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#oldschoolhustle
A Nostalgic Tale By Paul Baldry Went to the car wash today, sat inside like royalty, watching a lad outside fighting my motor with soaps, sprays, and chemicals that sound like they need a licence to operate. He caught my eye, I caught his, we swapped a smile — and suddenly I was ten years old again, back when hardly anybody had a car but we still managed to build an empire. A Bob a wash, ten pence for the wee yins, and don’t start me on the currency conversion — I’ve done that lecture too many times. Half a Crown for the truck, aye, 2/6, 25p in new money for those still struggling. No fancy gear then. Just buckets, rags, washing up liquid nicked from under the kitchen sink, and a sweeping brush that doubled as a wheel scrubber and a jousting lance depending on the mood. If they wanted polish, they got Pledge — furniture polish, straight from your mammy’s cupboard. The truck was a saga... mops, ladders, and the occasional near death slip that we laughed off because we were immortal. We soaked each other more than the cars, and a few passers by caught a blast too — all accidental, all hilarious, all part of the graft. Honest work, good fun, and enough money for swimming, the cinema, and sweets the size of actual sweets, not these modern micro morsels. No screens, no apps, just community spirit, soap suds, and the joy of a job well done. And today, watching that lad with his high tech arsenal, I realised car washing has become a skill, a science even — but back then it was magic.
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Feb 14
Feb 14, 2026 at 9:20 AM UTC
CAR WASH CHRONICLES
A Nostalgic Tale By Paul Baldry Went to the car wash today, sat inside like royalty, watching a lad outside fighting my motor with soaps, sprays, and chemicals that sound like they need a licence to operate. He caught my eye, I caught his, we swapped a smile — and suddenly I was ten years old again, back when hardly anybody had a car but we still managed to build an empire. A Bob a wash, ten pence for the wee yins, and don’t start me on the currency conversion — I’ve done that lecture too many times. Half a Crown for the truck, aye, 2/6, 25p in new money for those still struggling. No fancy gear then. Just buckets, rags, washing up liquid nicked from under the kitchen sink, and a sweeping brush that doubled as a wheel scrubber and a jousting lance depending on the mood. If they wanted polish, they got Pledge — furniture polish, straight from your mammy’s cupboard. The truck was a saga... mops, ladders, and the occasional near death slip that we laughed off because we were immortal. We soaked each other more than the cars, and a few passers by caught a blast too — all accidental, all hilarious, all part of the graft. Honest work, good fun, and enough money for swimming, the cinema, and sweets the size of actual sweets, not these modern micro morsels. No screens, no apps, just community spirit, soap suds, and the joy of a job well done. And today, watching that lad with his high tech arsenal, I realised car washing has become a skill, a science even — but back then it was magic.
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