Tree houses, catapults, air guns, knife/ axe throwing, campfires, digging “foxholes” into the sandbanks, jumping the river, walking in the river as far as we could physically go, rope swings over said river- usually ending up in it...
Once the whole book subplot fades in the background and it's just the interplay between the characters over almost nothing then it becomes something special, Geoffrey Palmer can make the most mundane line full of understated emotion.
Have to agree, first stint was better, he seemed more willing to be challenged in his views and less dictatorial though still bossy, he seemed more of a friend to Clegg especially and it seemed he felt like a member of a friendship...
Here's the next one to ruminate then as the consensus is we had two Foggy clouds worth of episodes...which era worked better for you and why.
For me the first era was better as he was a more established, albeit less respected, member...
I'll borrow this joke from the great Les Dawson...
The wife is so big that when she wants to pass her handbag from one hand to another she has to throw it!
To be fair the weather is so inclement and bitingly cold there will be very few ladies riding on the back of a horse with no clothes on hence the lack of Lady Godiva's :08::fp:
I'm guess decorating eggs in Bridlington has the effect of you always walking on eggshells therefore you're like to crack any minute and over there he'd be the local yolk!
Clegg however as you say was subtly altered over time instead.
That's exactly what I mean, thankyou. :)
Night filming slowed right down in the later years so I can see where you're from there...mainly because I eat giant carrots in the dark! ;)
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