New Zealand Family React to America's Most dangerous toys ever made!

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  • Опубліковано 24 тра 2024
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  • @phoenixmichaels
    @phoenixmichaels Місяць тому +384

    I'm 66. I had the chemistry set, lawn darts, ThingMaker, and clackers. We also had M-80's and quarter sticks... fireworks equal to 1/4 stick of dynamite. We had shotguns and .22 rifles as early as 10 years old. You could walk right into the hardware store as a kid and buy ammunition for them.

    • @markbeauchamp2053
      @markbeauchamp2053 Місяць тому +50

      It was fun, wasn't it?

    • @johnm.3279
      @johnm.3279 Місяць тому +36

      I see all of those things, and raise you a Pogo Stick, Erector Set, and a Slip'n Slide. The Slip'n Slide was my favorite. Especially if you set it up on a steep hill with a pond or lake at the bottom.

    • @savedbygrace2397
      @savedbygrace2397 Місяць тому +23

      We played with most of the toys in this video, and a train set with exposed wiring that shocked anyone who wasn't careful, which I wasn't.

    • @itsnoterica
      @itsnoterica Місяць тому +27

      Your generation had the cool stuff, mine is 90% screens 😭

    • @markbeauchamp2053
      @markbeauchamp2053 Місяць тому +22

      @@itsnoterica It's never too late to act like a kid and do something stupid.

  • @clemmc37
    @clemmc37 Місяць тому +259

    We Americans liked living on the edge as children......LOL. That's why we who survived to adulthood can take on anything.

    • @eovniel
      @eovniel Місяць тому +11

      I still have the lawn darts

    • @Andrew_P86
      @Andrew_P86 Місяць тому +6

      Lawn darts have a whole different meaning these days. Heroin needles 🤦

    • @USFirst1776
      @USFirst1776 Місяць тому +2

      ​@Andrew_P86 that's what we call the F16s in the Air Force haha

    • @John_Redcorn_
      @John_Redcorn_ Місяць тому

      @@USFirst1776i thought thats what they called the F-104.

    • @creamypeanutbutter6269
      @creamypeanutbutter6269 Місяць тому

      yea alright

  • @Ira88881
    @Ira88881 Місяць тому +61

    Who remembers the plastic water rockets?
    You filled them with water…connected it to the hand-held launcher…pumped it to God knows how much pressure…and BOOM!
    That rocket could take your head off!

    • @ngnmech
      @ngnmech Місяць тому +1

      Had more than one version of those. Had a two stage setup once. Would launch and when the lower section would loose pressure would release the upper stage and it would fly higher.

    • @thoughtfulwatcher
      @thoughtfulwatcher Місяць тому +2

      Oh man, those were fun. I spent an entire blistering hot weekend playing with one. One of those golden kid memories for sure.

    • @Ira88881
      @Ira88881 Місяць тому +1

      @@thoughtfulwatcher I grew up in Brooklyn, so I always played with them in the street.
      They would either easily break when landing on the hard pavement, or get lost on a roof!

    • @viperdemonz-jenkins
      @viperdemonz-jenkins Місяць тому +1

      loved that thing.

    • @MacTechG4
      @MacTechG4 Місяць тому +1

      Water rockets were great (the handheld ones with the hand pump)

  • @tani29111
    @tani29111 Місяць тому +40

    The girl next door could jump on her pogo stick for a super long time without falling, which made her kind of the neighborhood celebrity to us young ones. 😀

    • @superpayaseria
      @superpayaseria Місяць тому

      yep exactly. Exactly exactly . We had one of those too named Domini in Weiser if she ever happens to read this comment.

    • @ariellewilson730
      @ariellewilson730 9 днів тому

      I never had a pogo stick. Honestly, I would probably keep falling over, lol.

  • @mikeh8416
    @mikeh8416 Місяць тому +68

    I had several of these growing up in the 60's and like Brad Upton says "The dumb kids didn't make it".

    • @usafvet100
      @usafvet100 Місяць тому +1

      It may have served a Darwinian function!😮

    • @kurtsaxton823
      @kurtsaxton823 Місяць тому +3

      So true, but seriously none of my friends ever died we got scuffed up a little bit we had to rub some dirt on a lot of things and our moms called us dumbass quite often. But we live through it, love lawn darts.

    • @mikeh8416
      @mikeh8416 Місяць тому +2

      @@kurtsaxton823 Oh, I ALMOST FORGOT the wonderful sting of Mercurochrome! We even survived PUTTING MERCURY INTO OUR OPEN WOUNDS!!

    • @kurtsaxton823
      @kurtsaxton823 Місяць тому +1

      @@mikeh8416 yep and we might have a few twitches because of that but we're good right?

    • @kurtsaxton823
      @kurtsaxton823 Місяць тому +4

      @@mikeh8416 the late boomers and the early Gen x... No sissies were aloud.

  • @gregorykenfield3134
    @gregorykenfield3134 Місяць тому +42

    My friends and I had several of these toys. My favorites were the Jarts. There's a funny story about those...once they were banned, the toy companies introduced a replacement toy that was supposed to be safer. This new game was called Posey Pitch...it replaced the lawn darts with five-pedal plastic flowers about the size of a frisbee that were about 1/8 of an inch thick, with a large circular hole in the middle of the "posey." Kids were meant to throw these things at wooden stakes that you drove into the ground, using a throwing motion like you use when throwing a frisbee. The problem was, kids figured out that if you gripped the poseys by one of the pedals and threw them sidearm, they would fly forever at a very high rate of speed similar to a boomerang (but without being able to return when thrown). We soon became very good at throwing them accurately and VERY HARD at each other. I once threw one at a fellow kid running down the sidewalk on the other side of the street...I hit him in the head and took him right off his feet
    Kids can make ANYTHING dangerous!!

    • @Bassingal
      @Bassingal Місяць тому +3

      "Kids can make ANYTHING dangerous" is funny and SO true! My little brother took the lid from our metal trash can, got gas from the garage, poured it in the lid and of course, lit it on fire! Luckily, my boyfriend was hanging out with us, and immediately put out the fire. Brother also liked to set his GI Joe plastic toys on fire, to watch them melt. He went on to join the ARMY!

    • @Styxswimmer
      @Styxswimmer 23 дні тому +2

      ​@Bassingal when I was a teenager I made napalm. 25 years later there's still a permanent burn mark there in the yard. I also separated Hydrogen and oxygen from water and combined them. My parents and neighbors thought I made a bomb

    • @jeffchandler6285
      @jeffchandler6285 12 днів тому

      When I heard about lawn darts, I thought that they were home defense tools 😂 😅 after all hold one end let intruders run into point or throw it to drive home point of get out message. 🤫🤭

  • @cynthiaalver
    @cynthiaalver Місяць тому +29

    I'm surprised they didn't mention the wood burning set. That metal wand got HOT, hence the burning part of the toy. My brother had one. I burned myself once but the incident that caused my mom to take it away was when my brother went off and left it plugged in and the drapes began to smolder! He wasn't happy to see it gone but I sure was.😮

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Місяць тому +1

      Yeah I had that. Loved it.

    • @thoughtfulwatcher
      @thoughtfulwatcher Місяць тому +2

      They still make them. Some cost hundreds of USD and artist produce jaw dropping art with them. They've evolved to an artist tool, though. Even cheap sets aren't marketed to kids. I had 1 in Jr High. Loved it so much I picked up the hobby 20 years later. And oh yeah, I burned my fingers. I learned to properly use a tool, though, and didn't leave it unattended or near anything flammable.

    • @schirpik
      @schirpik Місяць тому +1

      When i was about 10 mom me got a woodturning lathe with the knives was fun till i got my shirt sleeve caught in it .lucked out and just lost the sleeve .

    • @Dynelegacy
      @Dynelegacy 24 дні тому +1

      Still got one in the basement along with the creepy crawlers kit.

  • @tani29111
    @tani29111 Місяць тому +15

    I inherited my uncle’s pre-safety chemistry set and my sister and I would randomly mix together different chemicals to see what would happen (we both lived thru it). We accidentally burned a hole in our back lawn - it was awesome.

  • @MrJeddYoung
    @MrJeddYoung Місяць тому +67

    I'm 55 so we grew up playing lawn darts all the time - i never got hit but my cousin still has a hole in her foot - but that's what you get for not paying attention. She never made that mistake again. Fun reaction - thanks for posting it.

    • @beckers68
      @beckers68 Місяць тому +2

      I'm the same age and my brother threw one at me on purpose and it stuck in my leg. Still have the hole in my shin!

  • @tani29111
    @tani29111 Місяць тому +71

    Creepy Crawlers was so much fun! Those metal plates got HOT, but if you got burned once, you just figured out how to not get burned again. No need for a fuss. I loved that melty plastic smell. Thank you for this reaction - very fun!

    • @carolwilder2289
      @carolwilder2289 Місяць тому +2

      Still have a complete set from my sons!!

    • @rimasmuliolis1136
      @rimasmuliolis1136 Місяць тому +2

      That smelled a bit like someone microwaving food in a Styrofoam box, didn't it? I wonder why...

    • @ewellford
      @ewellford Місяць тому +4

      I always used the slip-on handle that was provided for the molds. I don't remember ever burning myself. Later, they came out with edible GOOP, so you could eat your creations. The flavors that I remember were green apple, cherry, and black licorice.

    • @timfeeley714-25
      @timfeeley714-25 Місяць тому +4

      ​@@ewellfordit was a separate toy called incredible edibles my brother and I had the set and 8 tons of them, they were delicious!

    • @duppyshuman
      @duppyshuman Місяць тому

      @@ewellford Who could resist the taste of goble-de-goop!

  • @teressareeves5856
    @teressareeves5856 Місяць тому +26

    I'm surprised that cap guns weren't mentioned. Part of the fun was, of course, setting off the paper ribbons which had gunpowder. But even better was waiting for the cylinder to fall off while trying to shoot the pistol. Very dangerous, very highly desired. My mother confiscated the one that we had, my dad broke it apart & threw it away. We were upset...until we realized that we could still set off the gunpowder ribbons by striking each dot with a rock.

    • @markhamstra1083
      @markhamstra1083 Місяць тому +10

      🙄 Cap guns were not very dangerous, and setting off individual caps couldn’t give you anything worse than a very minor burn at most. The more impressive way to set them off was not individually, but rather to smack an entire roll with a hammer. That would result in something more like a small firecracker.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Місяць тому +2

      Those were so fun. I know they did eventually put orange on the barrel so they didn't look too real.

    • @HandleTakenlol
      @HandleTakenlol Місяць тому +1

      I still remember my matching pair of nickel plated pearl handled Roy Rogers cap guns. I never left home without them.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Місяць тому +1

      @@HandleTakenlol Those were a classic. And that style was still bigly popular way into the 90's at least. Not sure if they still are.

    • @danielboyer5535
      @danielboyer5535 Місяць тому +3

      @@markhamstra1083 We thought that a hammer wasn't heavy enough... we decided to use dad's sledge hammer. :)

  • @cozccs
    @cozccs Місяць тому +82

    Imitating Evil Knievel on our bikes jumping homemade ramps we also made plastic Shrinky Dinks melt in a oven.

    • @Rockhound6165
      @Rockhound6165 Місяць тому +3

      There's a picture out there of a kid on his bike flying off of a ramp jumping over several other kids. The best part of the picture was of the dad in the background sitting on the stoop watching.

    • @cozccs
      @cozccs Місяць тому +1

      @@Rockhound6165 yes,😄 haha saw it on Tik Tok

    • @arthurpasseri4590
      @arthurpasseri4590 Місяць тому +2

      We did that with our motorcycles...We had a place that was an old sand pit and we made ramps and one day I twisted my ankle when I landed wrong. Now, parents would sue if their Little Johnny / Little Susie gets a scratch.
      Drinking water from a hose, riding in the bed of a pickup and playing outside until the streetlights came on - after homework - is not done today.

    • @thoughtfulwatcher
      @thoughtfulwatcher Місяць тому +2

      Shrinky Dinks are still around. But you're more likely to find them somewhere like Hobby Lobby or a craft store than with toys. I bought a nice pack on 'zon. There's even a few art UA-camrs who did videos on them and what's best to color them with - markers, pencils, etc.

    • @cozccs
      @cozccs Місяць тому

      @@thoughtfulwatcher Great information,thank you

  • @irwfcm
    @irwfcm Місяць тому +13

    The most dangerous toy I can remember having wasn't on the list, the wood burning kit. It was this pencil-type device that you plugged in and the metal tip got red hot so that you could burn designs on wood. Plus it had a very short power cord so you were always using it in dangerous places near the drapes and stuff. We also had the lawn darts, Jarts. It was actually really fun if played properly, but we were certainly no exception seeing how high we could throw them straight up and seeing how far we could get them to sink in the ground. I was most afraid of it landing on the roof and making a hole and getting in big trouble. We were never afraid of being hit. I actually had several of these, but never had and problems. But I was actually a little afraid of that wood burning kit. It seems they still have them, but it doesn't look like they are marketed as toys for kids anymore.

    • @thoughtfulwatcher
      @thoughtfulwatcher Місяць тому +1

      As an adult who picked up woodbuning (pyrography I think is the proper name) again you're right. It's an incredible art form. Sets are sold either online or in craft stores now. They're a lot better made and can exceed $100 USD. Gone are the days of the janky tool with 1 heat setting, 1 permanent tip, and a bit of cork for "protection",

  • @STILL-KICKIN
    @STILL-KICKIN Місяць тому +13

    Never mind the toys, it was everyday life… I was born in the 60’s, youngest of 4 and we had a high-chair that could easily chop off a finger when you slid the stainless steel tray towards the child. Virtually everything in the house was constructed from or wrapped in asbestos… you went out to play at 7:30 AM, if you got hurt doing something stupid… you kept your mouth shut about how it happened when you got home because the whippin you might get was much worse than the initial injury….we were tough kids!! 🤣

    • @Genehicks199
      @Genehicks199 24 дні тому

      I was born in the 50's we use to go down to the river and play in the quick sand. I got many a whipping for that when i didn't get all the sand off my pants before i got home for supper. I got a lot of whippings and that taught me respect. Teachers also could whip you, and the LAST one you would tell would have been mom, she would want to know why. lol. I deserved every one i got.

  • @ApeShat
    @ApeShat Місяць тому +7

    I actually have a shirt that says, "Lawn Dart Survivor" . My parents still have their lawn darts.

  • @shadowkissed2370
    @shadowkissed2370 Місяць тому +3

    A redesigned version of Clackers enjoyed a revival in the 1990s. The new design used modern plastics that would not shatter and two free-swinging, opposing triangles attached to a handle, with weighted balls at the ends. That is the one us 90s kids remember playing with.

  • @Nguye605
    @Nguye605 Місяць тому +31

    Atomic energy lab... first thing I thought was Sheldon from the TV show the Big Bang Therory... 😂

    • @dar1201
      @dar1201 Місяць тому +1

      Me too 😂

    • @lancekirkwood7922
      @lancekirkwood7922 Місяць тому +1

      I can see young Sheldon having that, but he would more than likely go a few steps further.....

  • @TJWilson
    @TJWilson Місяць тому +40

    As a kid, I played with Jarts in my backyard. They were a blast. Miss those.

    • @hellhound1389
      @hellhound1389 Місяць тому

      I still have a set

    • @Cricket2731
      @Cricket2731 Місяць тому

      They're still available. But instead of the wicked metal points in the darts, there's now a weighted rubber tip.

    • @KamiNoBaka1
      @KamiNoBaka1 22 дні тому +1

      @@Cricket2731 As a kid in the 90s, I had a set that my dad still had from the 70s. All you really had to do to not get injured was stand somewhere behind the person throwing them.

  • @Timothy-NH
    @Timothy-NH Місяць тому +37

    They sky dancing fairy, there is a video that floats around where a little girl got one for Christmas, launched it, and it went up, came down and went right into the very lit fireplace. I could only begin to imagine how that crushed her little heart. That could have even been on AFV if I remember correctly.

    • @jayconant3816
      @jayconant3816 Місяць тому +2

      That video pops up on instagram every now and then sooo funny

    • @NatureWheelsandHauls
      @NatureWheelsandHauls Місяць тому +1

      Every time I see or hear those flying fairy things it makes me think of that video.

    • @JustMe-dc6ks
      @JustMe-dc6ks Місяць тому +2

      In hindsight it makes sense that it flew into the fireplace, there would have been a draft from the heat going up the chimney.

    • @ariellewilson730
      @ariellewilson730 9 днів тому

      I think I seen that video. I'm not too sure.

  • @josephroa8727
    @josephroa8727 Місяць тому +18

    Played with lawn darts in the 60's. My brother and 4 or five of our nephews had a game where we would throw the dart strait up and who ever moved was out if it landed close to you and you did not move you got a point.. Clackers and chemistry sets were also in the toy box.

    • @throughthoroughthought8064
      @throughthoroughthought8064 Місяць тому

      Now that I think about it, we might have done that "we would throw the dart strait up" too!

  • @clintsmith7128
    @clintsmith7128 Місяць тому +14

    Lawn darts were fun. And we played the expert version. That's where you had a team in the front yard and one in the back yard and we threw them over the house. What fun. 😂

  • @dougtripp2431
    @dougtripp2431 Місяць тому +3

    We had a Gilbert section in our hometown hobby shop. It was the first place I always went to. My grandfather worked as a freelance an electrical engineer. One day while visiting with him, he took me along to work, it might have been at RCA or GE or maybe someplace else. While there I saw shelves full of brand-new Atomic Energy kits. I asked about them and a man said they were given to the company when they had to stop selling them. He told me I could have as many as I wanted so I took 6 of them. I played with them for two weeks and every day after my grandfather got home, he helped me to build a working nuclear reactor which I used for my 6th grade science fair project. I set it up on the gym floor with all the other kids projects and even used the power to help energize half a dozen other kids projects. I got first place with it. The ironic thing was that back in fourth grade I made a very realistic model volcano that made molten lava, steam, ash, everything. I said that we had to set it off outside, but my teacher said other students made these and was perfectly safe inside. Being only 9 years old, I didn't argue. The volcano ended up starting a fire in the school, the fire company had to come and everything. When 6th grade came around, I was warned not to do bring anything dangerous for the science project. About a month later some government people showed up at my house and confiscated everything.

  • @angiepen
    @angiepen Місяць тому +3

    I grew up in the 60s and 70s, and I survived. :D Lawn darts were fun. I know not all kids could be trusted *not* to throw them at their friends or siblings, and not all kids could be trusted not to run in front of or behind the circle target while someone was throwing, but if everyone involved actually had a brain and used it, it was a really fun game to play.
    Clackers were a huge fad when I was in... fifth grade? Give or take a year, I forget. And again, if you used them as intended, they were a really good hand-eye coordination training tool. It took a lot of experimentation and frustration to get them working, but once you did it was fun. For a bit, then it got boring and we moved on to something else. But as with the lawn darts, when people got really hurt it was usually because someone was being an idiot, using them as bolos and throwing them *at* people, that kind of thing. I never knew nor heard of anyone who had their clackers actually break, though. That's weird, and I can definitely see that it'd be dangerous.
    One they didn't mention was cap guns. These were little metal guns and you loaded with strips of caps, basically little (like 5mm or so across) dots of actual gunpowder enclosed between two strips of paper, like a tiny explosive ravioli. :D The gun was a percussion mechanism, with a hammer sort of thing that snapped down and whacked one of the dots of gunpowder, which was sitting against a flat piece of metal. It went bang and you could smell the gunpowder. Of course, that wasn't good enough for us kids. We quickly ditched the guns and started putting caps down on the sidewalk and hitting them with hammers. Two or three caps stacked up made a better bang. Hitting a hole roll of caps with a really big and heavy hammer was the best. :) Again, I never knew nor heard of anyone who got hurt doing this, but I can see how it might happen, especially if you were banging your caps right on the edge of the sidewalk next to some dry grass or something.
    And speaking of fires, a kid with a really strong magnifying glass would of course spend some amount of time outside burning stuff in the sun. I never burned bugs or anything -- you have to be a reall glassbowl to do that -- but leaves and sticks were fun to burn with concentrated sunlight. And I'm sure any number of kids started serious fires that way, although I never did, nor anyone I knew.
    We also had the really *fun* slides on the playground -- tall and straight, not these low, bumpy or curly ones designed to slow you down. BORING! And parks with really tall swings, where you could get going fast and high, were kid magnets; only baby swings were low, much less had swing retarders on them. The merry-go-round at my elementary school was made all of bars, not just a solid, round plate. That meant there were open wedges in the middle, and if a 5th or 6th grader (10 or 11 years old) or two got in the middle wedges and pushed, the merry-go-round would go FAST. Wheee! When I was at that school, the little kids (up to 3rd grade) had a lunch period that overlapped with the big kids (4th and up) by like fifteen minutes, and those of us who were more responsible wouldn't let anyone push from the middle if there were little kids on the thing. It could get going fast enough that they'd have a hard time holding on, and they'd be scared and crying before that, so we'd yell at anyone who tried to push from the center when there were like 6- and 7-year-olds riding. Oh, and we had tall jungle gyms you could actually get hurt falling off of, which of course made them more fun to play on. I never fell off one, but I heard of it happening here and there.
    Basically, it was just a given back then that yes, you *would* hurt yourself periodically during childhood. It was normal, and it wasn't a problem unless broken bones, lost eyes, or actual death was involved. And it didn't get that bad very often at all. I never broke a bone until I was an adult, but I got a lot of bruises and scabs, and a few sprained ankles. And thinking about it, none of my injuries were because I was playing on or with anything that would be considered dangerous today. It was just kid stuff, and there are kids today getting the same kinds of injuries. It happens. And trying to protect kids from every possible injury or harm just stunts their development, their confidence and decision-making skills. Some things definitely needed to be banned, but sometimes today I think it's taken too far.

  • @MAGGOT_VOMIT
    @MAGGOT_VOMIT Місяць тому +4

    Back around 1980 when I was 12, a friend and I triple bounced his uncle (whom was a Green Beret stationed at Fort Bragg) on the trampoline at a bad angle. It sent him flying off the trampoline into a perfect dive-bomb 20ft out in the yard. It gave him a concussion, broke his jaw and broke his collar bone.

  • @WarzolJR
    @WarzolJR Місяць тому +5

    Billy was a chemist's son, but Billy is no more.
    What he thought was H2O was H2SO4.
    🤣

    • @benjaminelliott4112
      @benjaminelliott4112 Місяць тому +2

      😆

    • @cybercifrado
      @cybercifrado 18 днів тому +1

      Had a chemistry teacher in high school that I'm pretty sure was a little... off. He'd get out some chemicals and tell us to LEAVE them under the vent hoods; if you wanted to know what they were - WAFT do NOT WHIFF! Well... in his words, "There's always one every year..." Poor girl got a nose full of pure ammonia and then ate the floor. Then there was the guy that was screwing around one class and spilled a cup of toluene on the floor tiles. He had to corral the area and get another chemical poured onto it to prevent it from eating through the floor. XD

    • @WarzolJR
      @WarzolJR 18 днів тому

      @@cybercifrado LOL!!

  • @aztequa
    @aztequa Місяць тому +6

    …..remember when Dan Ackroyd of SNL fame played the shifty, shyster where in a 60 MINUTE skit where 60 Minutes was investigating dangerous toys, and Ackroyd was selling Bag-O-Glass, a plastic bag full of shards of sharp broken glass for $19.99. Claiming it was safe for children from 5 years old to a hundred. It was hilarious…😂

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Місяць тому +1

      From the maker of the Bass-o-Matic...

    • @MrEli768
      @MrEli768 21 день тому +1

      Kind of like a toy (on the cartoon Johnny Test) made by the "Wacko Toys" company called "bag-o-tacks"... or another toy of theirs, "don't shock yourself" (a toy that will shock you), or their "toy" called "Left Hook" where it's basically centered around a jack in the box toy that has a left handed boxing glove (instead of a clown head)

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 21 день тому

      @@MrEli768 That's real? Sounds like a Simpsons episode.

  • @j-did2841
    @j-did2841 Місяць тому +14

    @7:31 I remember lawn darts… yes I am older than ya’ll but never any incidents that I recall personally!

    • @blueboy4244
      @blueboy4244 Місяць тому +1

      we used to play then over a house..so one side in the front yard and the other side in the backyard and we'd be tossing jarts over the house trying to hit a target we'd set up (cardboard box usually) - what could go wrong??

    • @glassontherocks
      @glassontherocks Місяць тому +1

      We sharpened our lawn darts and threw them up into the air to land on a huge dart board we made out of plyboard. We never got hurt and nobody stopped us.

  • @kimkathrein2463
    @kimkathrein2463 Місяць тому +15

    I can’t recall any horror stories with these but I do remember playing with the lawn darts. As a kid, we just thought it was a fun game but thinking back on it now as an adult, it’s like, how did my parents not realize how dangerous they were? 😂

    • @mikeh8416
      @mikeh8416 Місяць тому +4

      We had monkey bars that were mounted ten foot above a cement slab, and 20ft tall metal slides with a joint half way up that reached 400 degrees in the sun. Let's not forget about sleeping in the back window of the car on long trips, or those metal wheeled roller skates that strapped to our shoes with leather threads that had a bent piece of metal that hooked them over your toes. We had rockets that used a hard plastic rocket (bottle) you filled 1/2 way up with water and then pumped enough air in to shred a car tire. We walked around with silver cowboy pistols that had cap rolls of paper with gunpowder that banged and gave off the wonderful smell. Those rolls were also great when you laid them sideways on the sidewalk and smacked them with a hammer to see how long your ears would ring. We played with mercury bubbles, and filled jars with dry ice to watch them blow. You spent hours on your swing set trying to get high enough to tip it over. Last but not least were ungrounded electric outlets, and telephones that would shoot fire out of the mouthpiece in a lightning storm. THOSE WERE THE DAYS!!!

    • @the3mfs359
      @the3mfs359 Місяць тому +1

      ​@mikeh8416 Everything you mentioned are fond memories for me. Especially the cap guns. I too enjoyed the smell of the tiny bit of gunpowder. We also rolled them up to get a bigger pop. I had clackers also. They were some deadly toys. Of course, swinging them wildly around people's heads wasn't the smartest move. The 70s was the greatest time in my life. What a shame what the world has become.

  • @briangoss8062
    @briangoss8062 Місяць тому +21

    The CSI one didn't actually say "Asbestos Included" on the box. That was photo shopped on that image for comedic purposes. I loved the Jarts but they were super dangerous. There were a number of kids impaled in the head, eye, hand and foot with them. They were also quite heavy and could do some real damage. The jarts were ~12 inches in length with a 4+ ounce weight situated obviously at one end of the dart with the entire amount of the weight focused into a literal pointed dart tip. Ouch!

  • @blacksnapper7684
    @blacksnapper7684 Місяць тому +22

    The design of Lawn darts were actually used by ancient Roman soldiers the original was called the plumbata!

    • @petebeatminister
      @petebeatminister Місяць тому

      But the Romans didn't sell it as a toy... Makes you wonder why Mattel didn't sell mini hand granades during the Vietnam war time. With a catchy slogan like "Smoke the VC in your back yard, just like on the battlefield!" 😆

    • @kirbyculp3449
      @kirbyculp3449 29 днів тому

      The deal was to buy the 'smoke grenades' and fire crackers sold for July 4th. Pull the wimpy smoker out of the plastic grenade case, insert gravel and the biggest fire cracker and powder from cut firecrackers. Light the fuse and throw it at your friends! Fortunately the plastic shell contained the gravel from flying out like shrapnel.

  • @intergalacticangler
    @intergalacticangler Місяць тому +13

    Some of them was fun To play. Loved lawn darts. 😂

  • @davidshowmaker4408
    @davidshowmaker4408 Місяць тому +18

    We had Yard Darts (Jarts)

  • @scottyrobinson5708
    @scottyrobinson5708 Місяць тому +24

    New Zealand Family you’re the true gold standard🥇🏅🎖️of fun funny charming and entertainment y’all are awesome love you 4!💯⭐️🤩❤️❤️❤️

    • @mandyfischer3133
      @mandyfischer3133 Місяць тому

      ​​@@jennm3321 take your negative energy off this page. Geeze lady having a bad day or in your case a bad life. So many of us enjoy this family and yes its a positive thing to be happy & proud to get comments on how loving, entertaining and fun family, Great Kids, Great Parents. They are living thier best life and im sure they don't need to give you the time of day, they don't owe you anything so get off your high horse better yet stay on it and ride away. I'm sorry New Zealand Famiy but you didn't deserve this, every once in awhile I have to call people out and say Really this is how your mind works. Great Reaction, Keep em coming !!!

  • @harrytrevenen2310
    @harrytrevenen2310 Місяць тому +6

    Most of the more serious child hood injuries in the late 50's and early 60's came from monkey bars and swing sets that were made of all metal, on the monkey bars you could climb up about ten feet off the ground, which almost always was asphalt so they would be level and not sink into the ground, I know I chipped a front tooth on them, as did several of my friends, but back then kids never wore any safety equipment like kids do today.

    • @user-gv4cx7vz8t
      @user-gv4cx7vz8t Місяць тому +1

      Neighborhood kids avoided the arched monkey bars for a while after a girl broke her arm. It was over concrete, so we had to be a bit careful.

    • @arthurpasseri4590
      @arthurpasseri4590 Місяць тому +1

      Safety features, what was that? Motorcycling without helmets ( ditto bicycling), Tarzan swings, jumping off cliffs into a swimming hole (especially skinny-dipping in the woods), sitting in the back of a station wagon. I'm 65 and I live through my childhood...

  • @donnytucker
    @donnytucker Місяць тому +3

    As an 80s kid, we did some of the craziest and gnarliest things as kids haha. We would jump off the roof with umbrellas to try and fly lol. That was a bad idea! We would jump off bridges. Another really dumb idea. We also climbed a massive radio tower and we were hundreds of feet in the air and we somehow never got caught.

  • @Radioroom91
    @Radioroom91 Місяць тому +2

    As a 90s kid only thing I remember on here was the pogo stick and the cabbage patch kid that used to snap off fingers. And me and friends used to jump off trees unto trampolines too.

  • @genejohnson2144
    @genejohnson2144 Місяць тому +4

    When I was a kid... maybe 11 or 12 years old, I made my own blow darts out of sharpened construction nails with a paper cone taped on the end. I stood across the street from my house and blew one through a section of PVC pipe. It hit the garage door with enough force to penetrate half of the nail into the door! When My Dad saw the hole... The pipe and darts were destroyed and I was grounded for a couple of weeks.

    • @MrEli768
      @MrEli768 21 день тому

      My friends got the straws in our high school cafeteria banned... we all had home ec class, the straws were slim enough that you could use straight pins (the needles that have the plastic ball at one end, used to hold stuff together that you intend to sew) as blow guns... you know where it goes from there... now, no one got their eye hit, but you had some explaining to do about all of the red spots you might have gotten, I actually already used to wear took to wearing insulated flannel shirts by then, and when they started that crap, it was a permanent thing I wore because it wasn't just in home ec they did it, it was all the time

  • @annajosullivan
    @annajosullivan Місяць тому +4

    I was born in 68 so I’ll be 56 this year. My two older brothers had the lawn darts and we all the clackers. I have three daughters who are grown now but when they were younger my parents bought them the moon shoes for Christmas one year. You know the things you strapped to your feet that looked like little trampolines. Then about 5 years ago I bought one of my grandsons a pogo stick for his birthday but they do really good on designing those now.

  • @ColinCamm
    @ColinCamm Місяць тому +12

    New zealand family would love to see you guys back in america best family youtubers i have seen in a while keep it goin!

  • @dawnhayes1231
    @dawnhayes1231 Місяць тому +5

    I remember playing with the lawn darts every summer when camping with my grandparents. Knowing them it was probably one of the original sets. 😂

  • @thumper7047
    @thumper7047 Місяць тому +3

    I had or used a friends version of just about every single one of these. My little cousin lived near a boy who was "hard to handle", probably today's ADHD, maybe a little Bi-Polar, in any case, the boy threw a "Lawn Dart at my little cousin and hit him in the eye. He was hospitalized for several days and has had to wear glasses ever since.

  • @marleybob3157
    @marleybob3157 Місяць тому +3

    My oldest sister begged my mother for a skateboard. Somewhere in the mid-1970's, mom finally capitulated and bought her one. On her literal first ride down the driveway, she fell and broke her arm. The skateboard was thrown out and my sister was in a cast all summer!

  • @faketohma
    @faketohma Місяць тому +2

    my brother had a chemistry kit when he was young. Mom had gotten it for him for christmas. She told him not to play with it unless she was there to supervise. He didn't listen, mixed the wrong chemicals and it blew up and got in his eyes. Christmas morning she had to take him to the ER. Dont worry, he can see.

  • @jaanfo3874
    @jaanfo3874 Місяць тому +2

    10:55 and 11:35 - I remember my younger sister having both of these. And yes, the cabbage patch doll ate her finger once or twice.

  • @377skyboss
    @377skyboss Місяць тому +30

    Those of us that survived these toys are a tough and imaginative bunch. We learned many things that today's kids just seem to lack. Things like common sense, the ability to duck, first aid, generally the ability to survive. I had a lot of these toys and I'm still here!

    • @TruthIsNotTemporary
      @TruthIsNotTemporary Місяць тому +3

      Also the ability to not scream or cry which would draw parents out of the house and make you go home 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @subspace666
      @subspace666 Місяць тому +1

      @@TruthIsNotTemporary yea or lose the toy knife etc if they found out we hurt ourselves with it lol.

  • @bretthardman4903
    @bretthardman4903 Місяць тому +13

    We had the JARTS, and I had the Creepy Crawlers as well. I remember they had that goop that came edible as well…😂

  • @stevestoll3124
    @stevestoll3124 Місяць тому +2

    In the 1980s we had a friend that had lawn darts, he would grab all the darts and toss them into the air and scream incoming artillery. We would scramble for sturdy cover. It ended when he put one through his Mom's new mini van wind shield.

  • @lurkerrekrul
    @lurkerrekrul Місяць тому +2

    I had the PowerMite workbench with real working (miniature) saw and drill. I loved it because they actually worked. And it wasn't just battery powered, each one had to be plugged in with a miniature electrical plug. I never hurt myself with it though.
    Something else I had later that could be considered dangerous was a Mattel Strange Change toy. I got it used at a flea market. It had a red metal base, which plugged in, topped with a plastic chamber. On the side was a small compartment with built in vise. It came with several colored plastic blocks. You put one or more of the blocks in the chamber and turned it on. As it got hot, the block would soften and then unfold into a creature figure, at which point you would use a set of tongs to take it out (because it was HOT!). As it cooled, it would solidify into that shape. Later, you could put the creatures back into the chamber, heat them up, then stuff them into the compartment on the side and tighten the vise to compress them back into seamless plastic blocks. I had a lot of fun with it until the vise broken and I could no longer compress them back into the blocks. It kind of made the rest of it pointless.

  • @ashleynfigueredo
    @ashleynfigueredo Місяць тому +5

    Love when the kids participate in reaction videos, love hearing a generation younger than me and their thoughts and perspectives 😂👏🏻🩶

  • @AkinyiMarie
    @AkinyiMarie Місяць тому +4

    I had an archery set that I would shoot the arrows up in the air, fly over my yard, my neighbors house and into the woods just beyond. Then I'd go get them, locating them imbedded in trees, the ground, etc.

    • @cybercifrado
      @cybercifrado 18 днів тому

      Yeah, that's a war tactic that an archer division would use to annihilate infantry...

  • @ShaneSaw2593
    @ShaneSaw2593 Місяць тому +2

    My dad still has a set of lawn darts. We bring them out every year when we have BBQs. Nobody has gotten hurt yet 😁

  • @jeffmiller7817
    @jeffmiller7817 Місяць тому +5

    GOT into an argument with my little brother playing Jarts... Before it was over I threw one straight down through the top of his foot and stuck it to the ground... Didn't hit anything vital and he was limping around better than I was sitting for the first few days after... Those were the days, you had to be tough to survive...

    • @walterhaynes1259
      @walterhaynes1259 Місяць тому

      My brother got mad at me and threw one at me. I reacted by grabbing it out the air. We then started throwing them toward each other and practiced grabbing them. We never got hurt until our dad caught us!

  • @linda.christie
    @linda.christie Місяць тому +3

    We had Jarts and never had an issue! However, we were playing with regular darts at my aunt's and uncle's house when I was maybe 8 to 10 (1970-72)? My brother threw a dart, and it went in my arm!
    I just took it out and told him what a jerk he was. We never even *told* the adults! Kids these days are such wimps.

  • @NA-me6sh
    @NA-me6sh Місяць тому +6

    still have my lawn dart puncture scar on my ankle!!!

  • @BeastrealDT
    @BeastrealDT Місяць тому +2

    I had the mini jigsaw. Radio Shack used to sell electronic kits of radios, robots and other machines that you could build. You had to use a soldering gun to connect circuits. Hobby shops sold wood burners for craving. ✌️

  • @jonadabtheunsightly
    @jonadabtheunsightly Місяць тому +1

    The really bizarre thing about the jarts, is that the kit included two colors of darts (three darts each with red fins and with blue fins), and two target hoops. If there's been only one target hoop, some kids might have all stood at one end of their yard and thrown toward the target at the other end, which would've been somewhat safer. But no, there were two target hoops, so *of course* everybody set the hoops up at opposite ends of the yard, and each kid or group of kids would stand by one of the hoops and throw their darts toward the other hoop. That way after you'd thrown all three, you didn't have to run to the other end of the yard to retrieve them. You could just pick up the ones your opponent had thrown, and throw those. This was so much more convenient, as long as you didn't mind standing right next to a target hoop while weighted spikes were being lobbed in its general direction.
    The uranium wasn't weapons-grade (enriched) uranium. It was just natural mined uranium, i.e., about 99% of it was the stable isotope. Granted, the remaining 1% is still sufficiently radioactive that it really really should not have been in a child's toy.

  • @brookea9383
    @brookea9383 Місяць тому +5

    I have some friends who were playing with Rollerblade Barbie. (Ages3-7ish) They were playing beauty shop with hairspray. A little while later, the little brother was laying on the floor and his older sister was playing rolling the Barbie across his back. His clothes caught fire. The Barbie was pulled after the company was notified. (If you look up the reason this Barbie was pulled on Google or UA-cam, it talks about this instance.)

    • @Bassingal
      @Bassingal Місяць тому

      WOW, cool story, thanks for that- I'm going to look it up, and no doubt get lost down the YT rabbit hole once again!

  • @greghorine4995
    @greghorine4995 Місяць тому +6

    Holy cow! We had the lawn darts when I was a kid, they were still around when I was a young adult in the 70's.

    • @lawrenceshdow
      @lawrenceshdow Місяць тому +1

      Oh for sure... they were super popular with people I was around as a kid in the 80s and into the 90s (even though in the 90s they were already banned; there were still millions of sets around to be had and being resold. I still have a set. I find them at garage sales every once and while.

  • @stephenkjellman6234
    @stephenkjellman6234 Місяць тому +2

    Jarts are always mentioned in these videos. I remember my grandfather and I played with them. He was the fun grandfather type always carefree and up for an adventure but got super serious when we played with Jarts. It was not till years later when I learned just how dangerous they were and remembered how his whole attitude changed when we played a dangerous game. Very strict rules on where to stand while people were throwing, paying attention was critical, and the all clear was it own unique rule. Good times. To his credit no one got hurt while playing the game. My brother and I were shocked when we saw the lists. We could not figure out how people could get hurt. Then we realized his special rules were the reason why we were safe.

  • @MsTwister57
    @MsTwister57 Місяць тому +2

    I remember Creepy Crawlers. One of my favorite toys in the 60s along with my Easy Bake Oven. I also had green clackers. I never had one problem, nor did I know of anyone in person or on the news that had injuries. Must not have been massive casualties. Oh! Caps were so fun,as well. Get some caps and a rock and pop them for hrs.

    • @shirleymarsh693
      @shirleymarsh693 Місяць тому

      My Clackers were purple and instead of the silver ring mine were older with a 2" wooden dowel Lol Soo much fun!!!❤

  • @lindamiller7399
    @lindamiller7399 Місяць тому +4

    The good old days.

  • @jeffhampton2767
    @jeffhampton2767 Місяць тому +5

    I had Creepy Crawlers I absolutely loved it it was my favorite toy I was probably around 10 years old or so❤

  • @mse1333
    @mse1333 Місяць тому +2

    I’m now 67. I absolutely loved my creepy crawler set!

  • @tfrowlett8752
    @tfrowlett8752 Місяць тому +1

    One toy I have that was banned for a non-dangerous reason is a bicycle mounted siren that you would put on the front fork of your bike frame, and you could engage and disengage the siren with a little chain. They were around from the 1910’s until the 1960’s when they were banned because they sounded too similar to actual police sirens at the time, and they haven’t been brought back since.

  • @80sGamerLady
    @80sGamerLady Місяць тому +3

    Jarts, Creepy Crawlers, Moon Shoes, are some of the things I had. (Sky Dancers were just after my time but my SIL who was younger had some, we still have one of them unopened). But if a kid wants to purposely try fate, they will find a way. I know I tried 😂. Burning and melting legos on lamps, trying to use gasoline to burn a tree to make a camp fire (glad an adult stepped in before I poured gas in the tree and killed it).

  • @jaycooper2812
    @jaycooper2812 Місяць тому +3

    I once owned the Erector set, lawn darts, and I still have my Cylon Raider in its original box. My Grandfather and grandmother had 3 Cabbage Patch dolls in the original boxes when my grandmother passed away in 2010.

  • @nitegoat1369
    @nitegoat1369 Місяць тому +2

    I loved Jarts. They were always brought out, during family functions. No one ever got hurt, playing with them. Also, we were given fireworks, when we were children. My mom was a Detroit cop from 1976-late 1980s. She would shakedown the local liquor store (called ‘party stores’ in Detroit) owners for their illegal fireworks. They would sell them to her, in exchange for her not taking them to jail. She would then bring them home to me. My neighborhood friends and I would often have bottle rocket fights, in the churchyard, at the end of my street. I am 53 years old.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Місяць тому +1

      That's the fun kind of corruption. lol. Still love Roman Candles.

    • @nitegoat1369
      @nitegoat1369 Місяць тому

      @@ct6852No harm/no foul. It was a win/win situation.

  • @Gameraaaa
    @Gameraaaa Місяць тому +1

    I actually still have the cabbage patch doll that "ate" the food. The doll has a backpack on and when you lift the flap, there's the hole that the toy food fell though into the bag.

  • @jeffhampton2767
    @jeffhampton2767 Місяць тому +3

    It was in the late 1960s when I was around 9 years old I turned my bicycle into a chopper and on the back fender my sister who was probably 13 years old painted Hells Angels with flames. I thought I was so cool 😂😂😂

    • @jeffhampton2767
      @jeffhampton2767 Місяць тому +1

      Around that same time period my other sister who was around 15 years old threatened my mother that she was going to thumb a ride to Woodstock in New York. But my mother said no you are not allowed to go and she never went 🤔😆😆

  • @Justintoxed
    @Justintoxed Місяць тому +4

    "I want one" in the thumb nail 😂

  • @Alan-lv9rw
    @Alan-lv9rw Місяць тому +2

    I was born in 1962 and grew up in the 1960’s and 70’s. There were fewer rules back then. We had unlimited freedom. It was great. And yes, the toys may have been a little dangerous.

  • @Arturius
    @Arturius Місяць тому +2

    Creepy Crawlers was still around in the 90s, I had one as a kid. The fumes were no longer a problem, but, well, you still were messing around with heated metal plates.

  • @AbleDefenseUS
    @AbleDefenseUS Місяць тому +3

    I'm 40. I played with lawn darts. I loved my creepy crawlers oven toy. I don't think there was so much harm in learning to respect ovens or heavy objects (the lawn darts were weighted). We also had a wood burning kit for making art on balsa wood with a searing hot pen.
    You mentioned trampolines. I cracked a rib wrestling on a trampoline and never told anyone until I was an adult.

  • @jeffhampton2767
    @jeffhampton2767 Місяць тому +19

    We had fantastic toys in the 1960s and 70s. I remember getting a BB rifle and slingshots and smoke bombs and firecrackers and a mini bike just to name a few❤

    • @jeffhampton2767
      @jeffhampton2767 Місяць тому +1

      Can't forget about the m-80s and the bottle rockets and then also turning my bicycle into a chopper and my older sister who was probably 13 years old at the time painting on the back of my bicycle fender Hells Angels with flames. I thought it was so cool 🤔😆😆

  • @brendaenglish2477
    @brendaenglish2477 Місяць тому +2

    I almost forgot I had the early version of easy bake ovens. It looked like a regular oven, it heated with a 100 watt light bulb. You had to flip the oven door down to open it and reach over to take the still hot baked goods out of it.

  • @RMartin631
    @RMartin631 Місяць тому +1

    At 66 years of age, I had most of the toys listed. Having at least half a brain, I had no issues with anything except for the Jarts. When my daughter was about 6 years old someone gave us a set of Jarts. We were outside playing with them. I was standing behind my daughter when she tossed one. Instead of it going forward my daughter didn't let go soon enough and it went behind her and the point struck me right in the middle of my forehead. I bled a little but her being 6 years old, she didn't give it enough power to penetrate my skull. They immediately went in the trash can never to be seen again.

  • @Pinkkermit17
    @Pinkkermit17 Місяць тому +4

    Still have the lawn darts and the knockers. Hit myself many times with the knockers, but ti still like them.

  • @patraic5241
    @patraic5241 Місяць тому +5

    I had a geology kit in the 60s. It had sulfuric acid to test certain types of rock. I had lawn darts too. You have to be really stupid to get hurt. Basically you had to actually throw one at someone. I had clackers too. It shattered a couple of weeks after I got one.

  • @ffarmchicken
    @ffarmchicken Місяць тому +2

    I had Creepy Crawlers as a kid in the 1960’s. I loved it! Yes, I did burn the hell out of myself but I learned that aluminum mold gets hot.😅

  • @arudanel5542
    @arudanel5542 Місяць тому +2

    I had ALL of these as a kid in the early 80s. My aunts and uncles were all under a decade older than me (both parents the oldest), youngest is only 8 years older than I am. So, I got all these gems from the 60s and 70s as a kid. Jarts (Javelin Darts) were a favorite, but we tended to see who could throw one and hit an apple in the tree. Basically sniper practice for people who hate fruit, I guess?
    But one toy we ALL had that wasn't on the list were the classic Shogun Warriors, big 2 foot hollow plastic toy robots with missiles, and weirdly enough, Godzilla who could shoot his fist. His fist was a good quarter kilogram or so (half pound) of VERY hard nylon, so instead of thinking "let's make it hollow, so it goes further" they thought "We need more force..." So, it got a spring that could have doubled as the shocks of a go-kart. I had to wrap my legs around it, put the fist into the wrist socket, and push straight down until it clicked. Another, Great Mazinga, had a hand with 4 small hard nylon bullets...
    We all ended up like vets with PTSD by 84. We'd be playing, and we'd hear someone's Shogun do the dreaded "click of doom". These missiles had springs so powerful they were ALWAYS on edge, and a slight shake would set one off. It'd fire, hit another, and we'd be in the middle of a full circle firing squad of toys.
    I got a cracked eyesocket from Godzilla's rocket uppercut, another friend lost sight in an eye from Mazinga's finger missiles, and let's not mention the literal crossbow attached to Raydeen's arm....
    Another favorite is the suction cup dart guns. Inevitably the suction cups would get warped and cruddy and not stick. So we'd draw targets on paper, tape them to boxes, and then pull off the suction cups and put the darts in the pencil sharpener at school. They were banned in my hometown when a kid shot the mailman in the butt, and he needed 4 stitches.
    He had a good sense of humor about it, admitting he'd have done the same thing, because kids are literally a pain in the butt. He's got the scar to prove it.
    Oh, 2 other fun kits from the science toy kits. I had an electrical kit that included all sorts of weird experiment ideas, and one that it showed, which blows my mind to this day, is to basically connect alligator clips to your nips, and stick it in a light outlet. I've never seen another one, so that probably was on shelves for a few hours, my grandfather stocked shelves at a toy store so we got a ton of weird stuff. Another was the glass cutting kit. You could take Dad's beer bottles, put them on a stand with an alcohol candle under it, heat the glass until it was red hot and then turn it slowly, a ceramic blade would cut the glass. Sometimes. Usually it would pop the bottle like a balloon, spraying glass shards and melted glass everywhere. No idea why these weren't mentioned here, maybe just so rare from being banned in minutes, probably.

  • @cynthiarodriguez8346
    @cynthiarodriguez8346 Місяць тому +3

    I had Jarts and loved them. Never hit anyone with one. Very fun to play.

  • @maxwellharris507
    @maxwellharris507 Місяць тому +3

    I’ve played with yard darts, really had to watch out for when they went errant

    • @yournewzealandfamily
      @yournewzealandfamily  Місяць тому

      So scary!

    • @maxwellharris507
      @maxwellharris507 Місяць тому

      @@yournewzealandfamily thankfully I never got by one.
      On a different note, toy guns used to not have an orange muzzle to indicate that it was fake. My dad used to run around with cap revolvers, pretending to be a cowboy (this was in the 60s)

    • @normanwyatt8761
      @normanwyatt8761 Місяць тому

      I think those things were called LAWN DARTS and my father-in-law bought them for my kids and they scared the he'll out of me that I had to hide them and told my kids that someone came in the yard and stole them....

    • @maxwellharris507
      @maxwellharris507 Місяць тому

      @@normanwyatt8761 I’ve heard lawn darts, long darts, etc. they’re all the same really

  • @usafvet100
    @usafvet100 Місяць тому +2

    Had a few mishaps with firecrackers, my Daisy bb gun, my friend's treehouse, and going Evel Knievel with my bike, but managed to survive it all. The laws of physics are quite unforgiving!😂😂😂

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Місяць тому +1

      Gravity is a b--. lol

  • @EastTXplaya
    @EastTXplaya Місяць тому +2

    I could pogo stick without holding the handle bars and holding the stick together with my knees. Fun times😂

  • @jerryhouston5400
    @jerryhouston5400 Місяць тому +4

    Left handed Tennessee guy checking in!!

    • @yournewzealandfamily
      @yournewzealandfamily  Місяць тому +3

      Always great to see you Jerry!

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Місяць тому +1

      What kind of witchcraft let you write with your left hand?

  • @breadmakerbreadmaker5283
    @breadmakerbreadmaker5283 Місяць тому +3

    I was seriously injured on a trampolene. I shattered my sternum and broke several ribs on both sides of my ribcage. It probably should have killed me and I was an adult when it happened.

  • @usafvet100
    @usafvet100 Місяць тому +1

    I'm 61, clackers were all over the recess playground when I was in the 3rd grade circa 1970. Never quite caught the hang of getting them to hit at the top and bottom of the arc, but the kids who were good at it could make them blur like an airplane's propeller arc. 😮

  • @philstone3859
    @philstone3859 Місяць тому +1

    We made up our own game with lawn darts. You’d stand still and try to throw the dart straight up and not flinch, look up or move. Of course your friend would warn you if they thought you were going to get hit, but the point of the game was to see who could throw it closest to oneself and still stick to the rules. It was unnerving to stand still, not looking up, which was almost impossible and have one of those thump into the earth inches from your foot. Even we thought it was a bad idea after a while. Suburban, pre-teen, front yard, brave, Russian roulette! Childhood was very different in the late 60’s to early 70’s. We were like pirates on the loose with our bicycles, going everywhere. Our play and games always had to have an element of danger or it wasn’t worth doing. It was always competitive between us, who could outdo each other was King Kid status until the next winner was crowned. Bleeding and crying were always a part of having fun or you weren’t doing it hard enough. Like I said, we were pirates! 🏴‍☠️
    (Everyone survived)
    It was a blast!
    We knew how to have fun.

  • @nikoknightpuppetproduction369
    @nikoknightpuppetproduction369 Місяць тому +3

    Brings back memories! I love your videos. Love from Texas USA!

  • @SleepyArcticFox-vo1nq
    @SleepyArcticFox-vo1nq Місяць тому +2

    Hello from Park Forest Illinois a south suburb of Chicago God blessed this lovely family

  • @williamscoggin1509
    @williamscoggin1509 Місяць тому +1

    I had a wood-burning art kit that came with basically a handheld Electric soldering iron. I put a blister on my thumb half the size of the pad. It only happened once though, I am 66 years old and I can still hear the skin sizzle. I immediately stuck my thumb in my iced tea and did not tell my parents because I knew they would probably take the toy away from me. LOL😅

  • @adamn7516
    @adamn7516 Місяць тому +2

    Lets be fair. Jarts really are not bad if used properly. I mean simply don't throw them at toward someone and you are fine. Jarts are sort of the equivalent to the archery sets that are still very much available. The arrows that come with these sets generally have blunt ends to hit paper or vinyl targets backed with hay bails but they seriously injure or kill a kid if their friend shoots it at them, depending how fast its traveling and the part of the body it hits especially the eye.

  • @FyfFyd-wu2jp
    @FyfFyd-wu2jp Місяць тому +23

    0 views and 29 likes? UA-cam is drunk.

    • @brandonnavarro4876
      @brandonnavarro4876 Місяць тому +1

      Ummmm wtf does that even mean?

    • @FyfFyd-wu2jp
      @FyfFyd-wu2jp Місяць тому +5

      @@brandonnavarro4876 It means that UA-cam showed that there was 0 views but also showed that it had 29 likes so I decided to comment a joke about it.

    • @Ryan1810C
      @Ryan1810C Місяць тому +1

      ​@@FyfFyd-wu2jp it means the videos come out early for patreon members. That's what that means

    • @MichaelSSmith-hs5pw
      @MichaelSSmith-hs5pw Місяць тому +1

      Who cares! Enjoy the video now.

  • @The_Badseed
    @The_Badseed Місяць тому +2

    We used to stand around and throw the lawn darts in the air above us and see who didn't get killed by said darts when they came down. Yes the 70s was an interesting time indeed.

  • @55Ramius
    @55Ramius Місяць тому +2

    I remember those Yard Jarts. We found out fast they were a bad idea. I was 21 and alone. Nobody around one day so before throwing the jarts away, I got the bench grinder out and put a shart point on them. I could stick them into the back yard fence or the old garage, telephone pole, ect. Was cool but I got rid of them before anybody got any ideas to use them. I am 69 now and was exposed to about all these toys but survided. No radiation kits or detective. We could not afford some of these either, like the chemistry one. You sure could tell the inventors of these things did not use any forward thinking at all. Just assumed a lot too. Since we had little money and I had a old bb gun, I would take "strike anywhere" matches and drop one into end of barrel. Using just the air, no bb, the match stick would come out at high speed and strike a hard object like garage or telephone pole and explode from compression then ignition. Or I would hold a flat rock at end of barrel, slightly tilted inward so the match would strike the stone on its way into the air. It would ignite and look like a flare into the sky. Cheap fireworks. 750 matches for $3. This is a small amount of stuff I tried when young. I still can count to ten (Have all my fingers) and have never needed glasses yet..lol

  • @smilingdog2219
    @smilingdog2219 8 днів тому +1

    Life was dangerous in the 60s when I was growing up. However, kids are bubble wrapped today and suffering mental health issues due to social anxiety for playing on a computer or phone and staying indoors.

  • @PatrickSBellSr
    @PatrickSBellSr День тому

    Jarts! Absolutely - they were great fun and we kids just knew to be careful. And I had completely forgotten about the miniature power tools! I loved those!!😁👍

  • @jordansimpson9099
    @jordansimpson9099 Місяць тому +2

    I know of someone who had that "Feed Me" Cabbage Patch Doll and told their sibling to stick their finger inside the mouth. Lucky an adult was there to help, but besides the mental aspect there was some light finger damage.

  • @George-ux6zz
    @George-ux6zz Місяць тому +2

    We had Jarts. My best friend and I vs 2 other friends from school were playing. One of the other friends threw one too hard while my friend and I were talking and not paying attention. The Jart went through my friend's foot. It stuck about 1/2 to 3/4 of an inch into his foot. The hospital fixed it but he was limping around all summer long. Did we learn our lesson? Nah! We still played, but we payed attention from then on.

  • @dsheppar1
    @dsheppar1 Місяць тому +2

    Growing up in the 60's and 70's, as a boy, I had most of the "good ones". Chemistry, creepy crawlers, polo sticks etc. But we also had bows and arrows, bb guns, sling shots and firecrackers. It was the best time because we would have breakfast on a Saturday grab our stuff and as long as we were back by dark we were fine.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Місяць тому

      The M 80's were the firework you had to worry about. Those could do some damage. Also the bow and arrow. lol