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1st November 10, 04:58 PM
#1
Cavscout's link is useful if you want lots of the metal lapel pins but if you just want the one this link is useful Same store, different page.
Interesting to note that these metal poppy badges with the leaf at 11 o'clock are sold for individual purchase only and the ones with the leaf at 1 o'clock are sold for bulk orders only.
I have one of each and bought my 1 o'clock variant at a CWWG memorial in France (36 Ulster Div). The Poppy seller at my local Sainsbury's this year suggested I was wearing a fake because the leaf wasn't at 11 and showed me that all of his were the same. I politely referred him to the poppy-shop website (I am a Royal British Legion member too so I wouldn't wear a fake.)
The poppy appeal do get more back from sales of the 11 o'clock poppies but if you want masses for distribution amongst your mates then the 1 o'clock is probably the way to go. Don't worry, they are both legal and have the added bonus you can wear them all year round (as many people in UK are doing now).
Good luck in your quest for paper poppies. Have a browse around the poppy-shop site, there's loads of good stuff to be had. Check out the umbrellas.
Last edited by English Bloke; 1st November 10 at 05:04 PM.
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2nd November 10, 01:24 AM
#2
My great-uncle, Alexander, died of abdominal wounds in WW1. He'd already been injured once before, but went back for a second go at it!
Brave men indeed...
Slainte to uncle Alex!
Bruce
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2nd November 10, 03:56 AM
#3
Years ago anarmy friend of mine had a part in a musical called Oh, What A Lovely War. He would sing songs from it in camp, and the one that always bought tears to my eyes was one called Far, far from Wipers (I recall it as Far Away from Wipers). It goes:
Far, far from Wipers I long to be.
Where German snipers can't get at me.
Dark is my dugout, cold are my feet.
Waiting for Whizzbangs to send me to sleep.
A footnote explains that Wipers is Ypres. This is the French spelling of the name. The town is in fact in Flanders, and its actual name is Ieper.
Regards,
Mike
The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life.
[Proverbs 14:27]
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2nd November 10, 03:58 AM
#4
Years ago an army friend of mine had a part in a musical called Oh, What A Lovely War. He would sing songs from it in camp, and the one that always bought tears to my eyes was one called Far, far from Wipers (I recall it as Far Away from Wipers). It goes:
Far, far from Wipers I long to be.
Where German snipers can't get at me.
Dark is my dugout, cold are my feet.
Waiting for Whizzbangs to send me to sleep.
A footnote explains that Wipers is Ypres. This is the French spelling of the name. The town is in fact in Flanders, and its actual name is Ieper.
Regards,
Mike
The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life.
[Proverbs 14:27]
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2nd November 10, 06:54 AM
#5
 Originally Posted by English Bloke
Cavscout's link is useful if you want lots of the metal lapel pins but if you just want the one this link is useful Same store, different page.
Interesting to note that these metal poppy badges with the leaf at 11 o'clock are sold for individual purchase only and the ones with the leaf at 1 o'clock are sold for bulk orders only.
I have one of each and bought my 1 o'clock variant at a CWWG memorial in France (36 Ulster Div). The Poppy seller at my local Sainsbury's this year suggested I was wearing a fake because the leaf wasn't at 11 and showed me that all of his were the same. I politely referred him to the poppy-shop website (I am a Royal British Legion member too so I wouldn't wear a fake.)
The poppy appeal do get more back from sales of the 11 o'clock poppies but if you want masses for distribution amongst your mates then the 1 o'clock is probably the way to go. Don't worry, they are both legal and have the added bonus you can wear them all year round (as many people in UK are doing now).
Good luck in your quest for paper poppies. Have a browse around the poppy-shop site, there's loads of good stuff to be had. Check out the umbrellas.
Thanks for the lore, and also for the link. That may be the slowest-to-load website I've had since the days of dial up. But I will persevere- a pin would be a long-term solution to my annual problem.
Canadian poppies are excellent BTW and the charity is a particularly outstanding one- but on the 11th I wear both styles if possible.
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2nd November 10, 08:06 AM
#6
No disrespect intended to the Royal Canadian Legion or anybody else's veteran charities. They all do a valuable service in providing support where there would otherwise be none. Sterling stuff indeed.
Incidentally.

Standing at the the headstone of my Great Great Uncle Sydney. Killed in Sept 1917 during the battle of Passchendaele (third battle of Ypres). He's buried in Tyne Cot CWGC cemetary. He left Yorkshire in his teens and emigrated to Australia, enlisting into the 1st AIF in Jan 1915. He was wounded at Gallipoli and again wounded in France and Convalesced in No.2 Command Depot Weymouth, Dorset on both occasions before meeting his untimely end in Belgium with the 5th Australian Division. Brave bloke. Braver than me anyroad!
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2nd November 10, 10:38 AM
#7
People from all over are generously PM-ing me with offers to send poppies. However, I panicked yesterday and got on the phone and now have some on the way from the UK, so once again thanks to everyone. Now all that has to happen is for the Royal Mail and Canada Post to do their part and....
ohhhh nooooo! Canada Post? What was I thinking?
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2nd November 10, 12:46 PM
#8
My grandson, 15 months old, has found out that the paper poppies can be disassembled if you run off with Nana's hat and find a quiet corner in which to work on the pretty thing undisturbed for a few minutes....
He must be going to follow in the family tradition of engineering - he got it apart without doing damage to it.
Fear not Canuck - recently I Air Mailed a beret to Canada and it arrived in just four days, posted on Monday and there on Thursday.
Anne the Pleater :ootd:
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2nd November 10, 12:54 PM
#9
 Originally Posted by Pleater
My grandson, 15 months old, has found out that the paper poppies can be disassembled if you run off with Nana's hat and find a quiet corner in which to work on the pretty thing undisturbed for a few minutes....
He must be going to follow in the family tradition of engineering - he got it apart without doing damage to it.
Fear not Canuck - recently I Air Mailed a beret to Canada and it arrived in just four days, posted on Monday and there on Thursday.
Anne the Pleater :ootd:
Good to know Anne. I told them to leave the straight pin out so that the poppy won't trip some magnetometer or xray alert. I'll hopefully have it in time.
Perhaps I'll have this one encased in lucite or something, and make a pin out of it.
Last edited by Lallans; 2nd November 10 at 01:04 PM.
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