Speaking of things you never see any more, just recently I saw a MILKMAN delivering milk. In glass bottles. wow
Aw! We had one when I was a kid!
We also had a Charles Chips guy for a while.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Speaking of things you never see any more, just recently I saw a MILKMAN delivering milk. In glass bottles. wow
Aw! We had one when I was a kid!
We also had a Charles Chips guy for a while.
When I was in high school I taught a girl how to drive stick. I learned to drive stick shift, well driving as well, in a Honda Civic Si. It really wasn't the ideal car for learning a stick shift in when you're also learning how to drive.
It was very handy to know when I did highway work and had to drive tractors and 10-ton trucks.
I taught 3 boyfriends how to drive stick. I learned how on a '79 Volvo - that thing was a fucking tank. Steel body, cast-iron engine.
I miss driving stick - it's part of the reason I love riding my motorcycle so much.
. It can be a pain in stop and go traffic though.
which is largely the reason why I never learned, I live in a city. Even driving on the highway is stop and go around here.
I would still like to learn to drive a stick. I'm sort of amazed I never did, since at least three of my friends had old Beetles when we were in high school.
Really? I've never seen a manual rental car.
Manual transmission rentals are the norm in the UK, that's for sure. Rocking a stick shift and clutch on the left is wild!
Vortex, the milkman was from a dairy in Maryland. Had milk and assorted dairy products and eggs. But a MILKMAN!
And I've never managed to learn how to drive a stick shift - my mother tried to teach me once on her MGB ... after about 15 minutes of grinding gears, she cried, "my baby!" (NOT referring to me) and never tried again. When she brought up the fact I've never learned to drive a manual transmission and asked me why, I said, "just naturally shiftless, I guess" ... and left her wimpering.
I liked driving a Beetle in high school. I didn't have one, but one of my friends did and I drove it when he was drunk.
I had issues with learning to drive a manual, when I was taught at the age of 16... then I needed to borrow someone's car for a college interview in Vermont, and the only one I could find was standard. When I don't have much of a choice, I tend to learn right quick.
I drive stick. I learned on my dad's 82 Ford pickup (manual everything), and every other car with manual transmission has been a breeze in comparison. My car in grad school had an automatic transmission, but the three after it were all stick. It's cheaper, usually lasts longer than a slush box, and is nice for mountain driving. You can downshift on the down slopes and keep some stress off the brakes.