Two questions for the U.K.
Oct. 15th, 2013 09:18 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The OMT for Doctor Who is "watching from behind the couch". In every American house I remember, the couch/sofa/davenport is firmly against the wall. A child who wanted to watch from there would first have to push it forward several inches. Are British houses differently arranged, or is this just an image?
We were watching QI last night, and the panel were marvelling about American drivers' custom of stopping* when they heard a siren. (My family: "We don't stop! We pull over and stop!") What do Britons do when they hear a siren? As my daughter exclaimed in outrage, "What is a siren FOR, then?"
* Some of them**. If they don't have anywhere important to get to.
** When I first moved to the New South, drivers always pulled over -- in both directions -- when a funeral went by. Ambulances were much more hit and miss.
We were watching QI last night, and the panel were marvelling about American drivers' custom of stopping* when they heard a siren. (My family: "We don't stop! We pull over and stop!") What do Britons do when they hear a siren? As my daughter exclaimed in outrage, "What is a siren FOR, then?"
* Some of them**. If they don't have anywhere important to get to.
** When I first moved to the New South, drivers always pulled over -- in both directions -- when a funeral went by. Ambulances were much more hit and miss.
Aha!
Date: 2013-10-15 06:14 pm (UTC)"The TV"; how old I am. We've got two, but the children mostly watch TV shows (old again!) on their computers in their rooms, reserving the living-room TV for video games.
I remember how weird I found it to visit my grandmother's house (1920s build, I think) in Texas; her gas furnace sat out in the living area, and the bathroom had an exposed gas heater with little ceramic points over which flames flickered. Frightened and fascinated me, that did.
Re: Aha!
Date: 2013-10-15 07:32 pm (UTC)There were fireplaces in both the downstairs rooms; the living room fire was always lit in winter, but the front room only on special occasions. Upstairs there were portable gas and electric heaters; there were fireplaces in the bedrooms, but we no longer lit fires there.
Being able to have coal fires, even though they meant so much work, was, I think, an emotive thing for my mother. In the horrible winter of early 1947, when I was less than six months old, lack of coal and general fuel shortages meant that she was living in one room of said house with a single bar electric fire. This was so stressful that she temporarily took me back to Swansea (where I had been born) to stay with her mother, who being in South Wales was more able to get coal, and stayed there till the summer when she took me back to London and my father.
Incidentally, I still don't have central heating; I don't like it. Even if it's a gas fire, I like to have a fire to, er, focus on. And radiators take up wall space that could be better filld with bookshelves.
Re: Aha!
Date: 2013-10-15 08:13 pm (UTC)The last house did still have a fireplace in one of the bedrooms, but the chimney was blocked (not very well, draughts and occasional chunks of brick came down it).
Both houses are the smallest version of late Victorian terrace, two-up two-down with kitchen and bathroom in later extensions at the back.
Re: Aha!
Date: 2013-10-15 08:29 pm (UTC)Obvs. the second rationale doesn't apply to a Victorian terrace house.
Re: Aha!
Date: 2013-10-15 08:41 pm (UTC)In this house you come through the front door to a very narrow hallway (30", I was measuring for a rug the other day). Two doors off that, nearer one to the front room (our living room, television and most of the bookshelves) and one at the foot of the stairs to the dining room. A lot of these houses have had those two rooms knocked into one to make more space. Kitchen leads off the dining room, and is down one step.
I was re-reading Howard Spring's Fame is the Spur this week, and it struck me that our house is the same size as two significant houses in the book, one in Manchester in the 1880s and one in the Rhondda from 1890 to 1935 or so, both described as tiny. Houses are one of the things Howard Spring is very good at (also automatic Bechdel pass, the book is absolutely full of women talking about and getting active in politics).
Re: Aha!
Date: 2013-10-16 07:21 pm (UTC)I was in the process of explaining that the house I grew up in didn't have central heating, before remembering this flat doesn't, either (our storage heaters gave up the ghost and it seemed simpler to bring in small portable heaters than replace them)
Re: Aha!
Date: 2013-10-16 07:41 pm (UTC)My grandmother's bathroom heater had only a metal framework (sort of like a rhino grill) in front of it, and you had to light it with a match. I was terrified and fascinated of it.
Does your flat have any fireplaces?
Re: Aha!
Date: 2013-10-16 08:04 pm (UTC)A storage heater is a (not terribly efficient) thing with heat retaining bricks inside, which is heated during the night when electricity rates are low, and which then radiates that heat during the day.
Re: Aha!
Date: 2013-10-16 09:06 pm (UTC)