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Coincidence?

Started by Georgie, November 05, 2006, 16:25:02

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Georgie

I was putting some seeds into envelopes today to send off as swaps with members here and once again it struck me how many folk have garden-related words in their addresses.  I don't want to give anything away but addresses over the last few months have included included the words heather, aspen, pines, cedars, cherry, hedgerow, hill, heath, park and wood to name just a few.  And I have 'Acacia' in my address.   ;D

So if I visited a site for bookworms for instance, and perhaps they swapped paperbacks, do you think they'd all have suitable addresses too?   ;)

G x
'The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.'

timelady

Hmmm.... I have a 'field' in my street name. :) Spooky!
Alas, none of the artists I know have arty addresses.

Tina.

cambourne7

DITO I HAVE A FIELD IN MY STREET NAME ;-)

Emagggie

My house name is very rural and I had 'wood' in my maiden name
Smile, it confuses people.

tricia

My last three addresses have had wood, wood and park in them and in Germany I lived in Holzhausenstrasse - Holz being wood as well. Yes, weird  :).

Tricia

tim


Plum

We have Bluebell in our address

manicscousers

ours is porlock, as in the hill

Hyacinth

Where I live all the roads are named after trees, but as it's a 'garden suburb' that was no great leap of the imagination :-\

Val

 ;D ;D we have an elm. also had a whole plantation once :P ;D...now that is showing off. ;)
"I always wanted to be somebody…but I should have been more specific."

supersprout

but so few vegetable street names :'(

pumpkin parade, cabbage crescent, tomato terrace, asparagus avenue perhaps ::)

OK I'll get me hat and coat and gloves :P

Georgie

I knew this thread would get the nutters out.   ;D :P  Lettuce Lane, Radish Road......

G x
'The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.'

Emagggie

Kolrabi Close?...........oh trust you SS ;D ;D ;D
Smile, it confuses people.

saddad

There are a few "allotment" lanes but they usually go back to Parliamentary enclosures... in Northern cities a "Peartree" area is quite common... they were fashionable to plant in the later 18thCentury and on their own roots made huge trees which stood out above the victorian terrace sprawl. Derby also has a dairyhouse road from when cattle were stalled inside cities to provide milk...
;D

Kea

Well try this....my surname before I remarried had 'Garden' in it with slightly different spelling but that was how it was pronounced and then I used to live in 'Gardener's Walk' now my street is another plant related name ending in 'Gardens'. When i was a child my parents had a farm called 'Rosehill', they later moved to a Woodville Street. My middle name is a plant. I also lived in a small place called something Forest. I think I've covered them all. No vegetables though.
How about a Parsley Place, Avocado Avenue, Cabbage Crescent, Lettuce Lane.

lorna

Georgie You know I will be sowing your seeds in the Grounds of my address ;D

timelady


Georgie

ROFL Tina, nice one!   ;D

G x
'The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.'

saddad

When our local school (Infants) was the village school it was on cabbage square, since changed to a more prosaic Browning Street.
;D

redimp

No plants in my address - street name is a castle in Kent but my Mum's maiden names were Plant and Webb so two garden references there.  My paternal grandmother's name was Woodcock so bird of the fields there.
Lotty @ Lincoln (Lat:53.24, Long:-0.52, HASL:30m)

http://www.abicabeauty

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