What I Didn't Expect about the UK // House Names?! // Living in the UK

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  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 721

  • @joyfulzero853
    @joyfulzero853 2 года назад +4

    Ideally you will have a reasonable size sink so that when you put your bowl in the sink you have space around it. you can put things in the bowl to soak for a while if you wish but still have access to the sink, it needs less hot water to fill the bowl, you can rinse the washed items without 'diluting' the washing water (if you wish) and other benefits.
    You can use the bowl to soak your tired, aching feet as well!

  • @BoredOfBills
    @BoredOfBills 2 года назад +3

    Washing up bowl - really simple - unless your house is fairly new and has a metal sink then the sink is made of china, your dishes are made of china, if one meets the other with any energy the dish will break. So, introduce a soft, forgiving intermediary - a soft bowl. Traditionally, the laundry was done in the sink, babies were bathed in the sink and anything that needed hot water and energy was done in the sink (still true) but dishes are not free and unless you have a dishwasher (or a metal sink) you will be washing your dishes in a sink - so you need a soft bowl. Further, check out the SIZE of those ceramic sinks - they are necessarily big enough to bathe babies and do laundry - try heating enough water to fill one (expensive and time consuming) so introduce a "mini sink" just big enough to wash the dishes and then put away. Old habits die hard in the UK and we like a bit of old fashioned here and there...

  • @billyhills9933
    @billyhills9933 2 года назад +66

    What you have to remember with house names is that sometimes the house has been there for hundreds of years. Chances are that the road didn't have an official name when it was built.
    If you see an old house with a number surrounded by newer houses, it's likely that that house could have been the only one in the road for a long while. Whatever number it has it received at a far later date as the building plots along the road were filled up.

    • @davidfrost1961
      @davidfrost1961 2 года назад +7

      Yes I have a early Victorian cottage for two hundred years was on it's own. now village built up I have only address with no Street or number just name

    • @Strider9655
      @Strider9655 2 года назад +3

      @@davidfrost1961 It has a number, you just don't know it.

    • @MrDannyDetail
      @MrDannyDetail 2 года назад +5

      @@Strider9655 Every parish and/or borough will be different on this. It is entirely possible that her cottage has never been assigned a house number at any stage, particularly if it is locally well known and therefore not easily confused with anywhere else. She will, however have a Royal Mail postal code, either specific to her cottage, or else the same as everyone else on the road.

    • @richmaniow
      @richmaniow 2 года назад +2

      In my street the houses have just name's, no numbers, but that's fairly rare these days as most properties have an official allocated number but the owners may have given their home a name as well to give it a bit of character but these names aren't usually recognised by the post office.

    • @billyhills9933
      @billyhills9933 2 года назад +3

      @@richmaniow Ah yes, the craze to give houses the name Chez Nous or Dun Roamin that started in the 70s.

  • @charlesunderwood6334
    @charlesunderwood6334 2 года назад +7

    How can you manage without a washing up bowl? You use less water which you can change more quickly, it stops metal pans scratching the sink and being plastic prevents glasses from getting broken in the sink.

  • @andrewgilbertson5356
    @andrewgilbertson5356 2 года назад +5

    If you use a washing bowl you can use the water on your garden.

  • @paulmk2290
    @paulmk2290 2 года назад +23

    I went to the US in the late 70s expecting to be able to take buses. When we found bus stops that's all the information you got, 'Bus Stop,' with no clues as to where the buses were going or when. The inference being that if you needed a bus you must be local and somehow know the details through local knowledge. In the UK timetables are invariably posted up at the bus stops.

    • @skellious
      @skellious 2 года назад +3

      they were up until covid. now my local busncomoany has decided to stop putting up timtables and it's infuriating. I have to keep helping people who dont know how to look up timetables on their phones.

    • @Robob0027
      @Robob0027 2 года назад +2

      True but they are useless because ever since a London no. 11 bus was torpedo in Whitehall in 1940 they have run in convoy therefore you wait for 30 minutes and then 3 come at once.

    • @JaneAustenAteMyCat
      @JaneAustenAteMyCat 4 месяца назад

      Not any more - now you have to look on your phone via a QR code

  • @MrJohnL21
    @MrJohnL21 2 года назад +1

    A 'mail slot' in English English is a 'letter box', because there often used to be a 'box' of some sort attached to the door behind the 'slot'.

  • @jimappleby3545
    @jimappleby3545 2 года назад +25

    We call it a letter box - even when there's no actual box involved. It distinguishes it from a 'post box', the cast iron thing that stands in the street, and confusingly is painted a bright colour called 'pillar box bed'.
    The original pillar boxes were designed by the novelist Anthony Trollope (Barchester Towers etc) and the first one, which is still in use, stands on Guernsey in the Channel Isles after 170 years. You'll still find the occasional one from Victorian times with "VR" on it.
    I really love your blog - keep it coming. It makes me look at the UK with new eyes and prompts me to appreciate so many things we take for granted here.

    • @steveknight878
      @steveknight878 2 года назад

      I can understand your confusion over Pillar Box Bed. More commonly, of course, it is called pillar box red, which is far less confusing. :-)

    • @evelynwilson1566
      @evelynwilson1566 2 года назад

      wow, that's so interesting about Anthony Trollope. Was he an engineer or something similar by trade?

    • @jimappleby3545
      @jimappleby3545 2 года назад +1

      @@evelynwilson1566 - nothing quite so banal. Trollope was later a successful author, but spent some of his time teaching in Belgium after his father's law business in England failed. He was on the point of joining the Austrian cavalry when a friend offered him a job at the newly established General Post Office in England, which created the world's first public mail service (posting a letter to anywhere within the British Isles cost just a penny.)
      At first letters had to be taken to a Post Office until Trollope's bright idea of siting mailboxes around towns, cities and out in the countryside made the whole thing more convenient for the public.
      Trollope was often in trouble for insubordination, and moved to Ireland to escape creditors.
      The "Penny Post" became a great success after the railways began to criss-cross the country. and the idea spread across the world.
      You'll find out more on Wikipedia.

  • @DaveF.
    @DaveF. 2 года назад +134

    Oh, and queue the dozens of messages about the inherent superiority of the British Plug. (Seriously, if there's one thing that Brits bang on about, it's how amazing a design the mains plug is). They're not wrong - it's a genius bit of design. Unless you step on it.

    • @JG-fv9bv
      @JG-fv9bv 2 года назад +18

      I often wonder if whoever invented the plug also had a hand in inventing the single Lego block ....same levels of pain when stepped or knelt on

    • @killerbye1985
      @killerbye1985 2 года назад +4

      Our South African plug is very similar, but we use round pins and our plugs aren't fused. But it seems crazy to me to not have a switch.

    • @TheHookahSmokingCaterpillar
      @TheHookahSmokingCaterpillar 2 года назад +12

      The plug was designed (or rather specified) by committee during WW2 as the government planned for what would be needed after the war.
      In 1941 Lord Reith, as minister for Works and Planning established various committees to look at post-war rebuilding, one of which was the Electrical Installation Committee. One of the members, the only woman and the only safety expert, was Caroline Haslett. The very first requirement in the specification for the new plug (BS1363) was "To ensure the safety of young children..." The regulations they came up with also covered sockets.
      The committee also recommended the "ring circuit" which is ubiquitous in British houses.

    • @killerbye1985
      @killerbye1985 2 года назад +5

      @@TheHookahSmokingCaterpillar One of the few times a committee designed something useful. LOL

    • @TheHookahSmokingCaterpillar
      @TheHookahSmokingCaterpillar 2 года назад +12

      @@killerbye1985 I reckon those committees than planned for post-war Britain did a lot of great things we now take for granted.

  • @andrewcross5918
    @andrewcross5918 2 года назад +2

    If you want a house name just give it one and start using it.
    As for post it works pretty well, post code can be determined by geographic location then as long as your house is well clearly marked the post will get to you. So if you buy some land and do a self build then for post you just invent a name, clearly mark on the house/gate the name and post can get delivered. Also there are post boxes but they tend to be on larger properties with gates and fences surrounding them that prevent access to the front door.

  • @insoft_uk
    @insoft_uk 2 года назад +15

    One thing she didn’t bring up about delivering is that our delivery 📦 are given to the person not left outside on a door step

    • @TheEulerID
      @TheEulerID 4 месяца назад +3

      All my UK deliveries are to the doorstep, although that is a choice.

    • @guypainter
      @guypainter Месяц назад +1

      And the paper boy doesn't throw the paper from the street... we prefer it to arrive intact!

    • @DenisePeel
      @DenisePeel Месяц назад

      My last delivery was left on the doorstep, in full view of anyone passing by. (UK).

  • @sarahhardy8649
    @sarahhardy8649 2 года назад +10

    The thing about a washing up bowl is that it deals with your food “equipment” for want of a better word. We also use sinks for prepping veg (freshly pulled beetroot tends to be quite muddy). As a splash container if we are decanting “something”. Somethings that end up in sinks are generally not nice (please remember we don’t tend to have waste disposals) so it’s better to scrap off our plates, cutlery, pots & pans into the bin, rinse them over the side of the bowl into the general sink and then wash them in a bowl that hasn’t been contaminated with god knows what. Yes, we clean our sinks almost religiously, but the thought is still quite yucky.

  • @rolandbellamy2837
    @rolandbellamy2837 2 года назад +3

    years ago i lived in mablethorpe on the lincolnshire coast , one year i got a christmas card from my neice who lived in barnsley yorkshire , all it said on the envolope was , " UNCLE ROLY , MABLETHORPE " :)

    • @andrewmcgee382
      @andrewmcgee382 4 месяца назад +2

      There is a legend -prorbably apochryphal, but never mind - that a letter simply addressed
      Wood
      John
      Hants
      Was correctly addressed to
      John Underwood
      Andover
      Hants.

  • @martingibbs1179
    @martingibbs1179 2 года назад +24

    The post office uses "post codes" to direct mail in the UK. Every road or road segment if it's very long has its own unique post code. For every post code there is a list of all the postal addresses registered for that post code. This can be a mixture of house names or numbers and for the post people they typically get taught by a senior and there are maps that indicate where in a road each house is located.

    • @gillcawthorn7572
      @gillcawthorn7572 2 года назад +5

      She would know this a the Zip code

    • @johnclements6614
      @johnclements6614 2 года назад

      The post office has machines that read the post code and sort the letters accordingly. Where the machine can not read the post code a person will. When I visited a local sorting office whilst at school the unreadable letters went along a conveyor in front of the person who used a keyboard and then the letter had something printed on it then back to the sorting machine. The postman would then sort by hand the letters within a post code. That was some time ago so must be more mechanised now.

    • @MeFreeBee
      @MeFreeBee 2 года назад +6

      @@gillcawthorn7572 I believe that UK postcodes are more localised than a US zip code, by which I mean each unique postcode covers fewer addresses than a typical zip code does.

    • @gillcawthorn7572
      @gillcawthorn7572 2 года назад +2

      @@MeFreeBee In my street of about 40 properties all have the same postcode.

    • @marklehuray1091
      @marklehuray1091 2 года назад +1

      @@johnclements6614 most letters do arrive in order (codesorted) but all packets are still sorted by hand as well as unmachinable mail which is still done as you described.

  • @craftyclaira
    @craftyclaira 2 года назад +5

    And also to blow your mind...when using trains in Europe the city station will have trains listed on departure boards for many other countries and they all usually run like clockwork! Example Paris will have trains listed for Milan/Berlin/ Madrid/Riga/ Brussels etc -daily! This always amazes me snd I'm from the UK

  • @nigelbarber3300
    @nigelbarber3300 3 месяца назад +2

    Rout?
    I guess you mean Route?
    It is said as
    Root.
    I hope this helps.
    Good videos. Keep.them coming.

  • @davemiller4385
    @davemiller4385 2 года назад +7

    house names in the north east are more common due the vast open countryside and farms. in the uk we call a mail slot a letter box as some homes have a box on the inside for your mail to drop into . 3 pin uk plugs are because we have 3 wires running through our supply ( live negative and earth )

  • @glo0115
    @glo0115 2 года назад +5

    I used to love living in ”The Penthouse, Dudley House”, fancy name for a small, cramped flat in a converted attic of an old house 🤣

  • @clairenoon4070
    @clairenoon4070 2 года назад +10

    Washing up bowl: I tend to use the sink for 'dirtier' jobs (flowers, pouring out old flower water etc) so I prefer to wash dishes in the 'cleaner' washing up bowl. Also, plastic is kinder to a glass or china cup that slips out of your soapy hands than the metal sink would be.
    House names: almost all towns and villages (except 20th Cent. designed 'New Towns') grew organically, so have a range of housing ages ranging over centuries. In the town where I live, the oldest houses are 1500s thatched cottages 5 minutes walk from my house which is 1980s, and there are house ages ranging between the two. You couldn't have given numbers to the thatched cottages, and then consecutively numbered what was built nearby in the 1600s, 1700s and so on, because there were gaps between which gradually got filled in with newer again houses.
    Also, most people in the 1500s/1600s/1700s were illiterate, so wouldn't have been able to read either a house name or number, so most houses didn't actually have a 'sign' on them; the names were just verbal and related to the nature of the property e.g. The Vicarage, Fletcher's Farm, Hill Top House, Lane End Cottage etc. For the same reason, pubs always had (and usually still do) a pictorial sign of its name outside e.g. a picture of a Golden Lion, as it's the only way illiterate people could find it if given directions - they wouldn't have been able to read the words.

    • @grahamo22
      @grahamo22 2 года назад +1

      Its also that most UK houses only have one sink trap, so if you are washing up in the sink, you cannot pour anything away. You wash up in the bowl and anythng that needs pouring away while washing, goes into the sink and not the washing up water.

  • @kinglear5952
    @kinglear5952 2 года назад

    Good to see you again this is the first video of yours to appear on my feed for a long time. I hope you and your family are all happy and well.

  • @josefschiltz2192
    @josefschiltz2192 2 года назад +29

    Well, my mother, grandmother and great uncle - at different times during the last century - all did a post round in a rural village. The village has stayed relative to 150 people. Many decades after her retirement from the job, my mother decided to test her memory and sat down and produced a list of the names and addresses in order of visit. She was one hundred percent accurate with the census. Forgot to mention, there were no numbers. All house names, plus their inhabitants, and she was in the first stage of dementia.

  • @effyleven
    @effyleven 2 года назад +3

    She means Public Transport... Public Transport-ATION is something they have in America..
    ... it is the "Ation Nation," where you go to get "burgl-ARIZED."

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 года назад +2

      I hate the word burglized when I first heard it I thought it was a joke

  • @MrRQBQ
    @MrRQBQ 2 года назад +2

    In the UK you really only need to put the number or name of the house plus the post code and that is sufficient for delivery.

  • @Kendall42971
    @Kendall42971 2 года назад +25

    The Washing Up Bowl is very common in the Black Community here in the US. Every Black American household I know uses one. The majority of us grew up using one. Also, having a Mail Slot in Urban Communities in the US is common. The home I grew up in in Chicago had one and so did all of the homes in our area.🇺🇸

    • @jameshead9119
      @jameshead9119 2 года назад +1

      I think was due to the sink plug had a habit of going missing so it was easier to keep a bowl in the sink than go hunting for one

    • @alanshepherd4304
      @alanshepherd4304 2 года назад +5

      Using a washing up bowl uses less water and is a lot less hard when washing fragile items like crystal glasses. We only use a bowl for items that won't go in the dishwasher!!🇬🇧

    • @TheCarl82
      @TheCarl82 2 года назад +2

      I'm from the UK and have always used a washing up bowl. I always just thought it was used or hygenie reasons. My house and most other houses in the UK only have 1 sink in the kitchen so I use my sink to rinse my dirty plates off, pour my tea slops away and generally pour away any other unwanted waste. Therefore having a separate bowl to wash stuff in is definitely more hygenic. And I don't have room for a dishwasher either🙁

    • @Kendall42971
      @Kendall42971 2 года назад +2

      @John Ashtone John, I've been trying to get to London for 2 years now. Back in 2019 I purchased 3 tickets to see Craig David at the O2 Arena for his Hold That Thought Tour 2020, but it was cancelled and rescheduled for 2021, then 2021 rolled around and it was cancelled and rescheduled again for 2022 (this year). I heard Boris has lifted the quarantine mandates for visitors so perhaps I'll make it there after all?
      🤞🏽🇺🇸❤🇬🇧

    • @jameshead9119
      @jameshead9119 2 года назад

      @John Ashtone Though most don’t have a Ming vase it wasn’t that long ago every house hold kept a best China dinner service that only came out on Special occasions

  • @BlueTangWebSystems
    @BlueTangWebSystems 2 года назад +3

    I'm 60, I'm a British citizen, lived here nearly all of my life (bar 1 year in Alabama). And I regularly STILL forget to switch the power on at the socket, particularly annoying if making a 'cuppa' and then find the kettle is still cold! Also, living in America we had the outside mailbox (though was a small box hung by the front door). I did like the fact that to send a letter you just put it in the box and the mailman would take it away. Whereas here you need to walk to the nearest postbox. Swings and roundabouts.
    As for the washing bowl. Agree, they are pointless. But growing up we didn't have the extra small sink to the side, so having the bowel meant you could run the water to rinse things down the side.

  • @patrickkelly7085
    @patrickkelly7085 2 года назад +17

    My name is Patrick my wife's christian name also starts with a P so i thought it was logical to name the house we shared together "In A Pod"

    • @andyonions7864
      @andyonions7864 2 года назад +3

      Absolutely. Any other name makes no sense.

    • @orwellboy1958
      @orwellboy1958 2 года назад

      Very clever, I like that.

  • @peckelhaze6934
    @peckelhaze6934 2 года назад +6

    Nice to hear you say "Dual citizen". I am a born Brit and, on occassions, I still forget to switch on the socket on the wall. I have come across properties that just have names, usually rural.

  • @RichardGadsden
    @RichardGadsden 2 года назад +1

    Some British houses do have mailboxes. It's usually for houses that are set back a long way from the street and have a security gate at the street (not a "gated community" in the American style, but an individual house behind a gate).
    They will have a mailbox attached to the wall, usually next to the security gate. Usually, these are a large metal box (much bigger than a US mailbox) behind the wall with a letterbox on the wall. Remember that, unlike the US Mail, in the UK parcels are often delivered through the letterbox, so you need a large enough container to be able to accept whatever the postie is managing to fit through the letterbox.

  • @richardlincoln886
    @richardlincoln886 2 года назад +1

    Socket - plug pins go into it => Socket,
    Outlet does make sense - sure - juice comes out - but generally sounds weird and as back to front as socket probably sounds to the U.S. ear. :)

  • @adrianadrian255
    @adrianadrian255 2 года назад +1

    In the old days, surge protection on household electricity wasn't great, people used to unplug all their appliances before going to bed. Switches made that less necessary. It's also safer to avoid arcing when plugging things in and out - and also safer if a kid used to poke something into the socket - this isn't such an issue nowadays, since live socket is usually behind a cover, that is pushed aside when you put a plug in - the longer earth pin, pushes a plate down, opening the live and neutral sockets

  • @BlueTangWebSystems
    @BlueTangWebSystems 2 года назад +3

    Having lived in the Highlands of Scotland, my house was named Tanglewood. It had no number, though we had only four houses on my street. It is very common there. I ran a small IT business which meant traveling to people's houses. Often the instructions would be of the nature 'Travel North from Aviemore, turn second right past the first pub then a mile or so take a dirt track left by the green bin, the destination is 3rd house on the right'. By contrast, my house while in Alabama uber easy to find, was number 1636, describing the 36th house on the16th street.

    • @michaelcaffery5038
      @michaelcaffery5038 2 года назад +2

      I've wondered before about U.S addresses with numbers in the thousands. It didn't occur to me that it was a combination. D'oh! I live in rural Ireland and up to a few years ago there was no post code or road names. The postman knew all the family names for the homes in his area. I didn't receive a few letters from friends in England because they used my nickname.

    • @shorelifeliving4858
      @shorelifeliving4858 2 года назад

      I didn’t realise the 1636 thing! I just thought it was the 1636th house on the street 🤦‍♀️😆

  • @DavidPaulMorgan
    @DavidPaulMorgan 2 года назад +2

    San Francisco has a superb public transport system - eg BART & the Metro and also several modes of public transport. I also thought Chicago was very well organised. "It's a Letter Box" 🙂

  • @nickgrazier3373
    @nickgrazier3373 2 года назад

    The post code is very useful here, if you use a gps to go to a house with a name then the gps will take you to a street and then to the middle between I think it’s 10 to 14 houses so it makes for a smaller group of houses to find a named one. Ours has a name so when we order a Chinese meal say then the phone will ring and a voice will say “where are you?” I have to go out with a torch if necessary. I normally explained the gps conundrum to them and they’ve never heard of it, Harrumph !!!

  • @neilmorrison7356
    @neilmorrison7356 2 года назад +1

    Also electric switches being the other way round. Press bottom for on in Uk and top for off.

  • @jeffhurst2077
    @jeffhurst2077 2 года назад

    Plus using a washing up bowl you can transfer the water in the bowl to your garden / garden water container easily

  • @timglennon6814
    @timglennon6814 2 года назад +2

    With Amazon Prime, you can get some stuff the same day.

  • @stuartmccall5474
    @stuartmccall5474 2 года назад +7

    Congratulations "K", you are an (ex) American that actually appreciated outside the US mail was actually delivered and you had only to get your head round the detail of how it was done. Did you know that in 2016 the Royal Mail celebrated 500 years of existence having been introduced by King Henry VIII in 1516 and in pre WW2 days, around 1936, had experimented in delivering mail to offshore islands within the UK by rocket rather than by ferry boat. The rockets worked but the ferry boat was more reliable so it was discontinued.

  • @maggiemay5194
    @maggiemay5194 Месяц назад

    Love your videos, your reminding me of all the great things that I take for granted

  • @bobkovacs2206
    @bobkovacs2206 2 года назад +2

    I've lived in the US all my life, and have owned two houses with a mail slot just like what you show in the video. A mail slot like that is not unheard of in the US.

  • @john_smith1471
    @john_smith1471 2 года назад +1

    The more modern Washing up baskets have been around for 30+ years, washing up bowls have gone the way of VHS tapes, basket or bowls used to-prevent damage and scratching of ceramic and stainless steel sinks, a bowl also saves water, better for water bills and the environment .

  • @dianeharrison4975
    @dianeharrison4975 2 года назад

    We also use w up bowls as we don’t have a waste disposal so we kind of put the peel in the sink then clean it out but we can still do dishes and other things in the bowl

  • @dianeharrison4975
    @dianeharrison4975 2 года назад

    Thank god we have letter boxes in our doors here and on off switch on our sockets, and washing up bowls they’re useful if you need to do something else and instead of emptying the sink water each time. You can use bowl , also handy if you need. To soak clothes etc, I don’t see why anyone wouldn’t have one!!we don’t even think about it I guess.

  • @araptorofnote5938
    @araptorofnote5938 2 года назад +3

    Hot running water was dependant on a coal fire and a hot water storage tank. Since the coal fire would not be lit in the summer months, many homes would be without hot water. Washing-up water would be heated in pans on the stove and a washing-up bowl required less water. It was also kinder to china cups and plates which might be damaged in a large stone 'butler's' sink.

    • @damianpritchard1456
      @damianpritchard1456 2 года назад

      I grew up with the "washing bowl", my mum still uses one. My wife from Europe never got the hang of it so we havent used one in years. But this explanation makes perfect sense. when I grew up we didnt have central heating and did get hot water from the kettle. And I am not even old!

    • @mbak7801
      @mbak7801 2 года назад

      China can stand heat better than earthenware. Rich people brought china and put tea in first knowing the temperature was not an issue. People on lower income had to put milk in first to reduce the thermal shock. There was no need for a washing up bowl if you had china and piped water.

    • @sarahmacrae8277
      @sarahmacrae8277 2 года назад

      Also the washing up bowl means if someone comes along with a mug with half the tea left in it you can pour excess tea into sink beside the bowl so the tea doesn't dirty the water .

  • @will4may175
    @will4may175 2 года назад

    Homes that have loose dogs running around have mail boxes somewhere the Postie can get to safely.
    A washing bowl stops your sink getting scratched and damaged over time with cutlery etc, cheaper to replace a bowl than a whole sink unit.
    Usually the richer folk with bigger posh houses or like you said rural areas that have house names, but you only have around 400-600 houses to deliver on a Postie route or double if van sharing so it's not difficult to get used to, parcel delivery firms will struggle more with multi drop but were used to it.

  • @gregstilwell7760
    @gregstilwell7760 2 года назад +2

    I reside in a smaller town in USA, and Amazon delivers most of my items within 24 hrs

  • @mrsjudetheobscure
    @mrsjudetheobscure 2 года назад

    Washing up bowl comes from when we heated water in a kettle, not having a hotwater tap. It saves water, so still useful.

  • @rantmaker6427
    @rantmaker6427 2 года назад +1

    Every home in uk has a zip code /postcode so it’s easy for delivery’s and postmen they use satnav and it guides them straight to the right address

  • @rp1692
    @rp1692 2 месяца назад

    As someone mentioned, in the US you can use your mailbox to send outgoing mail. But nowadays, very few people write enough letters to make the trade-off worthwhile (versus the convenience of the British system where the letters arrive in your home). It tends to only be a short walk to the nearest postbox anyway.

  • @sidrat2009
    @sidrat2009 2 года назад

    I like the bowl because you can still drain off the bits you want to drain off. Otherwise it's the same as trying to clean stuff in bath water instead of a shower. Same principle. Yes baths are great to lounge in and relax.
    Doing the dishes in a bowl/bucket means you can rinse off excess down the drain without having to empty the entire sink.
    It also prevents the metal on metal noise with cutlery.
    I can't believe a mains wall socket is constantly powered without bad things happening involving electrical fires.

  • @lemdixon01
    @lemdixon01 2 года назад +1

    It depends upon population density whether transportation is any good in a country, even a developed country. I liked it in Washington DC how you could put a bike on the front of the bus, very good idea. And I learned that for school busses dropping off kids in the US you have to stop your car even on the opposite side of the road, but that might encourage kids to not need to check for traffic on the other side of the roads by themselves.

  • @adrianadrian255
    @adrianadrian255 2 года назад

    I used to work for the post office. To set out your mail in the morning, you have to know the name of every house and the order they come in. On some rounds, I had a couple of hundred names. You learn them very quickly. Another thing that is different to most US towns is that places have no grid system for roads. - numbered houses will be the same on every street, whereas North American homes normally have longer numbers which indicate where in the city they are , usually the first two numbers indicating the block. UK towns pre-date traffic, or even mail.

  • @13guns87
    @13guns87 2 года назад

    The main feature of the washing bowl is it's ability to change water. If you have a sink, you have to wait for the water to leave and then add some fresh. With a bowl, the water goes in the sink and while it's doing that, your bowl is full of hot water. It's a time saver.

  • @NoOnionsUK
    @NoOnionsUK 2 года назад

    A washing-up bowl is because many/most UK houses only have a single sink. This allows us to wash-up and also drain liquids down the sink. My Parents have a larger house and have a 1½ sink - so liquids can be poured down the drain. We both also have Dishwashers. All quite normal here in the UK 🙂

  • @arthurerickson5162
    @arthurerickson5162 2 года назад +1

    Always look forward to your videos (and someday, my schedule will match your livestream’s). I love the outlet switches and wish we had them here in the States (of course we do have “switched” outlets, operated by wall switches, but it’s not the same). Regarding mailboxes, I used to have them on my street, but there was a period where kids were leaving lit firecrackers inside them, obviously causing damage, so the PO banned them in our neighborhood (other neighborhoods still have them). Now, our mailboxes are mounted by the front door. A few homes actually have mail slots/letterboxes!

  • @AndysEastCoastAdventures
    @AndysEastCoastAdventures 2 года назад

    Unbelievably before 1965 their were actually 55% more train stations in the UK than their are now so it was even better then. More or less every rural town was connected to the railway network. They were cut in the famous 'Dr Beeching' rail transformation.

  • @harrybarrow6222
    @harrybarrow6222 2 года назад +1

    The UK postcode takes the postman to the right street and the regular postman will know the house names (if they have them) as well as numbers.
    Houses without numbers are likely to be by themselves in rural areas.

  • @quietenglishman4179
    @quietenglishman4179 2 года назад +5

    I think the washing up bowl was initially used as many homes had ceramic sinks. They're useful as you can rinse food residue stuff down the sink without making the washing up water dirty. I'd hate to wash up without a plastic bowl. (You also said "rout" when you meant "route". A rout is what happens when Exeter RFC plays a rubbish team. Just saying...)

    • @orlandotrustfullandhiscosm4110
      @orlandotrustfullandhiscosm4110 2 года назад

      Americans pronounce route in the same way we would pronounce rout..just saying.

    • @christine899
      @christine899 2 года назад

      When I was a child (40's and 50's) we didn't have plastic bowls they were galvanized metal covered in enamel I think it was the 60's before I had a plastic washing up bowl.

    • @quietenglishman4179
      @quietenglishman4179 2 года назад

      @@orlandotrustfullandhiscosm4110 So how do they pronounce rout?

    • @orlandotrustfullandhiscosm4110
      @orlandotrustfullandhiscosm4110 2 года назад

      @@quietenglishman4179 they pronounce it the same. I guess its a more English word than American anyhow.

  • @viewfromthehillswift6979
    @viewfromthehillswift6979 2 года назад

    If you're not in post-WW2 sprawl land in the U.S., but in a big city, Amazon delivery can be very fast, public transport can be very good, and mail comes through a slot in the door (or into the lobby if you live in an apartment). Much of the UK is pre-automobile and thus denser, which is more efficient than, say, Florida's suburbia.

  • @vincespeedmk223
    @vincespeedmk223 2 года назад +1

    All UK addresses have a post code that for on the address block of a letter (AANN NAA) this correlates to a street in a particular postal area. So the names are likely to be unique for that street.

  • @Steve14ps
    @Steve14ps 2 года назад

    Buses in rural areas!!! There were a lot more of them before local government spending cuts!!! There also once a Post Bus service in rural areas, the driver delivered letters as well as carrying passengers, it was operated by Royal Mail.

  • @RCassinello
    @RCassinello 2 года назад

    I grew up a house (now demolished) with a very convoluted address:
    Old Oak
    Taft's Yard
    Austrey Road
    Warton
    Near Tamworth
    Staffordshire
    Which was particularly weird because whilst Tamworth is in Staffordshire, the house itself was in Warwickshire.

  • @markhorton7128
    @markhorton7128 2 года назад

    Having a switch on the socket saves power. If something like a transformer or charger is left plugged in, it continues to use a small amount of power even if the thing it is connected to is not on or not even connected.
    The bowl reduces the amount of hot water that you use, it also stays hotter in a plastic bowl. It also means a lot less noise and clatter against the metal sink when washing up.
    All houses once had names. England was the first country to introduce a house numbering system. :-)

  • @geoffreyevans1549
    @geoffreyevans1549 2 года назад

    All our plugs in the 50's had no switch.i think it was just a safety feature.also they came in 2 sometimes 3 sizes and were round pin.i remember the large ones used to give a blue flash when you pulled them out!

  • @rogersmith89
    @rogersmith89 2 года назад +1

    The reason we turn plug sockets on and off. Is so young kids and some older ones pock their fingers in the hole's. Turning them off they wont get a shock

  • @rayjennings3637
    @rayjennings3637 2 года назад

    Totally agree about the washing-up bowl question. I don't like them but my wife does!

  • @RonSeymour1
    @RonSeymour1 2 года назад

    The house names would be in smaller villages but what is important is the postcode because it pins the address down to a small area. Then the local postman will know the house.

  • @Grahame59
    @Grahame59 2 года назад +1

    Another reason we Brits can go to far away destinations for holiday is that on average we get a lot more days holiday from our employers. Americans get relatively few days holiday per year which makes travelling to far away destinations involving long flights (e.g. Australia) impractical.

    • @mr.balloffur
      @mr.balloffur 2 года назад

      Some Americans, some other Americans have great vacation times from their employers

  • @BrianMcGuirkBMG
    @BrianMcGuirkBMG 2 года назад

    I found the holiday destination point interesting.

  • @alexradojkovic9671
    @alexradojkovic9671 2 года назад

    Aussie power points (outlets) also have on/off switches fitted.
    Old style terrace house front doors also have mail slots if the door is beside the foot path.

  • @MrDportjoe
    @MrDportjoe 2 года назад

    Your grandparents or grand grandparents either had A a dish tub in the big sink or B a split sink to do dishes (i had both around growing up but then I'm 66 this year).

  • @amstreater
    @amstreater 2 года назад

    Washing up bowl is helpful when you know you’re going to need to do several “loads” of dishes - once the water gets dirty, you can empty it and then start filling the bowl again with hot water while the old water drains away, rather than having to wait for the sink to drain and clean it out before being able to refill it. But also, as someone else mentioned, many sinks in the UK used to be ceramic, so it would be easy to break dishes. Most houses now have a stainless steel sink, but it’s still just habit for a lot of people as they’ve just grown up with the washing up tub. I don’t usually use one now but I do have one which comes in handy for example when I want to soak things but I don’t wanna fill up the entire sink which takes ages - and also if I then need to use the sink for something like washing vegetables or draining pasta, I can just take the washing up bowl out and leave it on the side until I’m ready to address what’s soaking. A lot of people don’t have the double sink or even a small draining sink, so the plastic tub acts as sort of a second sink in that sense.

  • @Knappa22
    @Knappa22 2 года назад +1

    I’ve never lived in a numbered house.
    Very unusual to have numbered properties in rural Wales. Royal Mail uses the postcode to locate the house if needed, though most posties know all the house names on their round.
    The British electricity plug and socket is designed for safety. It is a triumph of design.
    One reason people use washing up bowls is because they have a more yielding surface for washing ceramics and fine china. It’s more likely you’ll chip something in a steel/ceramic sink.

  • @stukeable9070
    @stukeable9070 2 года назад

    The post service in the UK will deliver anywhere. Even......the caravan in the lay-by. as long as the rest of the address is there. Postcode helps a lot for clarification.

  • @TheExpatpom
    @TheExpatpom 2 года назад

    Posties probably rely a lot on the postcode to help identify where mail to houses with names instead of numbers goes. I don’t know how big an area zip codes typically cover but UK postcodes are usually just a handful of premises, sometimes just one of it’s commercial or a house in a rural area with little else around it. My old house was in a street with five postcodes and about 35-40 homes. They were all
    numbered but if any of them were called Blue Cottage or something it would still have been easy for a new postie to find once the mail is sorted into the batch for those 7 or 8 houses.

  • @nickgrazier3373
    @nickgrazier3373 2 года назад

    The slot in the door used to be an entry to a cage box hanging from the slot area so your letters would not drop to the floor but to a box like cage. I myself think this is where mail box came from. Maybe!!!

  • @template16
    @template16 2 года назад +2

    Mail is sorted by postcode in the UK. Living in a rural area my address is house name, village name and postcode. There's no house number nor a road name. The postcode covers only about eight properties so anybody delivering is directed by the postcode to a small area to then look for the property name.

  • @paulgreen2456
    @paulgreen2456 2 месяца назад

    As has already been mentioned, sinks used to be huge ceramic things that it would take ages to fill and would quickly cool the washing up water, so a smaller (originally enamelled - before plastic) would be used in the sink, using less water and keeping it hotter. Perhaps we just never got out of the habit!

  • @christopherdean1326
    @christopherdean1326 2 года назад

    When I was living with my elderly parents (partly to look after them, partly because I had lost my job and couldn't afford anywhere else!) I would do the washing up in the sink, without using the bowl. Now I have a place of my own again, I have to have a washing up bowl, because the kitchen sink in my new place has a stupid plug that won't keep the water in, and it is so designed that to change it would mean a whole new sink.

  • @bobwightman1054
    @bobwightman1054 2 года назад

    The Royal Mail have to deliver to a "secure" place so the American style mail box doesn't meet the requirements.
    A village near where I grew up has an unusual house numbering system: the original village had the houses numbered 1 to whatever the number of houses were. As new houses were built they just used the next number! So the houses on a road might go 52, 53, 54, 127 with 126 and 128 being elsewhere in the village.

  • @AndysEastCoastAdventures
    @AndysEastCoastAdventures 2 года назад

    Amazon have now introduced same day delivery in the UK if you live close to one of their major warehouses.

  • @Anglo_Saxon1
    @Anglo_Saxon1 2 года назад +14

    I've always wondered if the American mail box system isn't a bit risky cos anyone could easily pinch your letters(or cheques)

    • @Robob0027
      @Robob0027 2 года назад +1

      Who uses cheques these days?

    • @dianeharrison4975
      @dianeharrison4975 2 года назад +2

      Maybe you have to have a key but I agree with you

    • @CharlieMcowan
      @CharlieMcowan 2 года назад +1

      @@Robob0027 Americans still use cheques for lots of things: paying the rent, utility bills, etc

  • @kenirving5240
    @kenirving5240 2 года назад

    The bowl simply protects your sink from damage. The plastic bowl can be disposed of, or used to carry water wherever.

  • @keithsparrow7717
    @keithsparrow7717 2 года назад

    Re house names: many houses with names also have a number, so that they can be found. But older houses in small towns and villages may only have a name and street address, A related but different curiosity: Apsley House, 149 Piccadilly, Hyde Park Corner, London, W1J 7NT is known as No. 1 London (it was the home of the 1st Duke of Wellington).

  • @yellowtommytanker
    @yellowtommytanker 2 года назад

    As a 30+ year Postie, seeing your thoughts on named houses and how they are delivered to made me want to reply. When sorting post for a delivery, each delivery route has it's own frame. In each frame they have separate slots for each delivery address. In urban delivery routes the slots are numbered to correspond with each house and how the delivery route is completed, in rural areas where houses are named the numbers are just exchanged by the house names. We also (for your American viewers) use Post Codes rather than the American Zip code numerical system. The Post Code system uses 2 letters followed by 1 or 2 numbers, a space then a single number followed by 2 letters. The first 2 letters denote the town or city destination, the 1st set of numbers denote the area in the town or city and the last set of number and letters denotes the road or part of the road the delivery address is located on. Most Post Codes start with the initial 2 letters of the town or city address (say BA for Bath and EX for Exeter) but sometimes two places start with the same first 2 letters, when this happens, the second letter is switched (so Bromley and Bristol share the same first 2 letters so Bromley postcode is BR, Bristol postcode is changed to BS). London postcodes denote the area in London only (NW for North West, E for East, SW for South West etc). Technically you only need to have the house name/number and full Post Code for the delivery item to reach its intended destination.

  • @adammullarkey4996
    @adammullarkey4996 2 года назад

    UK power sockets (outlets) and plugs are the best in the world.
    The plug has 3 prongs in a triangle, as you can see from the socket. The bottom two are the live and neutral, which carry the current. These two prongs are plastic for the first half of their length, so that, by the time they contact the live wires in the socket, there is no exposed metal you can touch. The top prong is the ground. This carries no charge, and it's main role is to ensure that no excess charge remains in the appliance. Inside the plug are three wires, corresponding to the three prongs. The ground wire is significantly longer, meaning that, in the event of something pulling on the main wire running from the plug to the appliance, the wires carrying the current will disconnect first, and any power remaining in the appliance will be discharged through the ground wire.
    The ground prong is also slightly longer than the other two. This is because of a design feature of the socket. If you've ever plugged in to a UK socket, you may have noticed an odd, mechanical "clunk" sound. The live and neutral holes have small doors inside, preventing any metallic item, such as a fork, from being inserted and contacting the live wiring. These doors can only be opened by a lever in the ground hole, which is depressed by the ground prong, opening the doors, but, by the time the doors are open, the other two prongs are blocking the holes, so nothing can be poked inside. This means that it takes a concerted effort by an intelligent child to electrocute themselves.

  • @briwire138
    @briwire138 2 года назад

    If you don't have a switch on a socket outlet, the electrical circuit is broken and made in an uncontrolled manner in the actual connector resulting in arcing. A washing up bowl prevents ceramic plates from marking the softer sinks with prolonged use.

  • @efnissien
    @efnissien 2 года назад

    To answer your question on how mail finds people if the house has just a name. The postcode will allow the postman to know roughly where it is to a block of on average 12 or so houses.

  • @ElizabethDebbie24
    @ElizabethDebbie24 2 года назад +1

    Hi Kaylyn
    Deb from Wakes here
    My granived in a named house but it was also allocated a road number for the road she lived on

  • @mattlage2640
    @mattlage2640 2 года назад +1

    I'm a Brit, and I don't see the point of having a washing up bowl, but my misses insists on it

  • @cl4re4d4ms
    @cl4re4d4ms 2 года назад

    You can get outlets without switches but the ones with are much much better.

  • @davidporter499
    @davidporter499 2 года назад

    Generally in the UK each postcode covers 40 addresses, so the postman will find the property named with relative ease, then remember it’s location so that he can organise his mailbag. Simples.

  • @AndrewJamesWilliams
    @AndrewJamesWilliams 2 года назад

    Most cottages and homes with names will also have numbers. For example the bungalow where I grew up was named Trouville but its number was 26.

  • @petersiekmann5175
    @petersiekmann5175 2 года назад

    House names are generally fine, because the postcode (zip code) is much more specific than in the US and will apply to only a handful of locations, and thus easily identify the house. In fact the postcode is so precise that you really only need the person's name and postcode on the envelope or package.

  • @joyfulzero853
    @joyfulzero853 2 года назад

    The trick of having a decent bus service when living in a village is it being on a main road route between two sizeable towns/cities.

  • @adammc7170
    @adammc7170 2 года назад

    If in doubt of a house name, use the Royal Mail Postcode Finder. It will bring up every address associated with that postcode.

  • @petervaughan6854
    @petervaughan6854 2 года назад +3

    I used to live in a house with a name on a road with no name 😹 never had any issue with the post as the postcode already got you down to about 20 houses anyway

    • @gillianrimmer7733
      @gillianrimmer7733 2 года назад

      Yes, I live in an old cottage in a small village, My address is just 'Archer's Cottage', name of village and post code. It appears as Archers Cottage in maps dating back over 300 years.

  • @Inconsistent-Dogwash
    @Inconsistent-Dogwash 2 года назад

    There is a house not that far away from me called love spoon cottage, it has decorations going around the house that are hearts and spoons.

  • @BrightonandHoveActually
    @BrightonandHoveActually 2 года назад

    There is a trick to finding a house with a name. If you go into Bing Maps (NOT Google Maps) you can put in the house name and the postcode and it will show it on the map.
    Bing Maps can also show this in Ordnance Survey map format (via a dropdown menu).

  • @madskier50
    @madskier50 2 года назад

    Alll properties have an associated postcode, whether they are named or numbered.
    It's relatively easy to find any house, even if it only has a name and not a number.
    Some rural properties are the only ones in their postcode, which makes this even easier.

  • @roderickwhyte240
    @roderickwhyte240 2 года назад

    I lived in a house in essex in the 60s that had black mains sockets (square pins not round pins) without a switch on it. it varies with the street whether they have just a housename and/or number on the house. the postcode helps the postman see where to post letters. I don't fancy having to pop out in the street to get the mail. i can hop on a bus for free as i have an oldies bus pass. Enjoy our transport and don't get electrocuted on your mains sockets-make sure your hands are dry when handling them! just joking, have a nice day kaylen