↓
 

Streetplay Discussion Archive

Kicking it 1999 style

  • Home
    • Discussion Archive Home (this site)
    • Streetplay Discussion Group on Facebook
    • Streetplay.com
    • Streetplay on Facebook
    • Streetplay on Twitter
  • Locales
    • Boston
    • Bronx
    • Brooklyn
    • Chicago
    • International
    • Manhattan
    • Philadelphia
    • Queens
    • Staten Island
  • Spaldeen games
    • Ace King Queen
    • Box Baseball
    • Boxball
    • Curbball
    • Halfball
    • Other Spaldeen games
    • Punchball
    • Stickball
      • Stickball rules
    • Stoopball
    • Wallball / Off the Wall/Point
  • Girl games
    • Clap and Rhyme
    • Hopscotch
    • Jacks
    • Jumprope
  • Other Games
    • Bocce etc.
    • Card Games
    • Cricket
    • Hide & Seek
    • Hit the penny / stick / etc.
    • Johnny on the Pony
    • Marbles
    • Ringoleavio
    • Skully
    • Tag
  • Special topics
    • 1999 Stickball Classic
    • All Seasons
    • Member spotlight
    • Reader Stories
    • Young romance
  • Stickball
    • Stickball rules
  • Street Lifestyle
    • Bikes
    • Food & Drink
    • Hanging Out
    • Playgrounds
    • Roller skates
    • Street Fashion
    • Toys
      • Hula hoops & pogo sticks
Home→Author Streetplay Discussions - Page 374 << 1 2 … 372 373 374 375 376 … 383 384 >>

Author Archives: Streetplay Discussions

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Anonymous – What part of…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 7, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014

Anonymous – What part of Bronx were your from? posted on 4/6. I grew up in the Williamsbridge section of the Bronx during the 40’s and 50’s. I lived off Gun Hill Road and White Plains Ave. on Magenta Street. I agre it was a great place to grow up in!

Posted in Bronx, Locales | Tagged I grew up...

We called it “stairball”….

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 7, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 9, 2019

We called it “stairball”. Much like “pinners” described by Brian. Catch it on the fly for an out. If it bounced before you caught it, you had to throw at the stairs and catch the rebound on the fly or it was a single. If it landed in the street, it was a double if it was on the near side, triple if on the far side, and a homer if it landed clear across the street. We had both one-on-one and two-on-two rules. We were fantasy baseball pioneers – we had rosters of pro players, and we traded them, kept stats, had playoffs, and at least two world series per summer.

Posted in Other Spaldeen games, Stoopball | Tagged Summer

On Grand Ave. in Da Bronx,…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 7, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 14, 2014

On Grand Ave. in Da Bronx, we called it Skully, though the variants mentioned here weren’t uncommon. Our game-play equipment evolved over the years like one of those “tools made by man through the ages” charts you’d see in your 4th grade history, I mean, social studies textbook. At first we used the bottlecap, specifically from beer bottles (the twist-off variety, which didn’t get dented by a bottle opener upon removal). Lots of glide, but very light, blastable, and didn’t hold up great under car tires. We found that new bottlecaps had new paint on them, and they glided better. We then filled bottlecaps with wax, usually from a crayon. They were still fragile, but still glided well even with the additional weight. A weighted cap was good for blasting an unweighted cap, but when everyone’s cap was weighted, it didn’t much matter (physics and all). Since some labor went into putting wax in a cap, we began to scratch an “x” underneath the cap, using the cap itself, and then picked it up from the street if a car was coming so it wouldn’t get damaged. This is akin to what golfers do on the green; I think we invented the technique and the PGA picked it up. The next step in skully cap evolution was the “push-up ice cream pusher.” Back in the day, Good Humor sold ice cream in a cardboard tube called a “Push Up” (I think). The plastic thing that pushed the ice cream made an excellent skully cap (excellent glide), but it wore out quickly and was very fragile. Luckily, you could replace them by buying more ice cream. There were a spate of bizarre caps at this time of evolution (mayonnaise lids, Heinz catsup bottle caps) but one was notable: the glass cap. The glass cap was obtained from the ring atop the neck of a non-twist-off beer bottle. To get this cap involved much labor, as you would rub the top of the bottle repeatedly over the bumps of a manhole cover, hoping that the ring would crack off just right. It did about 10% of the time. This cap would glide like crazy, had no blasting power, and worked until it broke. Cars running over this cap didn’t much hurt it, but the final step in Skully Cap evolution did: the steel chair glider. The steel chair glider was found underneath your desk in school. You removed it using a bottle opener you sneaked into school. If you were smart, you’d liberate all four gliders so your chair wouldn’t rock. It was the perfect skully cap. Impenetrable to all elements, great glide, and blasting power. Some of these caps were big, some were small–if you were lucky, you had more than one size cap. I still have mine to this day! Let’s hear some more skully cap lore!

Posted in Bronx, Skully | Tagged crayons

My brother and I were quite…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 7, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsApril 7, 1999

My brother and I were quite lucky to grow up surrounded by tons of children our age. Most Friday nights our parents would get together for cocktails at one of their friends houses. There would be eight or nine couples and all their children. When the cocktail party was at our house my father would set up a card table in the garage for all the kids with cokes and snacks and we were pretty much banished to the outside. We loved to play a game called “Sardines”. We’d give an “it” person about 3 minutes to hide in the yard while we all stayed in the garage. Then we’d yell “Sardines” and we’d all take off trying to find the “it” person. If you found the “it” person you’d nonchalantly sneak into their hiding place with them. The last person to find everyone would be “it” the next time. One time about seven of us were in an azalea hedge, trying to be quiet when my father came outside to pee. He started to pee in our hedge. This provided hours of amusement for all the kids (except my brother – who was mortified).

Posted in Other Games | Tagged running around

We in our neighborhood would…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 7, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsApril 7, 1999

We in our neighborhood would get together and play a game called “Run sheep,run.” If I remember correctly we devided up into 2 groups. A leader would be chosen from each. The leader would take his group and hide them. Then go back to the other group and they would start looking. The leader of the hidden group would stay with them. As the looked the leader of the hidden group would call our prearranged color code to let them know if they were close or not. Such as yellow, yellow, meant they were going away ect. If and when they were discovered the leader yelled Run sheep run and we would all run back to base hoping to beat the other team home. Did anyone else play this and if so please correct any faulty memorys or deviations as to how you played.

Posted in Other Games | Tagged running around

I grew up in the Bronx in…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 7, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014

I grew up in the Bronx in the ’40’s and one of the things we did was rollerskate. My friends and I did this for what seems like hours. Those were the days when you could skate on the street because there were not many cars since gasoline was rationed because of the war and driving was saved for Sunday drives with the family. We used to skate down Burke Avenue to Bronx River Parkway which was quite a big hill and we must have climbed it 100X at least as I remember. Also, those were the days when we wore metal skates and wore your skatekey around your neck on a shoelace. I bet lots of you who grew up around that time have some of the same memories. Please add yours here – I’d love to read them.

Posted in Bronx, Other Games, Tag | Tagged I grew up...

All you young folk there,…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 7, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014

All you young folk there, telling of your memories. Back in the late twenties, early thirties we played kick the can. Our variety – we got two empty cans, put a hole in each near the top, tied a long piece of string between, and after dark placed these across the sidewalk, one can on each side in the grass, cans filled with water. We hid nearby and waited for adults to walk by,connect with the string and get their pant legs wet. We thought it was great fun.

Posted in Other Games, Tag

When we were about 13 to…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 7, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014

When we were about 13 to 16 we played kick the can every evening about dusk. We had a group of about a dozen or so that gathered near my house for the game. The best was if you could be in the dark with your current heart-throb. Not that anything happened it was just the idea of being hidden in the dark. We yelled and argued, kicked the can and tore through peoples yards and bushes until my dad got tired of all the noise and made us come inside. Fort Wayne, IN 1956 to 1959

Posted in Other Games, Tag

I was the pogo stick champ…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 6, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014

I was the pogo stick champ of my block. I could pogo down steps, up steps, off stoops, you name it. I sucked at hoola hoops but pogo was my thing. I grew up on 175th Street off MaCoombs Road in the Bronx. I went to PS 104 school. THere was nothing like growing up in those days of the early 60s.

Posted in Bronx, Hula hoops & pogo sticks, Toys | Tagged I grew up...

Okay, you’ve given me more…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 6, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014

Okay, you’ve given me more Brooklyn memories. It seems like my Brooklyn recollections are a shared collective across Boroughs and State lines. Of course there was the knishman. And no potato knish since then has tasted quite so right. There was also the Chow Chow Cup, which sold Chinese food in a cup that could be eaten. And there was the Good Humor Man who sold ice cream out of a truck. And of course the trucks that had the rides in the back of them. When I think of those trucks I can’t believe they never tipped over. All those memories of living in the City. Are my kids deprived because they won’t have them?

Posted in Brooklyn, Food & Drink, Reader Stories

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Categories

  • Girl games (1,201)
    • Clap and Rhyme (504)
    • Hopscotch (82)
    • Jacks (96)
    • Jumprope (264)
  • Locales (1,369)
    • Boston (14)
    • Bronx (325)
    • Brooklyn (553)
    • Chicago (23)
    • International (13)
    • Manhattan (159)
    • Philadelphia (135)
    • Queens (220)
    • Staten Island (9)
  • Other Games (913)
    • Bocce etc. (14)
    • Card Games (27)
    • Cricket (9)
    • Hide & Seek (22)
    • Hit the penny / stick / etc. (21)
    • Johnny on the Pony (99)
    • Marbles (70)
    • Ringoleavio (49)
    • Skully (339)
    • Tag (16)
  • Site suggestions (48)
  • Spaldeen games (996)
    • Ace King Queen (94)
    • Box Baseball (21)
    • Boxball (90)
    • Curbball (16)
    • Halfball (46)
    • Other Spaldeen games (534)
    • Punchball (95)
    • Stickball (546)
      • Stickball rules (31)
    • Stoopball (101)
    • Wallball / Off the Wall/Point (65)
  • Special topics (542)
    • 1999 Stickball Classic (46)
    • All Seasons (37)
    • Member spotlight (12)
    • Reader Stories (319)
    • Young romance (97)
  • Street Lifestyle (578)
    • Bikes (35)
    • Food & Drink (159)
    • Hanging Out (61)
    • Playgrounds (59)
    • Roller skates (33)
    • Street Fashion (36)
    • Toys (174)
      • Hula hoops & pogo sticks (24)

Tags

"A My Name Is Alice..." "Miss Lucy..." "The Projects" 9/11 1999 Back to Brooklyn Festival Astoria candy store Chinese handball Chinese jumprope collecting stuff Coney Island content suggestions crayons Does anyone remember... dolls & cutouts first kiss Girl / Boy / Cub Scouts Harlem I grew up... Lower East Side Off the Wall Pennsy Pinkie pimple ball pizza potsy running around Russian 7/10/12 (the game) salugi slugs (the game) songs South Bronx South Philadelphia spaldeen types Steve Mercado stoop sitting Streetplay business goals suburbia Summer tongue twisters tops and yo-yos wallball Washington Heights weapons of choice word games young love locations

Archives

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
©2025 - Streetplay Discussion Archive - Weaver Xtreme Theme
↑