Un-fun essentials

Moving anywhere, whether it be to a different house in the same city or across the world, always mean having to buy new stuff.

It doesn’t matter if you’ve crammed most of your belongings into a trailer, a rental van or even a shipping container, some of your stuff either can’t fit, is not allowed (no booze from France to here) or just doesn’t seem worth the effort.

But then you arrive in your new destination and realise that due to having a fridge that’s permanently part of the kitchen cupboards and a vacuum cleaner that was screwed into the wall and specifically included as part of the ‘chattels’ of sale and never needing a clothes dryer and realising that the new house doesn’t have a dishwasher and having to leave behind all cleaning equipment and products in order to satisfy the notaire that the apartment was going to be surgically clean enough for both her and the new owners’ approval….. you have to go shopping.

It is most definitely not shopping for the fun stuff. I mean, who gets excited about looking for a vacuum cleaner?

And I’ve become one of those people. You know the ones. There are thousands of us, but I have never paid actual money to become one. Now, in my fifty fourth year, I have.

I’m a member of Choice. In the afternoons, you’ll find me peering at reviews on hoovers that stand up, the barrel-shaped ones thatget dragged from room to room, those that need to be fixed to the walls, have batteries, are hypoallergenic, tell you what suction speed to use, useful filters, automatic floor surface converters, extendable arms and a armload of click-on brushes, poles, wet polishers and mops.

Yes, it is boring but also fascinating at the same time. Prices of their recommended brands and models vary for $200 to $3,000 which in fact makes the job of selecting the ‘best’ one for us (i.e. what we can afford and how useful it actually is) even more confusing. If we spent three thousand smackers on a vacuum I’d be insuring it as a work of art….

Don’t get me started on dishwashers, televisions or fridges.

Craig* would much rather be looking at kayaks, camper trailers or fishing boats, but we do need to have a house with food that doesn’t spoil, clothes that dry in less than three days and floors that don’t cover the soles of your feet with crumbs like the top of a chocolate freckle.

Mmmm, freckles….

Do we want our dishwasher to be affordable or effective?
Use a lot of energy or a little but leave food stuck on the glasses?
Butt ugly with loads of cycle options or cute but incredibly noisy?
Able to wash long stemmed wine glasses or remove the mysteriously-sticky avocado from knives?
Australian made (or at least designed because we know they’re all made in China) or a swish, no-nonsense, perennially-reliable European star?

Anyhooo, we were on our Sunday drive to Cremorne and stopped at a Homemaker Centre, the outer-suburban mecca for folk like us.

We didn’t rush in; our pace was reluctant and slow. We unenthusiastically listened to the product features and sales pitches from two separate vacuum cleaner experts and cleaned a bit of their carpets. Yes sir, it does indeed feel like a vacuum, who’d have thought? And do they deliberately leave their floors dirty for customers to see results or is it just shabby shopkeeping?

In another megastore the TVs were all on and blaring for our attention, which made us feel unaccountably tired. Our telly, bought in 2011, is still working but is comically small and it seems like everyone now has a screen larger than their windows. We’re hoping for a happy compromise but Just. Couldn’t. Be. Arsed. Looking.

Dishwashers and dryers seemed even more boring than vacuum cleaners and TVs and for some reason we forgot our mission and shopping list and drifted over to the coffee machines. We have one, but it’s still sailing the seas in a shipping container, with a hopeful arrival date of maybe six weeks. There was a palpable sense of longing and homesickness as we spotted our model, albeit a later version, and stared at it. “Oh, what I wouldn’t give for our Magnifica to be here right now,” Craig sighed as I tentatively stroked the milk steamer nozzle.

Defeated, we left electronica and appliances and looked for some couches. Moving from a compact 84 square-metre apartment to a 187 metre-squared house has meant that our 12 year old IKEA sofa would resemble a brick in the middle of a tennis court.

Boy oh boy, we saw them ALL. We visited the posh places, the not-so-posh-but-kinda-decent places and the CRAZY CRAZY CRAZY stuck-together-with-hope-and-staples places. We’re not L-shaped or modular people and those, along with the frighteningly skinny lunar module legs, covered about 90% of the entire stock available. I don’t want to plonk my ample arse into a chair and hear the metallic ‘twannnnnnggg’ of a leg snapping under duress.

I’m old, but I’m not ‘grandma needs her oxygen tank’ old and some of the sofas on sale were flouncy or puckered or curvy or something that created itself in the 1970s and continued to reproduce for decades afterwards. Craig sat in one and sighed, enjoying the comfort, but I quickly burst his bubble when I hissed, “Look, I know it might feel nice but I DO NOT WANT to feel embarrassed and depressed every time I walk into the lounge room.”

Otherwise, there were the sofas or modular units designed for people who, unless they needed to defecate, clearly intend to spend their entire lives inside the lounge room. Cup holders, massagers, trays for snacks, butt lifting machinery, conversion to bed mode, mini fridges and plug in extras. Heaven help them during a power cut.

Eventually, and with no joy in our eyes whatsoever, we settled on two larger replicas of the tiny IKEA sofa we already have. Black, leather, no patterns, unadorned. “It’s the pillows and the rugs that add the colour,” I assured Craig, who was already out of the door in his eagerness to escape the misery of Sunday shopping.

His eyes were already fixed on the blinking BCF* sign in the distance. I was about to crush his spirit yet again when I said, ‘Nope, we’ll do that later’ and led him back to the counter to pay for our sensible sofas.

The vacuum, TV, dryer and dishwasher will just have to wait until our strength and joy for living returns.

*Craig – just to give him a tiny bit of anonymity unless you ventured here via Facebook
*BCF – Boating Camping Fishing

11 responses to “Un-fun essentials”

  1. Sigh. With the exception of books and plants I loathe shopping. Himself loves it and is happy to go to every shop known to man to ‘comparison’ shop. Good I hear you say – let him do the work. He likes company of these treks. Good luck.

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    1. Himself can shop and you find yourself a comfy couch (if in a homewares store), or cafe and wifi!

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  2. I can relate to your story. We recently had a dishwasher debacle. Ours was only 6 years old but it broke. It wouldn’t turn on even though it had worked fine all that time. We realised it was the computer component.The fixit man took 3 weeks to come and then said he had to get a new motherboard from Melbourne and have it programmed for our model. That took another three weeks. When Mr Fixit returned and installed new motherboard it still didn’t work he said it had been programmed wrongly so back it had to go. By now we were a tad fed up. The cost to fix was $685. Bill rang Mr Fixit and said to stick it and we went off to buy a new one. We tried to keep it as close to the price of fixing. But the cheap ones looked suss. We settled on the bottom of the range of Fisher and Pykle a reputable brand made in New Zealand. I have a washing machine and dryer the same brand and they have been good. I got fed up with cheap vacuums not f****ing sucking and my daughter convinced me to buy a dyson on a stick with no cables. Silly me went for the biggest and best. It sucks well but it is too heavy for this little old lady but I would recommend the smaller models. Good luck.Shopping with the other half is a pain though.

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    1. Dyson seems to be the way to go, but I hear you re the heavier ones. I suspect we’ll go back (when our strength returns) and get that one

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  3. 84 square metres is compact? That’s more than twice the space I have here. Which is totally irrelevant and I shall buy a house as soon as I win lotto.
    I haven’t even looked online at sofas and other stuff, but I do remember Freedom used to have a great range of comfy sofas, my oldest daughter has one. I also had a tiny Ikea sofa, black leather, just a little too short for lying on comfortably to nap in the afternoons.
    With appliances, I would recommend as far as you are able to afford, go for the perenaially reliable European options, although I have discovered Asko washing machines are no longer actually made in Sweden as mine was, they outsource to China I think. But Miele and Bosch are great options, with both having combination machines that wash and dry your clothes so a separate dryer is not needed, although you did say you won’t need one.

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    1. Compact when the balcony area, three bedrooms are taken into account. The bedrooms were far more generous than the living area which was like frying sausages in front of the telly…… European might be the way to go…

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      1. If the bedrooms were larger I would have used one of those as a living room.

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  4. I enjoy shopping for appliance, although I hate when they fail.
    Two or three years ago we replaced our old Dyson stick vacuum cleaner with a new one. The difference was remarkable. It about $650 and I get Diane’s point. Ours is low to mid range and quite heavy enough. It could clean twice the size of our three bedroom apartment on the normal setting but on the high setting, it chews through the battery very quickly. So yes, feel the weight of the motor and with a Dyson, you really can’t go wrong.
    I expect our Bosch dishwasher is low end as it still has a dial but we have been very happy with it.
    Lounge suites are interesting. Most have huge seats and the backrest is so far back. Such suites I have sat on are not comfortable at all.
    We are happy, two people, with our combined Samsung washing machine combo dryer. To wash and dry takes over three hours but for two people that doesn’t matter.

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    1. There was a dyson on special AND one of Choice’s recommended ones, so I suspect that’ll be the one we get. In the meantime the vacuum at our air BNB has the nozzle and head fixed on backwards and can’t be changed, so it’s a real workout!

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  5. At least you had a good look around for those household goods for Choice. We recently bought a new cloths dryer, was amazed at how they dry clothes compared to our old one…do prefer clothes dried outside though.

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    1. Oh me too, but as you know, there’ll be days when that won’t be possible and stepping around clothes horses or draping sheets over the tops of doors is getting a bit old…

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