It was time for another haircut today. Donna-Marie being on holiday, I was attended to by another pink lady. It is now clear that to work in this delightful hairdressers one has to be dressed in a magenta smock-like garment clashing or, according to taste, blending nicely with the pink decor, and have a champagne personality. Victoria, although a long-standing friend of Donna’s, has only been working for her for eight weeks, and is clearly enjoying it.
Victoria’s teenaged lookalike son visited his Mum whilst I was in the chair. Great fun then ensued, with lots of banter following my joking ‘I’d never have guessed’, when informed that Elliott was her son. She then held up a bulky envelope addressed to him. They live across the road from the establishment. The envelope would not fit into their letterbox. The postman knew where Victoria worked. He delivered the parcel to her. That is what I call service, and comes from a good knowledge of one’s customers, and probably some continuity of employment, possibly more likely to be encountered in a country town than in a city. Elliott was delighted.
Elliott was asked to open the envelope to show me the contents. The young man was now the proud possessor of two kendamas. He is apparently very skilled in manipulating this Japanese toy. Like the diabolo of my youth, the kendama is a variation on the yo-yo. Apparently the fundamental idea is to toss the ball in the air and catch it in one of the wooden cups, or skewer it on the spike. It seems a little more physical than the average computer game.
I must have been somewhere around ten or eleven when our maternal grandparents brought Chris and me each a diabolo from one of their holidays abroad. Two long hand-held poles are linked by a length of string on which one balances, spins, and tosses an object shaped like a wasp-waisted tube, as shown in the accompanying illustration from 1812. This is the diabolo. Modern diabolos are, I believe, made of some plastic substances that are stronger, more rigid, and less prone to deterioration than our rubber ones. We two boys spent at least one 1950s summer obsessed with improving our skill. The requisite long dress made for somewhat restricted movement, but we managed well enough.
Jackie had driven me to my appointment and gone on to Ringwood. I walked to the car park to meet her, arriving just as torrential rain hit the town. Either it tracked us all the way home, or it had struck Minstead simultaneously.
Jackie produced an excellent sausage casserole this evening. It was followed by lemon drizzle cake and ice-cream. She had a glass of yesterday’s Pedro Jimenes wine. I drank a First Cape cabernet sauvignon 2012.
Mo and John, who will be spending some time in Sigoules came over for a drink and helped me finish my bottle. I showed them some photographs of numero 6, and Jackie took them on a Google maps tour around the village.
Oh yes! I do remember these as a kid in the 60’s. I don’t know if we had one, maybe a cousin. I don’t think I was ever any good at it. I seem to remember it was wooden, but it might have been plastic. I also remember a similar item sent to us from Alaska by friends of my parents. They were two poms poms of fur between a string. It was made by the Inuit’s for children to play with. But it came with no instruction, so we never know how to use it, LOL No internet in the day 🙂
Here’s a listing in Ebay for the very same thing.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Vintage-Hand-Made-Alaskan-Canada-Inuit-Fur-Skin-Yo-Yo-Bolo-Toy-/182656401389
Thanks very much, Boomdee – for the comment and the link. Ours, in the 40s, were rubber.