Pages
- Home
 - Kumano Kodo Trip
 - Japanese Festivals
 - Japanese Castles
 - Stitching Finishes 2025
 - Stitching Finishes 2024
 - Stitching Finishes 2022
 - Stitching Finishes 2021
 - Stitching Finishes 2020
 - Finish It in 2019
 - Stitching Finishes 2018
 - Stitching Finishes 2017
 - Stitching Finishes 2016
 - Stitching Finishes 2015
 - Stitching Finishes 2014
 - Stitching Finishes 2013
 - Stitching Finishes 2012
 - Smalls Stitch A Long 2018 - 2019
 - Smalls Stitch A Long 2014 - 2017
 - 6 & 6 in 2018
 - 17 in 2017
 - Take A Stitch Tuesday
 - English Paper Piecing Projects
 
Saturday, February 13, 2021
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

5 comments:
There are not so many left in New Zealand, though probably most towns still have one I think. I used them often in the 1990s when hunting for accommodation, to call taxis, etc, but now cellphones are pretty much universal.
I think home phones meant pay phones were no longer required much and now with mobile phones they get very little use. Vandalism used to be a big problem with pay phones here. I have not used one for years, I think there is still one in our little town.
I think they are extinct in Sweden. Should you find one it is likely the slot for coins or telephone cards is jammed with chewing gum or the cord cut by a vandal's knife.
Also not so many here either, I have seen a couple in Melbourne but haven’t seen anyone using them in a long time. Everyone seems to have mobiles. At Christmas time, the homeless are allowed to use the public phones for free to contact their family.
I remember having a payphone at our highschool, to call home to get picked up or when you forgot your lunch at home. Felix said his school didn't have one - they could use the phone at the office! I don't even recall the last time I used one, though, muse be about 20 years ago now.
Post a Comment