Sunday, September 25, 2022

Fwd: Old Milk Bottles


Old Milk Bottles - Various uses

 

Some decades ago, our local dairies used to deliver milk in stout and strong glass bottles. I remember that the capacity was half a litre. Buffalo milk was popular. Consistency of contents in terms of fat, quality, colour and flavour was of high order. People used to return empty bottles in exchange for a fresh supply. So, the bottles were in great circulation. Breakage was rare compared to the volume of business. Though customers used to wash them before exchanging empty bottles, cleaning was not proper. Dairies spend a lot of time and money cleaning them after every use, otherwise fresh filling will be spoiled. Progress in technology affording much better and cheaper polythene sachets / pouches made such glass bottles obsolete. Those days are gone but not memories connected with them.

 

At times you are left with a couple of empty milk bottles. They were put to different uses. Some of them that I can recall are listed below:

 

1.       Filled with coloured sand, it can be used as a paperweight on our Tables

2.       Filled with hot water, it can be used as a hot compress for wounds / injuries / sprains

3.       Filled with Ice Cold water, it serves as a cold compress for reducing fever

4.       When you want 500 ml of a liquid in the kitchen, it turns into a measuring device

5.       It can be used to grow small creepers / flower plants etc decorating the window

6.       Painted bottles become handy candle holders, hangers etc

7.       Broken bottles too may be sent for recycling

8.       Persons practicing onanism may find a handy tool in this ubiquitous glass bottle

9.       Of course, it can be used for storing Puja oil or other liquids

10.   Some may sell it to the scrapes collector and make some pennies

 

Ten is an ideal count for any enumerative write-up. Therefore, I stop right here.

 

 

   

Dr P Vyasamoorthy / 9490804278

Saturday, August 27, 2022

Re: Street Vendors and their calls

Additional comments
Please see
https://youtu.be/c5adwDitdKg
Advantages of such hawkers' wails:
  • You can know the approximate time, if you are regular
  • You can guess the state, language and availability of vendor's wares
  • you can entertain yourself guessing what the item being sold is and venture out to verify if it is correct
  • Learn how the vendors are automating their work by playing recorded sales pitch
  • One lady even earned a PhD on this topic!
  • Appreciate how service at your doorstep eases your life

Dr P Vyasamoorthy / 9490804278

Dr P Vyasamoorthy / 9490804278


On Sun, 3 Jul 2022 at 12:15, Padmanabha Vyasamoorthy <vyasamoorthy@gmail.com> wrote:

Have you paid any attention to the high pitched calls of street vendors in your area? We see people selling vegetables, green leaves, Rangoli powder (Moggu) etc. Then there are house to house garbage collectors, old clothes exchangers, mobile vans vending Saibaba's grace / blessings too. Each one has a distinctly unique wail. Some could be sweet and enjoyable, as the one seen in the audio clip given below. Some could be so harsh, deafening and jarring that in cities like Bengaluru, street vendors are prohibited from using the megaphone.  There was an old man in our colony suffering from Alzheimer' Disease; he made frequent complaints to the police about street vendors' offensive / disturbing noise. I have even gone out of the house to find out what one is selling so that I won't miss him, as at times their wails may not make sense. 

Street vendor selling watermelon in the city of Savannah Georgia, USA in 1939

Do you like hawkers' howling? Senior citizens are less tolerant. Hence my question.

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Dr P Vyasamoorthy / 9490804278