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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Gosh. I can not believe that people are setting fireworks off already!!

30 replies

DabblesInDarknessWithALightOn · 11/10/2007 22:10

It truly is appauling. Do you not think?

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PelvicfloorLotsofGore · 11/10/2007 22:12

Bastards

Elasticbandstand · 11/10/2007 22:12

isnt it an indian night of fire or some such?
though

Alambil · 11/10/2007 22:13

it's the last night of ramadan - that will be why

Elasticbandstand · 11/10/2007 22:17

i thought end of ramadam was at weekend?

Desiderata · 11/10/2007 22:18

It's probably Diwali, or some such.

You can't keep blaming the Brits any more

Desiderata · 11/10/2007 22:22

No, apparently Diwali is on November 9th, this year.

Elasticbandstand · 11/10/2007 22:22

i did read it was some celebration of autumn, but can't remember which faith

Alambil · 11/10/2007 22:23

just googled the date and it said 11th Oct

fishie · 11/10/2007 22:25

eid (end of ramadan) is saturday. i have noticed far fewer unseasonal fireworks since new regs introduced.

Elasticbandstand · 11/10/2007 22:26

Navaratri/Durga Puja/Dussehra

Hindu and today

Elasticbandstand · 11/10/2007 22:27

are there new regs on fireworks?

Desiderata · 11/10/2007 22:28

Lewis, the date of Diwali was 11th October? I googled up something different.

Desiderata · 11/10/2007 22:30

But what is defined as 'unseasonal' these days? I am assuming that different cultures are allowed their festivals?

I assumed that the new reg's applied purely to Guy Fawkes Night. More research required methinks

Alambil · 11/10/2007 22:31

2007 CALENDAR OF IMPORTANT ISLAMIC DATES
Aashura: January 29, 2007
Ramadan: September 13 - October 11, 2007
Eid ul-Fitr: October 12, 2007
Hajj: December 18 - December 21, 2007
Eid ul-Adha: December 20, 2007
Islamic New Year: January 9, 2008 (1429 A.H.)

that's what I got from here - not that it means it is right of course!

fishie · 11/10/2007 22:34

i think it is only allowed to buy them for festivals. of course one could argue all sorts of festivals, but it does put off some. i live beside a sort of common in london so suffer plenty teenage fireworkers.

ScaryScaryNight · 11/10/2007 22:37

Sorry Lewisfan I think Desi is right, Diwali November 9th in 2007
look here

bookwormmum · 11/10/2007 22:40

In my borough you can only buy fireworks from 15th October -10th November which covers Diwali, Hallowe'en and Guy Fawkes nights. Presumably no-one in the borough has all-year fireworks licence - which is hardly surprising as last year they cost in the region of £500. Probably just as well.

fishie · 11/10/2007 22:41

i have been reading new regs. too dull but main point is no under 18s may buy or posess a firework and if you buy more than 50kgs must register.

bookwormmum · 11/10/2007 22:48

Seriously if you are being disturbed by fireworks then ring the police and the council. Even better if you know where u-18s are getting their fireworks from - you can drop the supplier right in it since the council will send in a under-age person to do a test purchase. The firework regs are quite stringent as Fishie said. (I worked in a trading standards/licensing dept last year and this sort of thing is their priority at this time of year)

DabblesInDarknessWithALightOn · 11/10/2007 22:52

ohh, bookwormmum - u sound like a cold calculated bitch! i like u!!

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Alambil · 11/10/2007 22:56

am being dense - what has diwali on Nov 9th got to do with tonight (Oct 11th) ?

sorry - am really rather dense!

Elasticbandstand · 11/10/2007 22:57

actually fire works are for my birthday .. probably..
or justines

sKerryMum · 11/10/2007 22:58

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ScaryScaryNight · 11/10/2007 23:01

Sorry Lewisfan, I am the dense one:

By LewisFanBAHons on Thu 11-Oct-07 22:23:02
just googled the date and it said 11th Oct
By Elasticbandstand on Thu 11-Oct-07 22:22:57
i did read it was some celebration of autumn, but can't remember which faith
By Desiderata on Thu 11-Oct-07 22:22:15
No, apparently Diwali is on November 9th, this year.

I thought you were responding to Desi

Reading back you are saying it is end of Ramadan today, and not Diwali.

DabblesInDarknessWithALightOn · 11/10/2007 23:05

sKerryMum - i started a very similar thread but with a a diff title a copuple of mintues before but got almost no replies...

see here isnt it funny how people replies based on wording

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