hollydolly
SF VIP
- Location
- London England
...and cookie don't forget the collectable cards with loose tea...and also with bubble gum..
When I was little, we lived in California and drove to visit relatives in Oklahoma and Arkansas every once in a while, crossing the desert to do so. Does anybody remember a sort of burlap water bag thing that fit around the bumper in front of the car, and you put water in it and used it when crossing the desert in case of vaporlock or a leaky radiator? My dad was very religious about being sure the bags were filled. This would have been around 1950.
AZ Jim -- I hadn't even thought the word "vaporlock" in years and years until I wrote the above post. When I was a teenager vaporlock was a problem with the cars we (or our boyfriends) had then -- usually the cars were years and years old. Just out of curiousity, why don't cars vaporlock any more?
And gas operated wringer washing machines.Gas fuelled refrigerators and bath heaters.
I remember my grandpa setting a steel bucket full of course sand on top of the wood stove. Once the sand was hot, he'd sift the bucket over the stairs and driveway.Coal delivery, using the coal ashes in the snowy driveway, school,desks with a place for the inkwell, flashlight batteries that lasted maybe three days, steering wheel suicide spinners.
I had one of those when I got out of the Navy in San Diego and drove home to the east coast. No interstates in 1959.When I was little, we lived in California and drove to visit relatives in Oklahoma and Arkansas every once in a while, crossing the desert to do so. Does anybody remember a sort of burlap water bag thing that fit around the bumper in front of the car, and you put water in it and used it when crossing the desert in case of vaporlock or a leaky radiator? My dad was very religious about being sure the bags were filled. This would have been around 1950.