Gransnet forums

Chat

Effing fireworks.

(114 Posts)
FannyCornforth Fri 30-Oct-20 19:27:46

Great.
As if we don't have enough to make our lives difficult.
The fireworks have started.
Around her the damned things will pretty much be a constant from now until mid-January.
Poor, poor dogs; cats; birds and small pets; wild animals; farm animals; farmers; people with babies and young children; people with dementia; people with PTSD etc etc etc. angrysadenvy

MawB2 Sat 31-Oct-20 21:17:13

Oh PECS I can’t accept that dogs are “more pampered” nowadays. Their hearing is so much more Acute than ours we can’t imagine what they are hearing but I imagine It could be like the sound of the blitz or warfare without knowing that it is harmless.
And apart from working dogs, they didn’t all live in kennels
out of doors, not in my lifetime anyway.
We also had a Labrador, from working stock who was terrified of gunshot and would jump at the crack of a log in the fire!

Jaxjacky Sat 31-Oct-20 21:58:38

hulahoop and we ate them, with no problems!

Hetty58 Sat 31-Oct-20 22:38:54

So, here I am, yet again, with a frightened dog and cat - just brilliant.

I can't even go to the loo without taking the dog with me, can't move around the house freely, can't cook dinner so just had a salad instead.

Happy days enjoying Halloween everybody!

(I'm so glad we're in lockdown for Guy Fawkes.)

Ellypat Sun 01-Nov-20 00:56:32

I have PTSD and fireworks reduce me to a quivering wreck. I live in Vancouver, and am overjoyed that this is the last year firework sales are legal here!

Growing0ldDisgracefully Sun 01-Nov-20 10:08:39

I love organised firework displays and as a kid enjoyed the small display Mum and Dad used to put on in the garden (a joint venture with a neighbour with kids). However I do think that they should not be sold to the general public unless they have had some sort of training (maybe from the Fire Service?) and given a licence to purchase and use them? Might be a way of regulating the safe use of them.
I also spent some while as a patient in a plastic surgery ward as a child (not because of getting burned) but there were children in there on long-haul plastic surgery treatments to mend awful burns from domestic firework party mishaps. Maybe publicity of those sorts of injuries would make people think.

bobbydog24 Mon 02-Nov-20 08:28:44

I enjoy fireworks, all the colours and patterns in the sky but I hate the noise. They are getting louder every year. I too would enjoy them so much more if they were silent but that’s not what these morons who set them off at midnight and during the day want. It’s the disruption and fear they instill they get off on. Sad people really. Fireworks should be only sold the day before 5th November and on the day and not after. At least then we wouldn’t have to endure prolonged bursts of noise every night from early October. It’s not just animals that are frightened. My DGD hates loud noises and gets herself into a real state. Sometimes they are so loud you can literally feel them.

lovebeigecardigans1955 Mon 02-Nov-20 09:27:08

I don't like fireworks either. They make a pretty pattern in the sky for a brief moment but do they have to be so damn loud? I understand that a quiet variety has been advertised - it's about time they caught on and the noisy ones went out of fashion.

Shropshirelass Mon 02-Nov-20 09:29:12

Italy have silent fireworks, why can’t we. No need for the loud bangs. No need for fireworks either really but am I being bah humbug!!!

EllanVannin Mon 02-Nov-20 09:40:03

I'm sure the idiot who's setting the late ones off spends all day emptying the powder out of a few bangers into a solid explosion as I jumped out of my skin last night and the cat leapt out of the chair. It was loud ! Loud enough to set a car alarm off as well. God help us on the 5th.

Fennel Mon 02-Nov-20 11:59:13

Not sure anyone else has mentioned this, but the worst I've heard was when we lived in Singapore, at Chinese new Year. But at least it was only one day.
They had long strips of bangers, each ignited the next one so it went on nonstop. Frightening away the evil spirits.
Hopefully the locals here won't find out about them and try to scare Covid away.

BelindaB Mon 02-Nov-20 14:59:45

Fanny Cornforth - it was probably my reply that told you about the thundercoat - well worth the investment. A few other hints...

deliberately OVERFEED your dog a good hour before you think the fireworks are going to start (usually, that will be after dark). Overfeeding makes them sluggish and sleepy. Use the thundershirt but also, build him/her a den.

With my dog (Polly, sadly passed now) who had the dreadful fear of fw's I did all the above plus turning the tv up as high as I could and making her a den.

This ended up being the corner between the sofa and a cupboard, over which I'd drape a thick blanket. I'd then sit on the sofa with my hand under the blanket so that I could touch her and she me, to get further reassurance.

It's really just about all you can do. My thoughts are with you - not that that will be muchconsolation!

ginny Mon 02-Nov-20 15:21:53

Be prepared for lots on Wednesday evening.
One big venue fairly locally has been changed to a drive in display.Folks stay in a marked square around the car to watch!

SuzannahM Mon 02-Nov-20 15:36:20

Jaxjacky

PECS I love them too, always have done. I don’t remember, years ago, there being so many objections?

Perhaps because they weren't used all year round, like they are round here. We've already had two weeks of constant bangs through the evening, and it will go on for another two weeks, then over Christmas and New Year, and after that I think for every celebration in the area.

I love firework displays, have very happy memories of the ones in Sydney over New Year, and every year we attend the local Scouts bonfire and firework display. Despite having been hit smack between the eyes last year by a spent rocket - no real damage, just a lump and bruising, but very painful! But I wish they could be restricted to public displays, at least the big, noisy ones.