant forget what happy childhood most people had. love to go back to childhood.
Some great vintage footage of 35+ years ago - really captures the atmosphere of the period. Glad you put this on. Priceless.
Very calming video from a time when life was worth something. Thank you
Brilliant, driving around Gateway at the end, with the radio on, just fantastic. I was doing my A levels at the time in another part of the country where I grew up and lived back then. Thanks for the posting, just wonderful.
Being local I enjoyed this immensely.. I was a bit sorry to see that it was post Woolco !! lol.. I was also amazed at how many Orange coloured cars there were on the roads.. lol.. Thank you for sharing this
Great post, I love seeing all the old cars. Brilliant.
I did a vehicle check on a couple of them. The red Hillman seemingly died soon after this video!
Summer 1985,was 16 left school,shortly followed by my dad kicking me out,started a YTS scheme,lived on my own for the 1st time.Always skint & hungry but it built my resilience.Funny my dad is still alive,he's 89.Used to go to the Hampshire center a lot through my childhood,wandering around Wolco's.In my mind it was far superior than that Castlepoint rubbish,they built in it's place.Thanks for sharing this.
I remember Woolco and The Hampshire Centre as it was. It definitely had a small town feel to it. However, Castlepoint isn't bad considering what the town centre is like.
The idea of a mother or father "kicking" one's child out of the home they grew up in, would be what would possibly turn me away from them.
They certainly wouldn't get my attention when they became elderly and infirm - there'd be no morale to do such a thing.
Either that, or it would be as low on my list of priorities, as they'd nurtured it to become.
I felt ready to leave home at the age of 14/15, but personal circumstances made that impractical until I was 19.
Being "forced" out, would leave a deep scar behind that would never heal.
Despise parents that do that, quite frankly.
No road rage with anyone! Bring back these times...PLEASE.
What are you talking about? There was just as much road rage back then in the 1980s.
Fewer cars
@@peteterry2877 actually... there wouldn't have been.
And I say that, owing to the method in which motor cars are constructed. Just as one aspect.
In essence, human psychology has been played on to cause driving to feel like an unhealthy, and gluttonous experience (overly comfortable, leather, heated seating, automatic climate control, overly stimulating LED touch screen technology, automatic emergency braking - even things which can cause hassle if they break, such as electric windows).
The physical appearance of cars can even resemble "faces" (both at front and rear) to induce certain primal reactions when "wronged".
Loads of different factors at play.
@@letsdiscussitoversometea8479 It has been said that the safest ever car would have a dagger mounted pointing towards you in the middle of the steering wheel. I'm absolutely sure it wouldn't have a touchscreen.
Just parking all over the place to contend with.
Brilliant, thanks for the memory's, born in west parley ferndown grow up Bournemouth Poole, simple times, love it thanks again
I remember when the Poole Park train was hauled by a steam loco. Many happy days spent travelling on it, playing crazy golf, going out on the pedalos, feeding the ducks and geese and so much more including falling into the pond by the cafe and just to the right of the station. Later on I played cricket on the pitch by the park entrance. Possibly one of the best parks in the UK.
Same here. I lived in Lilliput so used to go in the park a lot. Whenever we drove through the little bridge to Whitecliff by Dad would open the windows and we would all yell "Cuckoo!" to hear the echo.
I have put more video’s on both UA-cam and Facebook, look in Memories of Old Poole & Bournemouth😊
Love the health and safety of the train, the kid with the leg hanging out :-)
Oh wow I wish I was alive back then 😢 look how lovely everything was it’s so upsetting 😢
You are definitely not wrong
@@peternagy-im4be it’s a horrible place to live now sure there’s worse places but it’s not nice at all.
So many memories with my dad and mum thank you so much ❤️❤️❤️
This footage is absolute gold
How many billions of videos are there on UA-cam? This is one of my favourites of all time. This is my mid-teen years exactly.
I came up with a friend from Southend On Sea to Bourneo on a day out in 1985 and bought a 1930's HMV gramophone player from a guy who was using it to prop the door open at his shop - Lol !!!!!
Just to think that those kids on the train in the beginning are in their 40's now...scary
Arthur Scargill, who remembers the power cuts when the miners were striking...Boy those were fun times, i was 20 years young in 1986, those times will never return unfortunately.
I remember those times. No phones, no Instagram freaks and people spoke to each other and didn’t type “lol” in everything
Lol
The lol thing is just laziness!
100% no mobile phones no internet, nobody knowing your business.
this one goes deep man.... deep into my childhood!
Great video 🥰
Just before my time as I was born in 89 but its so good to see how different Bournemouth and Poole use to be
It really hasn't changed much, other then the type of people that are moving in
Great video. enjoyed it very much. Looks like it was much easier to find parking spaces, and Bournemouth/Poole looked a lot tidier and you can sense a friendlier vibe back then!
No social media, no expectations of confirming, no GTA, nothing like any of that insidious rubbish.
Definitely better. And more likely to make real friends.
@letsdiscussitoversometea8479 Absolutely correct. The streets free of trash if you can read between the lines
I was expecting to see "Woolco" at the end 🤣🤣🤣
Me too! When I stayed with my grandparents in Ringwood on holiday I always prayed for a rainy day so we could go to Woolcos for an Airfix kit. Even now my family refer to rainy summer days as ‘Woolcos days’.
One of my earliest jobs was as store manager at Freezer Fare which was the first shop on the centre's parade.In the same row was a piano shop, Fads diy and Augustus Barnett wine store. Happy memories.
I lived in Christchurch from 82 to 87, and know the area well. Better days indeed.
Superb we are lucky people filmed everyday life, but I wonder if people in 1985 looked back to 1955 and said the same things, times changes, I agree simple times, something better, some worse?
they see Arthur Scargill,coming from a Scottish mining village,i remember the miners strike vividly,hard hard times ! love seeing the old cars in your video mate
I remember Bournemouth like this as if it was yesterday
1986 - the year I passed my driving test. The roads were a lot quieter back then ...
You certainly took the long way round from Poole Park to Castlepoint!
The Hampshire Centre as stated in the title 🙂(even if it had been in Dorset ten years when this was filmed ). I bought my first ever CD there back in 1989 before they knocked it all down and built Castlepoint.
What I noticed most was that people talked to each other rather than gazing at a phone screen.
I bet most of these classic old cars were sent to the scrapyard years ago. It’s a shame how times change and not always for the better, it’s nice to see people outside and enjoying themselves without the blasted masks being worn. Great video.
Back in September when local lockdowns got announced for us here in Wales for me it had felt like a right smack in the face as we had just resumed face to face socialising a couple of days previously and having that announced was like having an office door slammed shut in my face!
Anyway we had ended up doing a movie day at home that day the plans to go out were supposed to have happened after emotions had settled and had a think about how perhaps the government had accidentally done me a favour announcing those lockdowns as at home I had been spared from having to have worn those wretched masks whilst out and about and saved some cash as well!
I never wore one and indeed never will.
Thanks for that. I have lived here since 1989 but had never seen the Pier Approach swimming pool. I did see a couple of films in the infamous Imax which replaced it and regularly went swimming in the BIC (the wave machine was fun). All gone now 😞
I wasn't in the park that day as i was at home trying to fix my toaster.
Brilliant video. Thanks for all the videos that you've uploaded. Some great memories.
It’s strange how little it’s changed. Every time it skips I immediately recognised it. (Except for Gateway and B&Q!)
I remember that B&Q. I also remember exploring the area in Bristol where I was buying a house back in 1986 and seeing an almost completed B&Q store and thinking "I wonder what they are going to sell". They weren't sure themselves back then as along with DIY they had a place a bit like MFI selling furniture, and a place repairing cars (who did a good job on my 1980 Ford Capri).
Looks like a different world compared to what it's like now......
Ethnic diversity and multiculturalism is the reason why it's so vastly different.🇬🇧🏴
A very deliberate plan to flood the UK with assorted scum from all over the world. A dreadful country now absolutely appalling.
I wish I could have experienced the time where everything was natural and people where happier
Life is life at any time, for any generation.
It's how your mindset wants times to be; whether happy, positive or miserable and negative.
Don't think that everything was glorious back then.
There were many good bits and many bad bits.
The one thing that was the same back then as now was how spoilt and lucky we are yet moan and moan and moan as if we are hard done by.
@@Sidneyyoungblood75"spoilt AND lucky"???
They mean the exact opposite thing to the other!
And being told - all the time - how "lucky" one is, is going to cause unpleasant feeling.
Everyone has a right to protest about something that goes against what's agreeable to them.
Solving it isn't a matter of "luck" - particularly, if the solutions already existed beforehand, but were then erased from public consciousness.
I absolutely loved this video. So many memories. I forgot how popular the Ford Fiesta was. There was loads of them in that video! Also cemetery junction looked a bit different then but couldn’t work it out....I didn’t realise the old swimming baths were as big as that. Not sure what all the fuss about the IMAX was about. It must have been a similar size to the old baths?
I spent one summer holiday working at the Hotel Romantica at cemetery junction. A very unglamorous address for a hotel with that name! It was demolished when the junction was upgraded and expanded.
The old swimming baths were a elegant building, as you drove down the hill you got your first view of the sea, magical for a little lad, then they put up a ugly building no more sea views, I'm 55 still remember my old man driving down the hill and seeing the sea, lovely
The problem with the Imax was that the side facing Bath Hill was a blank wall made using Breeze Blocks. It also didn't help that the actual Cinema was years late opening. A Trojan Horse to get some restaurants built ?
Think of the amount of phone's that would be filming these day's, hardly a camera in sight. Great vid.
Bournemouth used to be the best kept secret now with so called progress its starting to look like Croydon by the sea with all the office blocks and sprawling uni campus shame :(
Lansdowne is becoming a real dump with the stuff they are building
Old Victorian properties bulldozed for ugly apartments great progress
Plus is becoming very tawdry in appearance, manners, behaviours of people who live in town and holiday makers.
Bournemouth town sadly has gone to the dogs!
Lots of shops have shut down and gone to castle point.
The gardens and the Bourne stream are great though!
@@joannesaltfleet2071 I wonder how many beggars there were in the town centre back then. In my memories you were more likely to find a guy selling "Socialist Worker".
Wonderful video! Any chance of more to come?
the care free days :) how i miss them
The red Hillman imp. What a slow coach! I was 14 years old .1985 great times!
This film has some rare footage of the old Pier Approach swimming baths befoe they were knocked down.
Someone coughed on the train and there wasn’t a mass panic!
I wish I could've experienced this. Just superb 😊❤️
I’m 21 so I wasn’t even alive then, but it does make me sad to think about how abandoned the train is now, it’s not as popular as it used to be. When I was a kid it definitely was. But.. now it seems to be a lot less so, it still runs I know though.
Spend a few days every year next to Poole park,wonderful place.
My god how have I only just found this that was back in the days when there use to be a zoo in Poole park brings back so many good memories
Unbelievable this brings back memories,
I moved to the Bournemouth area in 1985 when I was 8, I remember seeing all this many moons ago now 😂
1986 is the year I left school. Thanks for the memories
Same here
Wonderful. I lived on Castle Lane West at this time.
I drive that route regularly and just been uploading some videos to my channel of the same areas! Its not changed as much as I thought.
The W123 Mercs that appeared in this are probably the only cars you're likely to come across today more or less.
Just look at all the old cars 😢
Charminister road at 06:25?
Like to see all the old cars in Bournemouth long gone, but perhaps a Morris Minor still survives today.
A Hillman Imp holding the entire road traffic up !
What was the building beside the pier where the imax used to be?
That building at the side of the Pier was the Swimming Baths.
Shame everywhere here now is so busy. That looks like 7am traffic on a Sunday morning in comparison.
Beautiful time, being 20 is far better than 55.
Tell me about it.
Good ol days..... I miss them
Didn’t stay as Gateway for long!
Did they have a Zoo there?
It did indeed!!! can't remember what year it closed though
On the other side from the duck lake, by the cricket green.
PS I can still remember the smell of it!
Thanks for the replies, we stayed a flat opposite side of road near the entrance and I went in every morning with my cousin, great time feeding the birds. On one occasion a Spider monkey caught a Sparrow and took a bite out of it.
The red Hillman Imp (FEL 205L) only lasted until February 1986 according to DVLA.
Probably crashed :(
or overheated!
You forget how common the Imp was into the 80s. Quite a rarity now
Probably got rammed up the rear by another driver following too closely and written off, if this video is anything to go by.
Probably rusted away. That was the fate of most 1970s cars. The Japanese ones were worst. I recall seeing a Datsun 280Z less than ten years old full of holes.
Dam the roads are clear now look at it .
brilliant, thank you
How lovely not a phone in sight.
Bloody hell - it jumps about a bit, doesn't it?!
For me this is just before the world changed!
This was the year I left school!
When the Sun was Yellow but the men weren't... now look at our Nation compared to this..
What have we allowed?
i spotted a few ladaghinis in that video 😃
Great to try and name all the cars. Hardly any signs and no speed cameras, driving used to be enjoyable.
all those British cars made here lots of jobs ! not just making them but keeping them on the road not just mechanical but body wise ,yes i worked in a body shop
Poole park?
All children out playing and not been stuck in bedroom on PlayStation
Yes and the 70's were even better. Everyone outside doing something. Appalling country now full of freeloaders and assorted scumbags. Despicable little jobsworths etc etc
Roads looked a lot bigger back then
The cars were just smaller.
Enjoyed that 👍
People say future is bright but I say passed was much brighter then what it is today, today is more in darks and it getting darker more every day. I wish I was back then in the 80s and 90s when every one was happy together and enjoyed time and less trouble also nice cars today's cars are shit wholes really no style no strength at all just show off. And so much traffic because young people buying cars on finance which I hate.
To think those children would be pushing 40 now
And?
5:31 “There’s Authur Scargill” - “I could have shot him”....
A poignant reminder that every generation has its cultural turmoil!
4:40 Could that guy go any slower... Bloody Grockles.
Hillman Imps weren't exactly built for speed! From the registration number it is a local car in any case.
@@philipnesbitt3334 Yep, EL was Bournemouth.
This can't be 1985 because there is a 3 year old me and my mum at the front of the train (which was strange to find) it must be 1995
It is definitely 1985/6 my 2 sons are on the train and they are now 36 and 38 years old👍
I moved here in 1989 and the Pier Approach Swimming Pool was gone by then and Gateway had become Asda.
5.15 nice Marina !
No mobiles, no tattoos, slim people happy kids
Around this time a colleague moonlighted as a doorman at a Bristol Nightclub "Romeo and Juliet's" enforcing their policy of "No Jeans, No Trainers, No Tattoos".
He said that he would occasionally suggest to couple that if the guy put on the girls cardigan then he could let them in without breaking company rules.
I don't think girls having Tattoos was even a thing back then.
The tax on the Hillman Imp, FEL 205L, ran out in March 1986 so this would have been 1985.
Oh the Hants centre lol
That looks so old i live local
The council keeps saying there going to bring back the train ha ha another red herring????
cavaliers Cortinas sierras fiestas and escorts everywhere u looked
I love escorts!!
Where are all the healthy at any size people .... not a single mobility scooter in sight - how terrible that they were obviously ignored and not filmed - or potentially they didn’t exist then ... 🙄🙄🙄