Me: "Could you please relocate the exit about 4ft to the North? 🧭 I keep nearly breaking my ankles in Bernie's exploratory welcome holes under the clothes line." 🤷♀️
I’ve always wondered why Aussie washing lines are so robust - you could sling a tarp over the top of them and live beneath them!!
Not like our flimsy European things!!
And here the US enters the clothesline chat. As a kid we had a clothesline and used it often, even with having a dryer. Now I would say the majority of people here do not use a clothesline at all. 👚👗👖👕🧦🩲🩳
I wish I had a clothesline. My first apartment was in a complex of small fourplexes, and there were clotheslines in between buildings. The dryer in the laundry room cost a fortune and didn't work worth a hoot, so I used the clotheslines.
In the 90s, we were the same. Almost everything went in the dryer. Then electricity got really expensive & not using the dryer made a difference to the bill. I don't use the dryer at all any more.
When we first lived here, I had a tarp over half of ours. It was good for keeping dark clothes from fading.
When our son was little, we had a swing seat that we would hang from it. My husband would get it going so fast that our boy 👶 would be sideways in the seat. He loved it.
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Me: "Could you please relocate the exit about 4ft to the North? 🧭 I keep nearly breaking my ankles in Bernie's exploratory welcome holes under the clothes line." 🤷♀️
Not like our flimsy European things!!
Ours is massive. The people who lived here before us had 2 sets of twins under 5 years of age.
https://hillshome.com.au/collections/hills-hoist-clotheslines
My Grandmas in England had a length of rope & poles to prop it up. Setting the line up was both a workout & intelligence test. 🤷♀️
When our son was little, we had a swing seat that we would hang from it. My husband would get it going so fast that our boy 👶 would be sideways in the seat. He loved it.
#AussieEntertainmentCentre
#funforallofthefamily.