When I was growing up, we had snowball and snow block makers, and they were called our hands. Believe it or not, they were free and did the job just fine. In fact, my brother and I built some pretty impressive snow forts in our time, several that featured multiple rooms, most that boasted slides off the tops, and one that I recall even had a stained glass window. No kidding - - we figured out that if you froze water in a bar pan and added food coloring, it made something of a stained glass window (not a very attractive one, of course, but who else can brag that their snow forts featured such striking attention to detail?) You will have to keep in mind that we grew up on a farm, so we already had lots of drifts to work with, plus a dad that used a tractor and blade to push the snow into big piles. Still, we put a lot of work into the making of our "snow mansions" . . . . all without the assistance of the LL Bean Snowball/Snow Block Maker. Just think of the amazing projects we could have completed had we had this fantastic tool! We had no idea just how deprived we were.
HAVE YOU EVER SEEN SUCH OBVIOUS NEED FOR THE
LL BEAN SNOWBALL/SNOW FORT BLOCK MAKER?!?
2 comments:
I would have liked to have seen some of those snow forts when you were growing up.
Unca Bunca
I saw another ingenious device at the store the other day. A battery-operated marshmallow toaster. Apparently kids these days are too lazy to turn their sticks themselves when toasting marshmallows in a fire. Oh, yeah, they don't use sticks cut from the woods like we did. They need fancy wood-handled metal rods that self-propel! I can't believe how bad we had it back in the day. . .
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