ChatterBank0 min ago
todays choice was shopping at birmingham,shopping at cheshire oaks shopping at the potteries centre..
17 Answers
so we went to donnington market......
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.well the fact that i am married to stokemaveric..there is a clue there..STOKE..and i had a CHOICE birmingham is an hour drive away,cheshire oaks 50 minutes and the potteries shopping centre 20 minutes away and donnington maket is 55 minutes away up the a50,i would hardly need a helicopter now would i????.
Boxtops:
Isn't it a sign of old age when you find yourself saying "it's not so many years ago" and realise that it was actually 17 years ago? (The law changed in 1994!).
Welsh:
To me 'Donny' means Doncaster, not Donnington! (There was a time when many Sheffield bus drivers pretended not to have heard of 'Doncaster'. They'd ask 'Dust tha mean Donny, luv?").
Anyone:
Is Donnington market still a 'proper' market or has it (like so many other markets') 'gone posh'? With the big supermarkets now selling clothing, electrical goods and just about anything else, a lot of the traditional 'cheapo' market stalls around here have now disappeared, to be replaced by traders selling 'posh' bread (at £3 or £4 for a small loaf), upmarket cakes (at £1.50 for a cup cake), and luxury 'deli' items (such as cheeses at £20 per kilo).
Isn't it a sign of old age when you find yourself saying "it's not so many years ago" and realise that it was actually 17 years ago? (The law changed in 1994!).
Welsh:
To me 'Donny' means Doncaster, not Donnington! (There was a time when many Sheffield bus drivers pretended not to have heard of 'Doncaster'. They'd ask 'Dust tha mean Donny, luv?").
Anyone:
Is Donnington market still a 'proper' market or has it (like so many other markets') 'gone posh'? With the big supermarkets now selling clothing, electrical goods and just about anything else, a lot of the traditional 'cheapo' market stalls around here have now disappeared, to be replaced by traders selling 'posh' bread (at £3 or £4 for a small loaf), upmarket cakes (at £1.50 for a cup cake), and luxury 'deli' items (such as cheeses at £20 per kilo).
Mrs M, is it still the same? hope so!...and Chris, we always called it Donny Market, think everyone in a 30 mile radius does too!......it used to be great, really cheap, very busy, then as Mrs M said, lovely Sunday lunch at the Hotel by the river (I think!) in Donnington near to Donnington Park!.........
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