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- My mother's basement
We have threads here devoted to vintage things that have disappeared in our lifetime, vintage things that haven’t disappeared in our lifetime, and vintage things that reappeared in our lifetime. But how about those everyday things we are happy to leave in the past?
While taking the trash down to the curb this morning I was again reminded of how superior these wheeled plastic bins with attached lids are to the galvanized steel garbage cans we had in decades past. The new ones aren’t quite indestructible, but they don’t rust, they don’t dent, their lids don’t blow away, they hold more and they’re a helluva lot easier to handle.
I still resent being tasked with cleaning the garbage cans when I was a kid. This was before the age of the plastic kitchen garbage can liner bag. Refuse was put in the kitchen and bathroom receptacles until they were filled and then dumped into the big can outside. It became a smelly, sometimes maggot-infested mess stuck to the interior of the can.
While taking the trash down to the curb this morning I was again reminded of how superior these wheeled plastic bins with attached lids are to the galvanized steel garbage cans we had in decades past. The new ones aren’t quite indestructible, but they don’t rust, they don’t dent, their lids don’t blow away, they hold more and they’re a helluva lot easier to handle.
I still resent being tasked with cleaning the garbage cans when I was a kid. This was before the age of the plastic kitchen garbage can liner bag. Refuse was put in the kitchen and bathroom receptacles until they were filled and then dumped into the big can outside. It became a smelly, sometimes maggot-infested mess stuck to the interior of the can.