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Bread/milk deliveries

Just getting back from a restaurant with the family and on a back road I spotted an old, circa 1950's perhaps, milk truck rotting away in a field.
 
I have never seen this outside of television, ever. We do have guys called Arabbers who go around with horse-drawn carts selling fruit though...
 
I don't recall which company delivered milk to my house when I was a kid (either Cloverland or Sealtest). We had a galvanized steel box next to the back door steps with the company name on it which I suppose was for insulation purposes. I still remember Cloverland's phone number after all these years -- North9-2222 (thanks to those jingles permanently etched in the brain).
 
My mom and sister still get regular milk deliveries to their houses. My mom has a weekly delivery while my sister has a twice weekly delivery.

I don't think it's available where I live.
 
We have milk deliveries around where I live, from the dairy. We buy our milk direct from another dairy otherwise we'd use this service.

Mr Awe
 
We used to get milk deliveries when I was a kid, early 90s. Not sure what happened to them, but I haven't seen the milk float driving around for years, I think the dairy is still there though. We've never had bread deliveries here though..
 
My Grandad was a proud milkman for over 20 years before he retired in the late 70s. He was the genuine archetypal milkman ~ solid, dependable and helpful. And could carry 4 pint bottles per hand ~ none of these namby pamby carriers in those times. I remember the great excitement of helping him count out his tips at Christmas, in l.s.d.! When he retired his 'round' held a street party for him to his great embarrassment.

Last time I saw a milkman, a couple of years ago, his float was getting robbed by kids on their way to school. It was a very sad sign of our times :(

*Watch out, watch out, there's a Humphrey about*
Gold star to anyone that knows what I'm referring to ~ LOL
 
My Grandad was a proud milkman for over 20 years before he retired in the late 70s. He was the genuine archetypal milkman ~ solid, dependable and helpful. And could carry 4 pint bottles per hand ~ none of these namby pamby carriers in those times. I remember the great excitement of helping him count out his tips at Christmas, in l.s.d.! When he retired his 'round' held a street party for him to his great embarrassment.

Last time I saw a milkman, a couple of years ago, his float was getting robbed by kids on their way to school. It was a very sad sign of our times :(

*Watch out, watch out, there's a Humphrey about*
Gold star to anyone that knows what I'm referring to ~ LOL
That rings a bell...but beyond that, I got nothing!

And on the subject of milk floats...I remember seeing hand-operated milk floats when I were a lad. Imagine, if you will, a milk float that looked like one of these:

MilkFloat2.jpg


But with a handle on the front instead of a drivers' cab, not unlike this:

MilkFloat.jpg


The float would (obviously) progress at walking speed with the handle acting as a tiller for steering. Moving the handle up/down would turn the motor on/off.

Weirdness!
 
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