Helvi Oosterman
When I was a kid, we used to get hand-knitted woollen socks for Christmas. Mum was very busy and sometimes she had only enough time to finish one sock, and we had to patiently wait for a whole year for its partner. By the time I was ten, I had received roughly four and half pairs of socks…
Mum was lucky that she did not have to go shopping for the wool; it grew on the backs of our black and white Finn sheep, which was very handy. All she had to do was to send it to the local wool co-op to be processed into a knitting yarn. Some busy people called it LWCO for short, but we had enough time to get the words out, and we used the longer version.
Our Mum was a gentle person, not one of those tough black and white people. She liked nuances and shades better and therefore she also asked the wool to be blended into soft grey. Of course in those days we had never heard of the Aussie Rules that tell you that girls ought to wear pink and that blue is for boys. We were blissfully ignorant of such rulings and were happy just to have warm feet.
Life was good; we did not even know that paedophiles existed in our charmed world. Our parents let us walk to school, so obviously no one had told them either about these bad people. In return we did not tell them of our adventures of swimming in fast flowing rivers and the games we played on breaking up ice floes in springtime…we knew of people who had drowned, but not THAT many…
Now the mums have to buy big black cars and become taxi drivers for their offspring, and by the time the kids turn ten they have sleepless nights before Christmas because they can’t think of anything new they still have to have. They have their laptops, WII’s, IPods, IPads and scooters and trail bikes, and socks and shoes to die for with labels etched into them. Even the pencil cases have to be bought only at some special Smiggle shop; pens and rubbers from K-Mart just don’t cut it…
On Christmas Eve Dad and Big Brother used to go to our own forest and came back with a proper Christmas tree, a spruce with sturdy branches, branches so strong you could hang edible red apples on them, and of course home-made gingerbread biscuits and real candles firmly sitting in their holders…no, we never managed to start a fire…We made sure all the edibles were eaten before the 6th of January, the Finnish Independence Day, and also the customary date for taking the Christmas tree down and out.
Little Max saw a black plastic Christmas tree the other day at some shopping mall and thankfully thought it was horrid, so would have my Mum, if we would have talked about it too loudly on her well-kept grave.
They don’t make Childhoods or Christmases like they used to. I just hope that it is still politically correct to wish you all a very good Christmas…!
Hung, OK, my mistake, too busy with my own concerns, like all of you 😉 So sorry to hear you are not one of us lovely Sagittarians…
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oops again, this is a reply to Hungie…
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Back in 1982 I bought a pair of Norwegian woolen socks at a Saturday market in Nijverdal where my parents were living.
Together with the socks I also bought a lovely flat fish from the fish monger stall. In Holland fish gets crumbed like nowhere in the world and cooked in the best of oils.. .
It seems strange that those socks have remained in my memory joined with that lovely fish experience.
Actually, those socks are not just a memory. They still reside in my sock drawer and in winter I let Helvi wear them.
It was a sunny day as well.
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Thanks, you are too kind 😉
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I’ve just remembered. There’s a place in Tasmania that makes heavy natural knitted woollen socks. They’re all dyed in the wool and warm as toast.
They’re called Mongrel Socks, I kid you not, and they’re all I wear in winter. You can buy them over the net at about $20 a pair. Keep them washed in LUX flakes and they’ll last forever.
http://www.mongrelsocks.com.au/
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They look nice!
Country Road used to sell a pair of white 100% cotton socks I wish they would bring back I paid a mountain for and ‘didn’t mind’.
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Sandshoe, my best cotton socks were American, pricey, but in the long run the cheapest if you divide the price with times you have worn them…
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Thanks for Mongrel Socks site, will check them. The six-degrees of separation is there even with the mongrels…
Gez’ mum knitted a pair nice navy blue woolen socks, they were meant for the Son, but as they were a teeny bit too short for him, they ended in my sock drawer.
We used to buy pure wool socks at Crookwell, but they started to put some synthetics in the mix and I gave up on them.
Mongrels might be a perfect match for the RM Williams boots, soo countryfied…
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Lovely winter scene, but tell me H; the cost of that stamp. Do they print them like that for the dislectic?
And no it will never be incorrect, politically or otherwise, to wish friends and family a happy christmas. So the same right back at ya!
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I wondered about that weird stamp as well, Warrigal.
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Written in Braille, the stamps in Finland also carry the markings “1 lk kl” (First Class) and “Suomi-Finland.
A bit of a mystery but here is an explanation. However, it is also linked to ‘Revontuli’ or the Northern Lights.
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So many Saggies around here – very good. My grandmother used to darn my socks. I didn’t have many socks in the first place. None of them were warm or thick socks and in winter I used to wear two pairs but my feet still felt like frozen marbles in the Melbourne winter.
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My younger brother has the same birthday as me. When we lived in Balmain, a friend who had her birthday in July like Gerard, started having a yearly Leos’ party as she realised that many of our friends were born under the Lion sign.
Now there’s my bit trivia for the day, going to have lunch with Son, two family celebrations in one hit…worth taking a sicky for…
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…gez, i know you waz poor, i also know your mum used to knit your undies; first she unravelled your dad’s oldest jumper and used the best bits of the yarn…many knots had to be tied, all on the inside…must have been very ticklish ?!
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We used to get as a special Christmas treat, and during the war, sugar on our bread, but only if we had bread. Otherwise just a small spoonful of sugar.
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Finnish Independence day is the day after my birthday, hint hint.
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Happy birthday, HOO, for last Sunday (5th?), my son’s birthday was yesterday, and mine is this Saturday,hint,hint,hint…no socks but…
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January
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Happy Birthday, H. I would have said, Happy Birthday to HOO, too, but, now I won’t!
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