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Category Archives: Locales

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I “FOUND” my first bike,in…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on January 23, 2009 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
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I “FOUND” my first bike,in a storage basement in Grand central apartments in Bellerose,Queens.A old 28″ balloon tire bike,it was the biggest bike i ever saw! I had to mount it from the stoop,and use my tippy toes to peddle it. I was 7 or 8 then,we were to poor to have our own bikes back then. My brother rode it to the library on Union Tpke,and it was stolen.I still tell the story to my kids,now late twenties,the story about the biggest bike in the world. 1953-1964 QUEENS NY.

Posted in Bikes, Queens, Toys

Played skully in Glen Oaks,Queens,at…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on January 23, 2009 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 9, 2019
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Played skully in Glen Oaks,Queens,at P.S.186 school park in 1950’s and early 1960’s. The park had it painted in yellow paint on the pavement.Melted crayons into bottle caps over the stove.Great times, the best memories are from those wonderful endless warm summer days.

Posted in Queens, Skully | Tagged crayons, Summer

Still some confusion here…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on January 23, 2009 by Streetplay DiscussionsJanuary 3, 2020
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Still some confusion here on spaldeens and pensi pinkies. We can all agree spaldeens are hallow and can split,but are pensie pinkies hallow too? I remember it as a pink sponge ball.Or was there a third type of ball,solid sponge,as i remember.

Posted in Brooklyn, Other Spaldeen games | Tagged Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types, spongeball

I grew up in Summerdale (Oxford…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on January 15, 2009 by Streetplay DiscussionsJanuary 3, 2020
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I grew up in Summerdale (Oxford Circle) in the early-mid 80s. We played: * wireball * suicide (we called it “sooey”) * pitched quarters * flipped baseball cards * stoop ball (no one called it “step ball”) * Deadbox (not in Summerdale, but played with my * older cousins in Harrowgate) * Wall ball * Hand ball * stick ball * halfies * hose ball (my father grew up in kensington and taught us that) * wiffle ball (regular wiffle ball and padded bat with tennis ball — a lawn chair for the strike zone) * Spring * Freedom * Knock Knock Zoom Zoom * King of the Hill * hide and seek in the back alley/cubie holes * kick the can * foot hockey * 2 hand touch/1 hand touch * steal the bacon * straw races (when someone turned on the fire plug and we’d race drinking straws all the way down the street to the sewer) I can’t count how many pinkies, tennis balls and pimple balls I roofed from the age of 5 to 13!

Posted in Hide & Seek, Locales, Philadelphia, Skully, Stickball, Stoopball, Wallball / Off the Wall/Point | Tagged deadbox, I grew up..., Pennsy Pinkie, pimple ball, spaldeen types, Summerdale, wallball, wireball

I grew up in Bayside, Queens…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on January 10, 2009 by Streetplay DiscussionsJanuary 3, 2020
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I grew up in Bayside, Queens in the 1950s. We used Spaldeens for stickball and stoopball. The new ones cost a quarter and bounced higher than Pensie Pinkies (which, I believe, cost 15 cents.) Girls used Pensie Pinkies for punchball because they were so much softer. For that reason, they were also preferred for box baseball. For stickball, we played “fungo,” that is, no pitcher. Toss the ball in the air and hit it. Anyone remember the term “fungo?”

Posted in Box Baseball, Brooklyn, Other Spaldeen games, Punchball, Queens, Stickball, Stoopball | Tagged I grew up..., Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types

Hey does anyone remember…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on January 9, 2009 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014
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Hey does anyone remember JOhnny On The Pony. I grew up in The Bronx. It would usually take 4 or 5 players on each side. One team would line up against the wall. One player would face the others with back against wall and the rest of team would face him and would bend from the waist one behind the other holding the waist of the one in front of them. The other team would run and jump on the backs of the team trying to land as far forward as he could. The object was to make the team holding them to break under the weight of the jumpers.

Posted in Bronx, Johnny on the Pony, Other Games | Tagged Does anyone remember..., I grew up..., running around

We played at PS 166 in Astoria…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on January 7, 2009 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014
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We played at PS 166 in Astoria (33 St & 35 Ave)well into our 20s, usually one-on-one. We’d chalk or paint a strikezone on the wall and use a tennis ball, which was much more controllable and harder to hit for distance than a spaldeen. (I used to carry in my trunk a can of spraypaint and my ancient taped-up bat which had shortened drastically over the years from splintering at the ends and propping up a buddy’s air conditioner.) The pitcher’s line was about 50 ft away. Two outs per inning, grounders fielded cleanly and caught fly balls were outs. Any fairly placed hit that stayed in the yard was a single, in the street was a double, against the 3-story buildings across the street a triple, and over the buildings a homer. As we got older and the bat shorter, homeruns declined and eventually ceased entirely. There was a deli on the corner and a souvlaki stand on the next block. We’d drink beer and stuff our faces between games. Next day would invariably entail total immobility due to back injury suffered from pitching 36-45 innings without warm-up, and this only got worse as we got older. When my buddy and I moved to LA we tried playing in a couple of schoolyards (I think Palms Jr. High was one of them?) but it wasn’t the same. Since then PS 166 built a new structure which filled their yard so the entire venue no longer exists. I also played a LOT of chinese handball, but with slightly different rules than those I’ve seen elsewhere. All obstacles are in the field of play, one bounce to the car and one bounce off is still alive, the ball only has to hit the wall inbounds– we played on a handball wall or against the supermarket without ace/king/queen boxes– but can bounce out and still be live. This encouraged getting up close on the wall for a steep angle and slamming it down the block. Taught it to a couple of friends in Texas years later and they loved it. The quality of play in different neighborhoods (and on different blocks within the same neighborhhod) varied tremendously. When I was an early teen, the quality of play on my turf was significantly higher than that I saw in Jackson Heights or Elmhurst, but that’s probably changed many times over the years. I still have an outstanding challenge with a childhood chum who’s now a lawyer in Philly (he grew up next to PS 2 near LaGuardia) that I’ll spot him 19 points in a game to 21 and he’s been ducking me for over 30 years on this. Hope he reads this…

Posted in Ace King Queen, Locales, Philadelphia, Queens, Stickball, Stickball rules | Tagged Astoria, Chinese handball, Jackson Heights

I remember growing up in…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on December 10, 2008 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
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I remember growing up in Brooklyn playing stickball, handball and off the point during the sixties and seventies. I was the king of fishing up spaldeens from the sewers on our block with strung together wire hangers. it was a real art to get the ball to hold in the hanger as you carefully pulled it up from the darkness. then we would boil them to rejuvenate them so they could bounce again.

Posted in Brooklyn, Other Spaldeen games, Stickball, Wallball / Off the Wall/Point | Tagged off the point

Looking at the spanish list…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on December 10, 2008 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
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Looking at the spanish list and the first game is exactly the same as a english traditional game called oranges and lemons, with the rhyme being all about the bells around london and the capture including a threat to chop of your head, you the choose secretly betwen oranges and lemon, join the appropriate line and end with a tug of war exactly the same as on your site. I wonder which country first played this and if they use the same tune?

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, International

I grew up in Olney in the…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on December 5, 2008 by Streetplay DiscussionsFebruary 2, 2019
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I grew up in Olney in the late 70’s through the 80’s at 2nd and Albanus. We played tons of street games such as; -Wire ball -Step ball -Light ball -Homicide -Suicide -Dead box or bottle caps -Wall ball -Box ball -Stick ball -Halfies -Hose ball -Wiffle ball -Hide the belt -Kick the can -Spring -Catch one catch all -Keep warm -Pile on the rabbitt -King of the hill Those were the days!

Posted in Boxball, Locales, Other Spaldeen games, Philadelphia, Stickball, Wallball / Off the Wall/Point | Tagged deadbox, I grew up..., wallball

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