Hanging laundry outside to dry
By
Seia Ibanez
- Replies 23
Reminds me of my mum & the process of hanging out the washing on the very long lines. I think the clothes dried quicker than on our modern rotary ones. All was well until the prop collapsed or a wire came away from where it was attached. We didn’t have to buy props as we lived on a farm so dad would go & find another one. I still hang out the washing, weather allowing. I used to enjoy seeing a line full of very white nappies drying in the breeze over 40 years ago. How times have changed.We had two parallel wire lines across our back yard about one and a half metres apart. I can still see Mum with a mouthful of wooden pegs hanging out the clothes. We didn't have a lot of money so Mum would hang the end of one item with the start of the next item with one peg. Because the lines were so long across the yard there was a fair bit of sag in the middle. A man used to come around singing out "clothes props" so we bought two props, which were branch of trees with a fork in the end, and used them to hold up the lines in the middle.
Wooden pegs are the pits. They are prone to staining white articles of laundry.Do we remember the pegs?
Congratulations! You have reduced the world's total emissions by 0.0001 of a quadrillionth!We only use the latest eco-friendly method, which is saving the planet - WIND & SOLAR POWER.
Ah...I remember it well.We had two parallel wire lines across our back yard about one and a half metres apart. I can still see Mum with a mouthful of wooden pegs hanging out the clothes. We didn't have a lot of money so Mum would hang the end of one item with the start of the next item with one peg. Because the lines were so long across the yard there was a fair bit of sag in the middle. A man used to come around singing out "clothes props" so we bought two props, which were branch of trees with a fork in the end, and used them to hold up the lines in the middle.
Use stainless steel pegs. They are wonderfulWooden pegs are the pits. They are prone to staining white articles of laundry.
Still use this method whilst vegging in the bush atm.l had a line tree to tree and long wooden prop to hold them up
I use stainless steel pegs now, no staining.Always hang washing on the line if the weather allows it. Nothing better than the smell of freshly dried washing as it is taken off the line. Love the smell of my sheets and pillowcases after line drying them. I have a dryer but rarely use it, I just put washing on airer in rumpus room for a couple of days and put fan on above it. Usually dry the morning after putting there, especially in winter as we run our air conditioner for a couple of hours morning and night when really cold. I well remember the wire across the yard with clothes props holding them up, the wooden dolly pegs in the old peg tin, usually a recycled biscuit tin. Such great memories from my childhood.
@Gunpark ... Where does one purchase said stainless steel pegs from?I use stainless steel pegs now, no staining.