Coming Soon š At the beginning of April, youāll be
introduced to a brand-new GoComics! See more information here. Subscribers, check your
email for more details.
Boy: How did people survive Thanksgiving travel in the old days?
Frazz: I think lots of blankets.
Boy: I'm not clear on how that makes up for no video player in the back seat.
Frazz: Ah, we're not going back quite as far as currier & ives "old days".
The 1600ās had homespun, wool and fire places. No electricity, and unfriendly neighbors too. Oh and a very strict religious code that was in fact law. If you learn to read you can maybe find one bookā-the Bible and not much else.
Well son, back in the days when āthe horse knew the way to grandmaās houseā there were other interests that could be pursued under those blankets, not to mention comfy sleep. :)
back seat bingo. finding the alphabet on the car plates. Color challenges. napping. Mooing at cows. Holding breath while passing cemeteries. picking up feet when crossing rail road tracks
Oh you poor things! No video player in the back seat! My dadās ā56 Chevy didnāt even have a radio. He didnāt even get one until the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Ah, that would be called BOOKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! My parents would take half of my weekly comic book purchases and put them away about two months before a move or long road trip. Later it be paperback or hardcover books like Tom Corbett or Capt. Future, later Ellison or Heinlein.
No siblings so my parents talked to me, it helped them stay awake to boot. Or weād sing ā99 miles of road to driveā the # would re-update at mileage signsā¦..
Wilde Bill about 8 years ago
As I recall, I annoyed my sisters.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] about 8 years ago
The 1600ās had homespun, wool and fire places. No electricity, and unfriendly neighbors too. Oh and a very strict religious code that was in fact law. If you learn to read you can maybe find one bookā-the Bible and not much else.
KenTheCoffinDweller about 8 years ago
Well son, back in the days when āthe horse knew the way to grandmaās houseā there were other interests that could be pursued under those blankets, not to mention comfy sleep. :)
mischugenah about 8 years ago
We were all readers, so weād just bury our noses in books.
Erik McCurdy Premium Member about 8 years ago
Itās astonishing that any children survived roughing it back in the 90sā¦
e.groves about 8 years ago
We had this thing called āImaginationā.
car2ner about 8 years ago
back seat bingo. finding the alphabet on the car plates. Color challenges. napping. Mooing at cows. Holding breath while passing cemeteries. picking up feet when crossing rail road tracks
JudyAz about 8 years ago
keeping a list of license plate states.Are we there yet?
Joliet Jake about 8 years ago
Games and books.
Teto85 Premium Member about 8 years ago
They had good heaters and/or blankets in their cars or on the trains. Thanksgiving did not become a real national holiday until after WWII.
Wilde Bill about 8 years ago
Oh you poor things! No video player in the back seat! My dadās ā56 Chevy didnāt even have a radio. He didnāt even get one until the Cuban Missile Crisis.
mauser7 about 8 years ago
Ah, that would be called BOOKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! My parents would take half of my weekly comic book purchases and put them away about two months before a move or long road trip. Later it be paperback or hardcover books like Tom Corbett or Capt. Future, later Ellison or Heinlein.
roberta.forbes.pyle about 8 years ago
My parents wouldnāt let me read in the car (it made me carsick); so I would stare out the window and daydream. Now Iām the one behind the wheel.
water_moon about 8 years ago
No siblings so my parents talked to me, it helped them stay awake to boot. Or weād sing ā99 miles of road to driveā the # would re-update at mileage signsā¦..