Quote: Originally posted by JACQSZOO on 15/8/2010 Tea or hot chocolate! Neither of us are big drinkers although it has been known for us to have the odd lager! God we sound soooo boring lol
Tea and water , though i have been known to have the odd coffee and no your not boring
I prefer a cuppa coffee or a Dr Pepper and OH prefers his tea lol
Occasionally we'll go all out and have a Baileys and OH a beer but its rare
Been there and done all my drinking, now it just makes me tired
I thought reading the start of this thread I was going to be the boring one again! Tea for us too, or one glass or red for me with a steak.
It goes back to an incident where we needed to leave quickly and couldn't because we had been drinking, would not like to be in that position again.
Do both parents drink when your away, what happens if your child becomes ill?
Grandparents are there if children become ill, they don't drink. Theres 4 to choose from! Else one of us would not drink.
I like beer, myself. Being American, this means that I need to have plenty of ice to keep it cold (we don't just chill our lager. No matter what sort of "beer" it is, we like it ice cold.) I always bring some bottles with me in the ice chest, and the first thing I do after getting the tent pitched and everything set up is to open a bottle and relax!
Wine, being so sugary, doesn't make for a good night's sleep or a pleasant following morning. I also find it's too easy to drink too much of it. I can have just one beer and relax, but I never want just one glass of wine.
For me it is ice cold milk in the mornings - whatever the weather, full fat coke during the day and Vodka and coke early evening onwards. I don't drink tea or coffee so if a warm drink is required, then it has to be hot chocolate.
I have tried drinking other alcohol but do not like the taste of anything else! I could manage a glass of wine but it would have to be topped up with lemonade! I could manage champers but it would have to be topped up with orange juice!
------------- Sue
Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.