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@llYossarian2 ай бұрын
...so you must have noticed during the edit but do you even _hear_ the cicadas anymore?
@aidinniplays2 ай бұрын
9:47 just call them lawn chairs
@anndownsouth50702 ай бұрын
❤❤
@gmdhargreaves2 ай бұрын
Mate you are loosing it, Davenport? Na mate you meant to say Chesterfield
@versebuchanan5122 ай бұрын
Don't tell me what to do.
@auntlynnie2 ай бұрын
The funny thing about complaining about the noise of the planes is how loud the cicadas are. I couldn’t even hear the planes.
@MonkeyJedi992 ай бұрын
"What?" - "I SAID I COULDN"T HEAR THE PLANES OVER THE CICADAS!!!"
@cocobutter31752 ай бұрын
I was just wondering how he stands the cicadas since he's not from here. I've lived here all my life and I hate that noise. It's really the tree frog noise every summer that I hate, but when the cicadas came out and joined the chorus this year, I thought the tornado siren was going off. Then it didn't stop for hours, and the horrific realization slowly dawned on me... Days and days of this whining, droning siren blaring over that whirring clicking tree frog noise, and then the snakes came. I was waiting for more plagues. They all left, and then the scorching heat came. The country is fun like that. Can't wait for the fall when we get the deer-jumping-in-front-of-our -pickup-truck plague.
@VynalDerp2 ай бұрын
@@cocobutter3175 As someone who's lived with Cicada's all my life I've completely droned out the noise and it's like it doesn't even exist for me. Sometimes I have to be reminded the noise is indeed still there.
@bsteven8852 ай бұрын
@@cocobutter3175, the cicadas this late in the season come out annually in Chicagoland and other areas in the USA -- as opposed to the "one in a lifetime" occurrence of the 13-year and 17-year cicadas emerging in the SAME year. (OH MY, those were REALLY NOISY!)
@WKre123x42 ай бұрын
@@cocobutter3175he did a video on cicadas a few months ago, when it was the “thing” in the news. But like you or someone else said, cicadas are ever present, just a few special broods that arrive every so often.
@easternacademy2 ай бұрын
About 30 years ago, a business associate mentioned that she would be vacationing in the Adirondacks. I flippantly asked "Are you going to study the chairs?" When she returned, she presented me a stack of photos of every Adirondack chair she saw while on vacation. Even though each chair was clearly an Adirondack, details such as the curve of the back and the angles of the seat and legs were significantly different. My bucket list includes building a set of mismatched Adirondack chairs, using those photos as guides.
@bleachdemon7321Ай бұрын
This needs to be a youtube channel
@TheReflectivePerspectiveАй бұрын
You may find the Wave Hill chair of interest as well!
@mrst7831Ай бұрын
These chairs are so cute in various colours, for little kids. They are a trap for adults !!
@garretthedden5743Ай бұрын
This is a wonderful read, thank you! Sounds like a fun collection to receive!
@RobertJareckiАй бұрын
My uncle remodeled one of his Adirondack chairs. He replaced one of the armrests with a piece with a wider area at the end (like those one piece classroom desks) and added a tapered hole for a small bucket. He'd fill the bucket with ice and a few beverages so he didn't have to get up so often. Later, he changed it again to hold an insulated ice bucket with insulated lid. Don't know if he saw that somewhere or not.
@anotherjoshua2 ай бұрын
you left out one of the best benefits of Adirondack chair arms -- you can put a beer on them and still have plenty of space for half a roast chicken
@kirbyculp34492 ай бұрын
Nachos!
@LindaC6162 ай бұрын
💯 I used to get work done in the Adirondack chairs next to the café on the pier downtown. For that reason precisely
@maryvalentine90902 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@curiousfirely2 ай бұрын
I feel like this is the most mid-western use for a piece of furniture, and I'm here for it!! 🎉
@Martive_Led2 ай бұрын
But, sadly, with time you will have to get up and out of the Adirondack chair. Never an easy task for many.
@Rubrickety2 ай бұрын
Another furniture item that differs across the pond is the wardrobe. Here in the U.S. they are far less common (due to newer housing with built-in closets), and rarely if ever serve as portals to magical lands filled with talking allegorical animals.
@sophierobinson27382 ай бұрын
Chifferobes. My grandmother had 2. Her house only had 1 closet. We had a metal wardrobe, as my sister had no closet so used mine. She and my mother had a LOT of clothes!
@rdhawke2 ай бұрын
@@sophierobinson2738”chifferobe” gawd, I haven’t heard that word in forever… I’m a month short of 79 years old.
@TheQuietCottage2 ай бұрын
"rarely if ever" 😭😭
@AmyKozerski2 ай бұрын
I always heard them called armoires but that might be the wrong word maybe we're not cultured
@kimberlytross98642 ай бұрын
@@AmyKozerski In my understanding, a chifferobe has a space for hanging clothes on one side & drawers in the other side, both sides enclosed by double-doors. An armoire is often a larger, heavier piece - they were originally the cabinet used to store arms & armor, hence the name. Now, they can be used for clothes, books, shoes, anything - whereas the chifferobe & wardrobe are just for clothing storage. Of course now, as people use these pieces less & definitions have been forgotten, many interchange the words as if they are the same. The more high-end furniture stores often retain the older definitions.
@bholdr----02 ай бұрын
Little known fact/trivia: Adirondack chairs originally had their characteristic sloped seat because the were designed to sit (pun intended) facing downhill on a slope - which would make the seat level, rather than sloped back, but nowadays, their lounge-chair aspect is their feature. (Even though that makes them hard to get out of, sometimes.) ...Or so I understand. (Yeah, yeah, I read a book about the design history of chairs, once. I'm a really exciting guy.... Really!)
@FourFish472 ай бұрын
I HATE these sloped chairs!! They need to stop making them because, like you said, they're hard to get out of! Plus, I HATE sitting back in my chair - or car seat - like some low riding thug lol 😊
@slvnyc28242 ай бұрын
😊😊😊
@bholdr----02 ай бұрын
@@FourFish47 Well, if they're hard to get out of, I find that bringing an extra drink makes that less of a problem... But yeah, one is kinda stuck in them for a while...
@marshalltille77702 ай бұрын
I’m getting another of these chairs from Lowes this weekend. I love mine on my FRONT porch with a cheap cushion. Oh, with a cooler of cold beer in front of me watching KZbin.
@pfitz48812 ай бұрын
@@FourFish47 I totally agree. They are very uncomfortable and hard to get out of. I'd rather sit in the ground.
@adeptuspotatocus64512 ай бұрын
Southern US here. Couch can refer to any multi-seat chair. "Sofa" usually refers to 3+ seaters while "love seat" refers to a cozy 2-seater.
@josephcernansky17942 ай бұрын
When I was a kid my father "invested" in a "Davenport" with matching chair. The "Davenport" being this really long 7+ sofa/couch....it fit all 6 of us kids while dad had "His Chair"...to watch Walt Disney and Mutual of Ohama's "Wild Kingdom" on Sunday nights right after bath time. But we casually always called it a couch.
@Splucked2 ай бұрын
Same in New England.
@anitapeludat2562 ай бұрын
@@josephcernansky1794 You just described my childhood , Dad's chair , being the youngest, I had the floor, and TV watching. 1960+ era.
@lennybuttz21622 ай бұрын
Thank You Captain Obvious.
@Splucked2 ай бұрын
@@lennybuttz2162 **KAREN ALERT**
@cspat12 ай бұрын
My grandmother, who lived in PA called her couches a Davenport. I live in the Midwest and call mine a couch. They however are advertised in the sales papers and commercials as sofas
@GeminiRising72 ай бұрын
Apparently, "sofa" still sounds a bit more refined than "couch." I'm in my 40s and am from the Midwest. My mom always corrected me as a child when I called it a couch instead of sofa.
@profosist2 ай бұрын
I can confirm midwest grandparent called it a davenport
@trejea17542 ай бұрын
@@profosistsame here
@SuprousOxide2 ай бұрын
We didn't call our sofa a davenport. But we had a table places behind the sofa that we called a davenport table
@OriginalCaliKitty2 ай бұрын
When I was a little kid (back when dinosaurs roamed the earth) in northern Ohio everyone called it a davenport, as did my relatives in Michigan. I'm not sure when that changed, or if it did, because then we moved to California where no one called it a davenport - SoCal was couch territory. No one I knew called it a sofa unless you were referring to a sofa bed, but maybe we weren't high class enough. As far as settee, I think of that as a small couch (or double chair) for two people, whereas a couch can be 6-8 feet long depending on the size of your living room or den. (No one calls that room a parlor or lounge, although my Mom used to call it the "front room" as opposed to the den, maybe because that room was closest to the front door.
@MiamiMom632 ай бұрын
Porches were very popular in areas that were real hot in the days before air conditioning when families would sit out on the porch at night because it was cooler than inside and would even listen to the radio and hang out there. My mom said in the summers she would sometimes even sleep on their screened in front porch when it was real hot, and everyone felt safer back then.
@celesteredding15502 ай бұрын
Yep. 50plus years ago
@zone4garlicfarm2 ай бұрын
When I was growing up we had two cots in the screened porch. They were used every night from May-September. We had a neighbor who slept on his porch year round - in Maine.
@kathywiseley43822 ай бұрын
Our hospital had them at one time the end of every floor. They were screened so that patients could lie in the cooler night air in the summer and breathe a bit easier.
@justme55442 ай бұрын
We bought 2 of them and immediately gave them to the very young neighbors...because there should be an age limit on these things! They're NOT meant for old people!
@JRBWare19422 ай бұрын
Not only that, but before 60 or 70 years ago, it was specifically front porches--so that people could interact with their neighbors while sitting on the porch. Later on, people retreated to back porches--specifically to avoid their neighbors.
@sugarplum58242 ай бұрын
Front porch swings are popular in America for a few reasons. Our weather allows for a lot of time outdoors, particularly in the spring and summer. Moving back and forth on a porch swing stirs a little breeze, even if there's no wind around. Some homes in the American South had porch swings that could be made into a bed, offering fresh air on hot, still summer nights. There's also something quite comforting in a gentle swaying, back and forth. Think of rocking a fussy baby to sleep with just such a motion; it's soothing. With a swing on the front porch, you could easily socialize, inviting a friendly passerby to sit with you to enjoy a cool drink as you discover what the latest news might be in their lives. It's a comfortable place to pass the time and watch what's happening in your neighborhood.
@reindeer77522 ай бұрын
I have fond memories of wrapping up in a blanket and drinking hot tea or cocoa when it was raining.
@boblangill62092 ай бұрын
The loss of that sociability is one thing that has been blamed on changing home architecture. It varies by region, but having a patio in the back yard instead of a front porch, has been a long time trend for newer houses.
@josephcernansky17942 ай бұрын
Loved to sit on the swing on the back porch which was high up the hillside to watch storms come up the valley....till the lightning and wind chased us inside. In the summer the entire family split up between the swings on the back porch and front porch along with the "glider" to sleep outdoors on hot humid nights. We lived on a side street, so it was fairly quiet and SAFE!.....we had plenty of guns handy, but NOBODY ever worried about safety or robbery when and where I grew up. HOW times have CHANGED in the USA!
@papajeff54862 ай бұрын
Same with a rocking chair…
@teaeyedoubleguhur2 ай бұрын
I had my naps on the front porch swing as did my daughters.
@hannakinn2 ай бұрын
My Southern grandmother called a couch a Divan, the first time she handed me a decorative pillow she'd just been gifted and instructed me to go into the parlor and put it on the Divan, I had no clue where to put it, lol. I use couch and sofa interchangeably.
@deborahdanhauer85252 ай бұрын
Mine did too!! I’ve looked all through these comments and you and I are the only ones who said that. There was one person in Britain who said they called box springs a divan.🤗❤️🐝
@Dandee2682 ай бұрын
My grandparents did as well in Ky. It got passed on down to us kids. I used to say it until I noticed everyone else said sofa or couch.
@kellymoses85662 ай бұрын
My grandma called it a davenport.
@rdhawke2 ай бұрын
Divan…another term I haven’t heard in years and years.
@davidcampbell44652 ай бұрын
Yep, I grew hearing 'divan' also. I've often wondered if it was slang for 'davenport'. Probably southern/country slang.
@Darxide232 ай бұрын
There's nothing better than sitting out on the porch with a beer during a warm summer rain storm. Porches are covered, patios are not, so you get to stay dry. This is dependent on a rain-storm and not just a storm. Lightning and flying debris are counter to the ambiance you're looking for.
@JudithGolding2 ай бұрын
Congratulations on having the best incorporated, entertaining , and least annoying advertising piece within a KZbin post ever!
@DanielCoffey672 ай бұрын
I agree. I actually watched it all the way through... although I do wonder how much of a discount $30 off a position-controlled desk actually is. I suspect it falls under the "If you have to ask about the price, you can't afford it." category.
@UdderlyEvelyn2 ай бұрын
Yeah I have no interest but it flowed so well I let it play.
@kimnapier83872 ай бұрын
Jolly does a good sponsor added in,as well 😄.
@Needed4Reddit2 ай бұрын
@@kimnapier8387 I would probably go with The Why Files. The ads are fully on comedy skits that are almost better than the episodes.
@kenshinjenna2 ай бұрын
I'd say you don't watch much KZbin, but it is in the top 10... somewhere. Having said that, I still had to blow past because I am not remotely interested in an office chair. I don't even own/want any other type of chair.
@patbowers41802 ай бұрын
I call the back garden, the back yard!
@CptJistuce2 ай бұрын
The back yarden.
@StevenLubick2 ай бұрын
Also call it the backyard.
@theOlLineRebel2 ай бұрын
Finally figured out English always call their rear property a garden. I was totally confused thing that isn’t very pretty. Rather makes me now wonder what exactly an “English Garden” really is! Beautiful estate arboretum, or just a patch of dirt and grass?
@DancingPony1966-kp1zr2 ай бұрын
Front yard, back yard, and two side yards. I’ve always been confused by the use of “garden” to refer to them.
@theOlLineRebel2 ай бұрын
@@DancingPony1966-kp1zr Exactly. You think you're going to see a beautiful "English garden" always talked about, and see just a postage stamp of grass and patio.
@endiawilliams65292 ай бұрын
This might sound silly but when you said “this is my experience and no one can take that away from me” it meant a lot to me.
@kennethhanshansenjr.70192 ай бұрын
I'm an 86yr old 3rd generation Central Californian, and we always called a couch a "chesterfield".
@catofthecastle16812 ай бұрын
Chesterfield is a type of overstuffed tufted leather sofa from England!
@dementedfurbie.2 ай бұрын
To me, Chesterfields are the cigarettes my grandmother smoked
@moxievision2 ай бұрын
Chesterfield is also common parlance among Canadians of a certain age for pretty much any type of sofa or couch, but I think it's slowly falling out of use.
@patrickdix7722 ай бұрын
Like many things, the most popular brand in a local area often gets to be the generalized name for them there. Like there's the common thing of what a public drinking fountain is called. The majority of the USA calls them either a water fountain or a drinking fountain. Where I am in Wisconsin they're bubblers, which was originally a brand of drinking fountains. This is mostly in a pocket around SE Wisconsin, so it's just a more local thing.
@semajnollissor6612 ай бұрын
@@moxievision I hear you have to have something like a million dollars to get one (or an ottoman).
@maruka17162 ай бұрын
A friend of mine came from Kansas to attend college in upstate New York, and one of the things she wanted to see was "the Outer Rondacks."
@barbaraann97542 ай бұрын
:)
@Antfarmer2 ай бұрын
😆 😂
@sarah.s.flanagan2 ай бұрын
delightful
@noreenhewson69332 ай бұрын
Ha ha! We’ll be retiring there, in a few years. That’s too cute.
@abbynormal47402 ай бұрын
That's a new one.... Although also a Kansan, I watched enough of Norm Abram on TOH and TNYW in the 80's and 90's to hear him say "Adirondack" many, many times. 😄
@patrick_j_lee2 ай бұрын
In Ontario we call "Adirondack chairs" "Muskoka chairs", as our cottage country is in the Muskoka area of Ontario, not Adirondack, NY.
@wendyh27082 ай бұрын
I've heard them called Muskoka chairs from BC to NS. I have one on my front step. Love my Muskoka chair!
@patrick_j_lee2 ай бұрын
@@wendyh2708 To be honest, I wasn't sure what they were called in the other provinces, so thanks for the info!
@janinebean42762 ай бұрын
I call them that too! Southern Ontario
@alecs11962 ай бұрын
@@janinebean4276 Muskoka Chairs have become even better known throughout all of Canada ever since Loblaws PC (President's Choice) created a molded plastic resin version...which I find even more comfortable than the clunky wooden ones.
@mlw56652 ай бұрын
@@wendyh2708Yes, Canadians are wrong about many things (jk!:)
@lorrilewis21782 ай бұрын
My grandparents had great big Adirondack chairs on their backyard stone patio from the 1950s until the early 2000s. My grandfather made them. They also had a swing under the vine-covered pergola. Flowers everywhere. It was Heaven.
@Blondie422 ай бұрын
Now that he mentioned it, that lawn does need a mowing. Glad to see the pupper spending time with Laurence while filming
@user-kp6we9qw7i2 ай бұрын
In Tennessee, we “ Cut the grass”
@JohnEZang2 ай бұрын
Nah, just looks like lush naturally healthy grass. Can't stand when people feel the need to give their yard a buzzcut every 3 days. It's a mental illness.
@pamelabennett90572 ай бұрын
@user-kp6we9qw7i 'Whereas in my central PA region we just say "The grass needs mowed." 😀
@Asterion_Mol0cАй бұрын
I say "gotta go mow the lawn"
@greg_2162 ай бұрын
Adirondack chairs are supremely comfortable. If an airline had all-Adirondack seating, they would have me as a customer for life.
@xaenon2 ай бұрын
Preach! I bought a cheapie plastic one a couple of years ago and I frequently fall asleep in it in my shaded back yard in the summer evenings. It's amusing that he mentions a cat in the lap as an excuse to not get out of a chair: Cat in lap + Adirondack chair...... ZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
@marieclapdorp25802 ай бұрын
We have something similar in Canada called Muskoka chairs, which are incredibly popular. I, however, find them extremely uncomfortable. They are definitely not designed for short people.
@Sam979792 ай бұрын
The Ottoman Empire died for this and you just call them "Little foot stools", like, damn man wtf. Great vid tho! I'm typing this from an Adirondack chair in my yard lol
@denisecaringer47262 ай бұрын
I'm afraid to count the numbers of Adirondack chairs that we have here at the lake. They vary in design. In the living room, they're white-painted log-framed chairs, while the front porch has four red ones like your blue ones. The lower porch has white versions. Our family room is graced by two beautifully crafted pine Adirondacks that my late father designed and made as gifts when my husband and I built this house. I grew up in the same home in which my mother grew up, and one of my earliest memories is sitting in my dad's lap on a white-painted Adirondack chair that my mother's father had made in the 1930s. The chairs were gathered under a bower of huge trees, it was late summer and, yes, as in your video, a chorus of cicadas was creating that lovely, pulsating background "music." Love it.
@ADude-f3z2 ай бұрын
(Chuckles) In the United States, there are families with relatives all over everywhere. So when they come to visit, a sofa, or couch, is often referred to as a guest bed…
@darkwoes2 ай бұрын
Before I forget ... here in California I was raised to call the attached covered area out front a porch and the area out back is a patio. I have 4 names for living room furniture... loveseat, sofa, couch, and sectional depending on the size. Loveseat is for 2, sofa 3, couch 4, sectional 5 or more. A single seat for a lady is usually in a bedroom a la a fainting couch or a settee.
@shunyaku77592 ай бұрын
Consider yourself A chair Consider yourself Part of the furniture
@colleenmarin89072 ай бұрын
ROFLMAO
@JKNat90042 ай бұрын
Very clever...the song from Oliver, which took place in England. 😏
@hippiemama522 ай бұрын
Excellent!😅
@karen-leelamb10972 ай бұрын
Lol! Very good
@thomasdjonesn2 ай бұрын
👏👏👏👏👏
@billsager56342 ай бұрын
Keep up the good work. As an American who grew up in a neighborhood with mainly Scottish immigrants, you often provide insight as to why I say things in a manner that isn't normal for most Americans, but is normal for Brits.
@carolynbrubaker16192 ай бұрын
My son built a Murphy Bed for his California King mattress. It doubles as a guest bed and a sound barrier for my daughter-in-law's office which is on the other side of the wall. It's great!
@tomhalla4262 ай бұрын
My sister had a Murphy bed built as a guest bed. It had to be assembled in place.
@beenaplumber8379Ай бұрын
I thought Murphy beds were a UK thing! There was an episode of Are You Being Served with a plot that featured a Murphy bed prominently. There was also one featured in the UK comedy series Allo Allo. I've never seen one in the US, though I imagine in Manhattan, where apartments can be minuscule, they might be more popular.
@loltubelvr0072 ай бұрын
You missed the bed inside the couch; A fold-away bed. Popular in America.
@dwaneanderson80392 ай бұрын
Also called a sofa sleeper or hide-a-bed.
@waggermama2 ай бұрын
A sofa bed? We have those in the uk
@EinsteinsHair2 ай бұрын
In the '60s my parents called our couch a "divan." But actually, a divan is a deep sofa, generally without arms or a back, which can be used as a bed. It did fold out into a bed, so perhaps they believed that any sofa bed was a divan. I cannot ask them now, unfortunately.
@waggermama2 ай бұрын
@@EinsteinsHair it’s weird isn’t it, cos my folks say divan bed to mean a mattress on a fabric coated frame (and it sometimes has drawers in), but I can also see a divan as a backless seating/sleeping place
@xaenon2 ай бұрын
And the futon!
@kimfleury2 ай бұрын
Michigan Baby Boomer here (tail end). My family says "couch," but we had neighbors who were either WWII vets or Rosie Riveters, with kids our age, and their children sat on the Davenport to watch television after supper while their former Rosie Riveter mom warshed dishes in the kitchen zinc. I always felt like I was visiting a living history museum when I was there. They were also subscribed to the original "cable television" in the area, which gave them access to about 5 extra channels on their black & white TVs. They were kind of chintzy channels, like the time and weather clocks that were fixed to a board that was rotated in a circle. And yes, they were weather clocks, just like analog clocks, but the hands pointed to wind direction, wind speed, and icons that showed the forecast for rain, sun, clouds and snow. But mainly we watched old movies from the era of the parents' childhood and young adult years, even as we watched the parents wearing the same clothing and hairstyles and talking just like the people in those old movies. They even still had a wringer washer.
@Antfarmer2 ай бұрын
Wringer washer!! Hadn’t thought about those in years! My parents had one for the longest time because we were in some serious 😉 desert 🌵 and water was extremely expensive 💰💰
@dawnkindnesscountsmost59912 ай бұрын
I'm interested to see you in Michigan use the term "warshed;" today I learned that it is a pronunciation of "washed" not limited to southwestern Pennsylvania, where I am from. So, may I ask what you call a carbonated beverage, such as Coca-Cola, Pepsi, and Fresca? Here, it's traditionally pop, but a few people from here say soda, and in my opinion are acting too big for their britches. 😉
@darkwoes2 ай бұрын
I would love to have a wringer washer.
@csnide67022 ай бұрын
My grandma lived in Michigan and said "davenport" as well .... ! and my Mother -in-law (god rest her soul) always added the R to wash...... 😄
@DancingPony1966-kp1zr2 ай бұрын
Try a home or hardware store in Mexico. I’ve seen them there brand new.
@RandomNonsense19852 ай бұрын
I grew up one town away from Westport, NY and never even realized that’s where the Adirondack chairs were invented. It’s nice to see one of my favorite KZbinrs giving my area a shoutout. The Adirondacks are an absolutely beautiful region, and there are some spectacular views around the High Peaks area, especially during peak foliage season in the fall.
@beckyferris23902 ай бұрын
When I was a kid in the 60s we called them bed springs. They were all metal with coils and weighed about a ton. Later on we bought a box spring with a wooden frame and it weighed far less.
@better.better2 ай бұрын
no, you called them bedsprings because they were CALLED bed springs... box springs are box springs because it's a wooden frame (a box) as opposed to the all metal type. I would guess that the metal style was a pre-war innovation, and people returned to the wooden version during wartime efforts, or maybe just because it is easier to deal with the box spring: weighs less, cost less, easier to handle.
@joannshupe93332 ай бұрын
@@better.better I recall when my open springs were replaced with a box spring (early/mid 50s) and my mother said they were the absolute BEST because you didn't have to crawl under the bed or remove the mattress to dust the springs!!
@conraddominguez-urban52152 ай бұрын
There was a "Peanuts" comic strip from the late fifties or sixties where they are playing "Cowboys". Lucy comes running up to Charlie Brown complaining loudly about how Schroeder won't play fair: "I shot him and he won't fall dead!" Charlie Brown asks where she shot him, to which Lucy states, "I shot him right behind the davenport! And if that isn't fatal, I don't know what is!"
@atticstattic2 ай бұрын
September 25th, 1953
@OriginalCaliKitty2 ай бұрын
Charles Schultz was from the Midwest (Minnesota) and born in 1922, so that may explain the usage.
@glennbob50932 ай бұрын
I remember reading this in a collection, and though initially confused figured out from context it was a couch.
@tomhalla4262 ай бұрын
My Grandmother called sofas Davenports. She was born in 1894, in the upper Midwest.
@trejea17542 ай бұрын
My grandma b. 1899 in Indiana also called them davenports. Somehow I ended up calling them couches.
@efogg32 ай бұрын
Mine did too. Davenport. Born in Upstate NY. 1918
@neils55392 ай бұрын
Was she from Davenport Iowa?
@juliejohnson-hunt71342 ай бұрын
My mother (b. 1928) and my grandmother (b. 1890’s) in northern Indiana, always called them Davenports. I use the more common term couch though. I also migrated to TX.
@debrajames38692 ай бұрын
My grandmother was from Tennessee and she also called them davenports. Of course, she pronounced it, "dab'n'port".🤣
@SteveandLizDonaldson2 ай бұрын
The original wooden Adirondack chair: forever scraping and repainting. The plastic composite Adirondack chair (which is what I see in this video): heavenly
@sugakookie63032 ай бұрын
I just bought two Adirondack chairs for my fire pit area. My grandfather every few years would do the scraping and repainting…mine are the composite…
@alecs11962 ай бұрын
Regretfully though, those comfy resin plastic ones are quite light, hence even a small squall blows them off of your dock into the lake where you last see them floating off into the sunset.
@susan77752 ай бұрын
@@alecs1196 Ours are heavy same as wood is
@FLPhotoCatcher2 ай бұрын
Just use linseed oil, and oil it every-other year or so. No need to scrape it. That might only work if you buy unpainted ones to start with.
@Mick_Ts_Chick2 ай бұрын
My dad makes them. They live at a lake, so he mostly winds up making them out of teak. Expensive, but they last a lot longer.
@accademiaoscura78702 ай бұрын
Murphy Beds were hugely popular in France in the 20th Century.... probably due to small apartment sizes. In fact I can personally recall driving across France as a child (with my parents) in the late 1970's, and literally EVERY hotel we stayed at, had a murphy bed!!
@lindaedwards66832 ай бұрын
Growing up in Iowa in the 60s, we called the sofa a davenport.
@jeanping97392 ай бұрын
My grandmother called it that too. She spent most of her life in California but did start off in Nebraska.
@JKNat90042 ай бұрын
My mom always called it a davenport and is from Wisconsin. My dad was born in the south and called it a sofa. I've called if by both names. Up until maybe 5-10 years ago, my tendency strayed from davenport to sofa. I don't really like the sound of couch.
@stephgreen30702 ай бұрын
My grandmother from Minnesota also called it a Davenport. Her kids (my mom and my aunts and uncles) called it a couch as do I. I wonder if it is more a generational thing vs a colloquial thing.
@securitycamera87762 ай бұрын
Did you sit on your davenport in Davenport?
@xaenon2 ай бұрын
@@securitycamera8776 damn, you beat me to it....
@milemarker3012 ай бұрын
this is a giggle, pulling together such an odd topic. fun!
@MYJ612 ай бұрын
My paternal grand mother called a sofa a “Chesterfield”. Many new RVs have Murphy beds for space saving.
@alwynemcintyre21842 ай бұрын
In Australia the box spring bed is considered two pieces, the sprung base and the mattress, together they are called an ensemble
@GangstarComputerGod2 ай бұрын
It’s the same in the U.S. you don’t sleep on a box spring
@ladonnaburk4020Ай бұрын
My grandparents called the sofa a devan, pronounced in Okie language, DA-van. I flip between couch and sofa. I visualize a couch as something hard, straight, square, line, while a sofa is a soft, fluffy and comfy.
@FR-tb7xh2 ай бұрын
Here in the Northeast US, generations of my family always called them settees, too! Back in the late 1950s, my parents bought their huge settee and matching upholstered chair from a high end furniture store in Manhattan. They had super deep seats (even we kids had long legs), super-dense down-filled cushions, and were built on hardwood frames that didn’t twist when the pieces were moved. You can’t find that quality today. Mom got them reupholstered after about 20 years. Also, we always had big wood red and white painted Adirondack chairs and two-seaters at our lake’s edges - but they had really big ‘paddle’ arm rests (big enough to fit an appetizer plate, a beanbag ashtray, plus your arm), and magazine and newspaper racks built into their bases! I loved lake living and the memories so much, I once painted a watercolor of the waterfront and those chairs (some turned over to lose the prior night’s rain).
@WyhnTemple2 ай бұрын
Forgot about the term Davenport. I grew up with it in the 60s. Haven’t heard that term in decades. Before box springs were widespread, there was another style of bed called Hollywood beds which had the connected coils like the box spring but were completely exposed springs (no box). A thick mattress was laid on top but there was no bedframe whatsoever. It made it easier to use a torch to destroy bedbugs and their eggs from the springs. The downside was that the springs had a tendency to catch and snag bedding and would bend out of shape over time. Now that’s a blast from the past!
@Jfleshman12092 ай бұрын
My mom referred to a settee as a loveseat.
@kimberlytross98642 ай бұрын
I think a settee is a smaller couch-like seat, less stuffed, more uncomfortable, more formal.
@deborahpike2 ай бұрын
Love how the paid advertising was done. Not annoying at all.
@JeanWatson-y3h2 ай бұрын
I thought that desk/top/counter thing a ma jig was pretty cool!
@chalmer312 ай бұрын
I had to pause at 8:20 to see if they were my cicadas or your cicadas 😂
@karenwilliams41522 ай бұрын
I did the same!! 😂
@wayneyadams2 ай бұрын
2:02 Similar to what you are talking about are regions and groups who call a refrigerator, Frigidaire. There are also regions and groups who call a tissue, Kleenex. I have heard the word Davenport used for sofa, but it is very rare.
@mmmpotstickers86842 ай бұрын
and Xerox.
@wayneyadams2 ай бұрын
@@mmmpotstickers8684 Thanks, I forgot about that. In fact, that is the only thing people call copying.
@CptJistuce2 ай бұрын
Also "coke" as a generic term for carbonated beverages.
@wayneyadams2 ай бұрын
@@CptJistuce Are ya'll talking about coke cola? LOL
@CptJistuce2 ай бұрын
@@wayneyadams Coca-Cola is a kind of coke, sure.
@kendavis80462 ай бұрын
Yeah, I think we can come up with some oddities in furniture, but I suspect both populations on both sides of the pond understand what to sit on and what to put a plate on to eat. And since I am stricken with the disease of crossword puzzles (American version usually, but I sometimes do the cryptic version when I run across it) I knew every version of sofa that you mentioned. We are more alike on both sides of the pond than we are different. My wife and I watch a LOT of BBC programs! (Well, she watches, I mostly sleep, but that is only because of the time of the night.)
@leahl.81882 ай бұрын
LOL...as someone from the ADKs I gotta admit i was impressed by your pronunciation of Adirondacks. Then you explained your journey to the proper pronunciation. Now say Sacandaga!
@Hey_Its_That_Guy2 ай бұрын
...or Susquehanna...
@bethknight44362 ай бұрын
Or Ticonderoga
@Hillbilly0012 ай бұрын
LOL! Always interesting Citizen Laurence.
@AxelQC2 ай бұрын
We bought a mattress last year. Typically you buy a box springs with the mattress as a set, but I was informed that box springs are now obsolete. "Foundations" are now sold with mattresses.
@LarryHatch2 ай бұрын
My family would vacation in the Adirondack Mts. of New York, lovely wood cabins, those chairs, and bears going through your trash like they owned it. They kind of did own your trash unless you had a death wish. Those chairs were popular in Big Moose Lake.
@colleenmarin89072 ай бұрын
Yes, the bears up there own everything that smells like it could be food, and rightly so
@teaeyedoubleguhur2 ай бұрын
On our first vacation to Old Forge, my now son-in-law grilled steaks one evening. He forgot to out the trash can into the shed. About three in the morning, their dog started to bark her head off. She looked out the front door. the trash had been knocked over and a bear was outside. Later we noticed some claw marks on the house and the window screen was ajar. That darn bear was trying together in! Yes. my future s-i-l knew about the importance of keeping your trash secure as he'd been coming up to the Adirondacks since he was little. He also used to be a camp counselor at a camp near Big Moose Lake.
@OriginalCaliKitty2 ай бұрын
Back in the 50s we used to have lawn/patio chairs that were all metal and you could bounce in them. Loved those.
@user-neo716652 ай бұрын
They are still around. I have 2 I sit in all the time.
@freeshrugs632 ай бұрын
My great-grandmother had a metal "glider" on her front porch. It seated two and rocked gently back and forth within a couple of inches limit. As I remember.
@thekowboymom27102 ай бұрын
Hearing rhe cicadas buzzing made me think i was hearing them at my house. But the windows are closed and the AC is on!
@JeffreyHawk2 ай бұрын
LOL, same. They're going nuts outside right now, so I thought I left the back door open.
@phazesix2 ай бұрын
@@JeffreyHawk Haha. I just moved to Chicago from NYC 2 months ago. Not used to this yet!! I thought they were done because I saw some expired ones on the ground. I guess they're still kickin! I grew up in WI & we never had them.
@BewareTheLilyOfTheValley2 ай бұрын
I live in Alabama and they love to shriek their heads off. I keep a fan going when I'm sleeping as I like the ambient noise but it also works to block out the screeching.
@lisasmith70662 ай бұрын
@@phazesixI pray they don’t make it to Southern California! 🦗🦗🦗🦗🦗
@joeholm45912 ай бұрын
A friend of mine in college moved into an OLD apartment building in our city and it not only had a Murphy bed that folded up behind lovely oak doors, but also had a wall safe (which we could never open)
@romad3572 ай бұрын
Way back in the '50s and early 60's I heard sofa/couch/davenport/chesterfield all used. Nowadays it is mainly sofa or couch. BTW, the first apartment my late wife and I lived in back in 1978 was a furnished. We negotiated that as we bought our own furniture, the rent would be reduced. Fast forward and while in the process of moving from California to Arizona, we rented a furnished apartment until we bought a house.
@susanlangley42942 ай бұрын
My Canadian family of Anglo-Irish descent called it a chesterfield. Since no one I knew as a child called it that, I quickly switched to couch or sofa depending on context.
@mirandarensberger69192 ай бұрын
As a short-legged person, I have never in my life encountered an Adirondack chair that was comfortable to sit in, but getting out of them is damn near impossible. I will never understand why they're so popular.
@seantlewis3762 ай бұрын
I have almost every piece of furniture mentioned here, including a box spring and a slat support bed. My Adirondack is on the front porch. The only time I've ever seen a murphy bed was a studio apartment my brother had in the 1980s. I wouldn't mind one of those now.
@callmecoffingaming48072 ай бұрын
Apartments that COME FURNISHED? That sounds awesome, and simultaneously I can see me wife slowly getting rid of it all and replacing it anyway.
@AnnaAnna-uc2ff2 ай бұрын
If you rent a furnished apartment that includes a bed. Throw away the mattress.
@larryprice56582 ай бұрын
Furnished apartments are also more expensive per month. The longer you stay the less sense it makes. Since furniture is easily damaged, one can expect a much higher security / cleaning deposit.
@callmecoffingaming48072 ай бұрын
@@larryprice5658 That makes sense I suppose. I just moved into my first apartment and my wife had had a blast making the place fit her aesthetic. I don't really care what it looks like so I let her do everything, but if I had furniture that wasn't technically mine I would go crazy so in a way I'm glad we own all the stuff in here, so if any of it breaks it's just a matter of throwing it away.
@aprilpotter30542 ай бұрын
I suspect you cannot dispose of the furniture b/c it belongs to the landlord. You would have to store the original stuff.
@sharondornhoff75632 ай бұрын
@@aprilpotter3054 If you're lucky, the landlord might be willing to take some of the original furnishings you're replacing away, gratis. Mostly that's just when they're in the process of preparing another apartment to be rented, though.
@belialbathory2299Ай бұрын
Settee is usually an antique small love seat type sofa. The Adirondack chairs sloped seat has one sitting appropriately. The knees are supposed to be higher than your hips to relieve back pain and so forth.
@jmcg61892 ай бұрын
Live in the South now, but I still call it a couch. I even call the loveseat a couch. First hour!
@DanielMWJ2 ай бұрын
Not just in the south! Love seats and sofas are specific cushion numbers for a couch!
@AdamYJ2 ай бұрын
As someone a stone’s throw from the Adirondacks, I’m glad he got around to the realization that they’re named after the mountains. I’ll take all the Upstate acknowledgement I can get.
I grew up (1970s Toronto suburb) calling them Chesterfields, but the other kids on my street did not. I usually call them couches now. The Chesterfield Shop is a company that still sells them
@DianeCasanova2 ай бұрын
I remember using davenport, then couch. I'm in Michigan.
@pkmcnett56492 ай бұрын
We called them that when we were kids. Also from Michigan.
@survivordave2 ай бұрын
My granny (who grew up in Idaho) used to call couches Davenports sometimes. I had forgotten that 😅
@toodlescae2 ай бұрын
My grandma and Great-grandparents did as well after spending most of their life in Iowa and Indiana.
@FoolOfATuque2 ай бұрын
In Canada a couch is also called a chesterfield. A string trimmer is a whipper snipper. Garbage disposal is a garburator.
@CaraFay-bf8jk2 ай бұрын
My maternal grandmother worked at the tuberculosis sanitorium in Saranac Lake, NY. Mom was born in Saranac Lake. As an Adirondack native, I can say I am not a fan of the Adirondack chair. Mostly bc my aging body finds it easier to sit down with an assist from gravity than to stand up to the adversity of gravity. 🤣
@fabrisseterbrugghe85672 ай бұрын
The greatest American furniture invention in my opinion is the rocking chair!
@jimgreen57882 ай бұрын
Laurence, in addition to the term Adirondack applying to the mtns. in the northern part of the state, they apply to the huge Adirondack Park, which begins just a short drive north of Albany, continuing almost to the Canadian border, and covering nearly 20% of the entire state.
@robhugh5352 ай бұрын
It's the largest State Park in the country, bigger than the Everglades, Yellowstone and Grand Canyon National Parks combined.
@justso45092 ай бұрын
At six million acres it's larger than about 50 whole countries. Small ones... but still.
@spiritzen2 ай бұрын
Porch swings are oddly popular in Scotland, the weather is not suitable but strangely many houses have them there.
@wayneyadams2 ай бұрын
It's interesting that Adirondak Chairs were invented in upstate New York but today are the iconic symbol of beach leisure. You even had a picture of them on the beach. Everyone dreams of sitting on the beack under a palm tree sipping on a large tropical drink through a large colorful straw, adorned with a tiny umbrella and a slice of pineapple stuck on the rim.
@NuNugirl2 ай бұрын
Nobody lugs those heavy chairs to the beach. We use “ fishermen “ chairs. Those are the guys who beach fish, who bury the end of the big rods in the sand. They sit low and have built in foot rests and double drink holders in the armrests.
@sarah.s.flanagan2 ай бұрын
I grew up in the Adirondacks and I'm pleased the chairs rank so highly
@RogueNationVideos2 ай бұрын
in Canada we have Muskoka chairs which are almost exactly the same as an Adirondack chair, only the back legs are longer and bow flat.
@penihavir17772 ай бұрын
Murphy bed: Murphy may have patented that version, but I ran across on in a Dickens novel (can’t recall which one, years ago), where a fellow had an efficiency apartment (well, basically one room, dining table to have a friend over but no kitchen ). His bed folded away, the metal frame doing some sort of accordion maneuver, with the table folding away at night. Oh, and he ordered meals delivered from local restaurants, and the “waiters” would “wait” until he’d finish the meal, to collect the plates and bring them back to the local restaurant.
@GenXfrom752 ай бұрын
The Adirondack chairs!! Got two in my backyard 😅
@rickscott73502 ай бұрын
Growing up in the West I learned Davenport, but my friends would giggle. I learned couch and sofa later. Found it was something my mom learned as her family was from Kentucky.
@leahmollytheblindcatnordee35862 ай бұрын
My parents used that term as well and are in Michigan. I still use it in my head sometimes, although I still connect it with the most uncomfortable one they bought when I was young.
@darrell95462 ай бұрын
Some people where I was raised called sofas 'divans', which is evidently a Turkish word. When I was a kid the swings at my school were much like the ones in your black and white photo--they were huge, with very long chains on the seats. You could kick them into huge well, swings, then launch yourself into space. And the landing zones were either hardpacked or paved.
@deborahdanhauer85252 ай бұрын
A Turkish word? Wow. My grandmother called it that. Very few on here have said their family used Divan. 🐝❤️🤗
@ElderStatesman2 ай бұрын
11:29 "Thomas Lee, who was based in Westport, New York..." Funny you should mention that, I was chilling out after work at Ballard Park in an Adirondack chair... in Westport. Just yesterday. Funny how this video wound up on my "For You" feed. 🤔
@Steampunkkids2 ай бұрын
At 1:55 Thank you for bringing up Davenport. I’ve only ever heard it in the Midwest. No one out in Cali seems to use that term. Thank you!
@M167A12 ай бұрын
My parents used Davenport and we're from Spokane
@rickscott73502 ай бұрын
@@M167A1 Same here, grew up in Spokane and learned Davenport, but it came from my Mom from Kentucky.
@profosist2 ай бұрын
I can confirm midwest grandparent called it a davenport
@lightningdemolition19642 ай бұрын
And no one in California refers to it as "cali"
@herrdrayer2 ай бұрын
My family had a Davenport desk next to a Davenport couch back in the 90s. The couch is long gone, but my mother still has her beloved 1860s Davenport desk. I think another appeal of Adirondack chairs is that an amateur with a hand saw, a drill, and some deck screws can build one from scrap wood in an afternoon.
@faenethlorhalien2 ай бұрын
That's an interestingly niche topic for sure!
@markbrown26402 ай бұрын
Another thing called an Adirondack is a type of permanent shelter, usually found in scout summer camps and other semi developed outdoor recreation areas. They have an advantage in low impact camping because the land managers control where people shelter rather than just letting them set up a tent on top of some critically rare plants or the nest of some endangered animals. They are also easy to make ADA compliant. They are easiest to imagine as small cabins with one side open to the weather.
@ricebeansrockroll8822 ай бұрын
I somehow missread that entire first sentence and was so confused.😂
@robertr.45832 ай бұрын
Hearing the cicadas singing away was my favorite part of this video. Yay for the cicadas.
@dojomaster54812 ай бұрын
In the mountain states of the US, Adirondack chairs even have their own variant, in that of ski chairs, not the chairs form ski lifts though that’s also a thing, but Adirondack chairs made out of skis. This type of chair is especially common in Colorado, heck I have one in my backyard.
@chrislaws47852 ай бұрын
Speaking of beds and slats, did you know that the saying "Sleep tight" comes from the fact that early beds would have either slats or just simple ropes running under it that would often come LOOSE during the night. Hence the term sleep "tight", as a way of saying "I hope your bed doesnt come loose in the middle of the night"....lol.
@carissafisher75142 ай бұрын
I thought it meant being tucked in?
@Mick_Ts_Chick2 ай бұрын
I've toured a lot of historical houses, and have heard the explanation used for the ropes coming loose also.
@007momaАй бұрын
Although I know “sofa”, I always call it the couch. The shorter 2 seater the “love seat”.
@ConservativeVeteran2 ай бұрын
@3:08 "....just sort of sailing around South America as you do." 🤣🤣🤣
@liamobrien61512 ай бұрын
Growing up in Newfoundland, what others elsewhere called a couch, we called a chesterfield.
@n.b.35212 ай бұрын
"Chesterfield" was the common term across all of Canada at one point, but getting steadily less so. I also don't hear people say "serviette" as often as "napkin" anymore.
@marlenewilliamson40052 ай бұрын
I find it amusing that while I live in US I have been told my decorating style in English country . That may because of my Grandma Taylor who originated from England . Her home was always so pretty and comfortable . So that may be a good topic for you .
@katmandudawn84172 ай бұрын
An old southern word for a wardrobe was chifferobe. It has a hanging area on one side and drawers on the other. One I have has a rack for your walking sticks. In the parlor you have your sofa or settee. Your kitchen has an icebox and a Hoosier for storage and additional work area and a pie or jelly safe to keep your baked goods away from pests. I sometimes think about the trend of open shelves in kitchen. Early on kitchens had very limited storage and it was all open shelves. The thing was open shelves let’s dust and bugs get on everything on them. Back in the days , before A/C windows had to be open in warm weather. Roads might not be paved and dust flew up with every passing vehicle so bugs and dust always drifted in to settle everywhere. Our great, grandmothers were just as happy to get cupboard doors on their cabinets as we are to take them off. Did you ever ask why paperweights were such a thing in the day? Breezes coming in open windows.
@andreah.59622 ай бұрын
It looks like a settee is the equivalent of a love seat (2 cushions). A couch / sofa has 3 cushions.
@DanielMWJ2 ай бұрын
Here, couch is any soft-cushioned, multi-seated furniture. Love seat is specific to 2 seats, and sofa to 3 seats.
@kdrcolac43602 ай бұрын
4 or more is a sectional.
@kimberlytross98642 ай бұрын
In my family's US usage, a settee is a more formal piece, not very stuffed or comfortable. A sofa was fancier, like for the formal living room, and a couch was less formal, like for the family room or den.
@FrogCabin-in5wd2 ай бұрын
There was a thankfully brief furniture craze back in the 1970's: Barrel furniture that appeared to be made from actual barrels. You had your barrel table and your upholstered tall-back barrel chairs... They were meant for home gaming rooms and bars, but I only ever saw them on the furniture floor at Montgomery-Wards, a U.S. store that was also soon to disappear.
@thesender67932 ай бұрын
I remember Monkey Wards.
@fraliexb2 ай бұрын
7:37 Murphy beds I've never ran across any, but what about Hide-a-way ??
@mythmurzin2 ай бұрын
it was always explained to me growing up that a couch was a low-backed 3+ "seat". sofa was a high backed 3+ seat. and a davenport was a fancy 3 or 4 seater with middle arm rests.
@creaslin2 ай бұрын
My grandma called them Davenports, and she lived her entire life in Michigan.
@richj1209522 ай бұрын
I have a guest room, with a regular queen sized bed. I also have an office. My office desk is actually a murphy bed. You clear the computer and stuff (hey, it's a flat surface), lift the desktop up, open cabinet doors under the desk, and fold out the bed. It isn't for my office, but for overflow guests. It has only been used twice in 5 years, but it has been used.
@loriloristuff2 ай бұрын
I heard a sofa called a davenport in Minnesota and South Dakota. Otherwise, it was couch, sofa or loveseat (smallish sofa). Interesting about the Murphy bed!
@lynnsample45492 ай бұрын
In my family growing up, I heard the couch referred to as couch, sofa, davenport, and divan. If a fold away bed was included, it was a sofa-sleeper. So, a couple of new words for you. Good video as usual.
@johnhelwig87452 ай бұрын
I seem to remember an episode of the British sitcom "Are You Being Served" where Mr Humphries gets tangled up in a murphy bed. That has to be 45 years ago.
@semigoth2992 ай бұрын
@@johnhelwig8745 I haven’t seen that one, but I do remember when Lucy and them went to Japan and they were in their room and she thought the dresser was a small Murphy bed but the hostess said no Murphy’s bed then she realized that they had to sleep on the floor with pads underneath them
@bjdefilippo4472 ай бұрын
Great episode. One of the things I love best about AYBS, and so many British sitcoms, is the inclusion of so many people with a range of accents and physical characteristics. Talent was more important that fitting a visual mold, or so it seemed to me. The naughty humor with Mrs. Slocombe's cat also tickled my funny bone.
@melissarastatter53052 ай бұрын
That show is still hilarious
@Martive_Led2 ай бұрын
@@bjdefilippo447 Actually, wasn’t Mrs Slocum’s cat 🐈 always referred to, by her, as “my pussy?”
@Roma139072 ай бұрын
yep Season 10 Episode 6 - Friends & Neighbours he wasn't alone Ms. Belfridge and 2 babies were along for the ride. There is also the season 1 episode where Rumbold and Lucas share a mobile Murphy bed on the sales floor.