From time to time I like to reminisce about days gone by
(and, in the process, sound exactly
like my parents did, thus boring the socks off of anyone under 40). Thanks to
the changes I’ve seen in my lifetime – especially during my working years – I
am the proud possessor of skills that are totally useless in 2012.
The short list is:
- I can (safely) tap a beer keg. Not the new ones, but the old fashioned type. These are the ones that, if badly managed, can result in injury or even death as the rod flies up and into your head (usually entering the head or, at best striking you very hard under the chin).
- I can change a ribbon on a manual typewriter.
- With a little bit of refresher practice, I think i can remember my copy fitting formulas, so that I can tell you how many words at a given font size will fit a given space.
- I still remember most of my proofreaders marks (and still use them, much to the confusion of my work colleagues who wonder why I wrote # and 'stet' on their document.)
- I (vaguely) recall how logarithms work – and I can certainly do long division without a calculator.
- Although I never learnt how to cast on or cast off, I can knit – but I forget how to do pearl stitches.
I seem to recall there was a (shot lived) fad at primary
school. A lot of boys were knitting in arts and craft classes and I recall that
the needles were overly thick, perhaps to make it easier for kid’s fingers. I
made a longish scarf, only because knitting a big long thing was all I could
do.
It’s this last, lost skill that came to mind most recently,
thanks to the ABC ’s annual ‘Knit In’
promotion. I was still home from work and listened to a lot more radio than I
would normally be able to and so, the annual ‘Knit In’ got more of my attention
than usual.
The event was, as always, remarkably successful. More than
1,000 knitters headed along to the ABC
studios in Sydney and beavered away
knitting squares (I think they’re around 8” square or so), which are then
packed up and sent off to be sewn together to make blankets. These are sent overseas to people in need.
The ABC ‘Knit In’ was
launched 10 years ago, to support the main initiative program, called ‘Wrap
with Love. ‘Wrap with Love’ began in 1993 and, since then, over 255,000 wraps
have been knitted (square by square), sewn together and sent off overseas. There have also been around 8,000 distributed
around Australia ,
with over 3,000 going to victims of the Victorian bushfires in 2009.
Here’s another of my special ‘likes’ – a lot of people doing
relatively small things to make a real difference in the world. In the first
year, the founder (the late Sonia Gidley-King OAM) and 30 supporters sent 38
wraps off to Mozambique
in a container of farm machinery. So, the 250,000+ total is even more
impressive!
They got into the spirit in my local are as well, as reported in The Leader.
http://www.theleader.com.au/news/local/news/general/knitting-warm-gifts-for-the-needy/2646982.aspx
They got into the spirit in my local are as well, as reported in The Leader.
http://www.theleader.com.au/news/local/news/general/knitting-warm-gifts-for-the-needy/2646982.aspx
Time to break out the knitting needles Trev! J
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