Saturday, January 19, 2019

Summer in the City - Fun Under the Fire Plug

Here we are, more than halfway through July already. Summer seems to take forever to get here and it quickly goes by. If you haven't noticed, you can see that we're slowly losing sunlight at the end of the day, something that naturally happens once the solstice comes in late June.

One other thing I've noticed is that it isn't like it used to be on the streets. B
ack in the 60s and 70s when we were growing up, we were out from midday through as late as our parents would let us stay out. We didn't hang around the house.

One of the things that you hardly see anymore are kids getting soaked under the fire plug. For those of you scratching your heads, that's what is called a fire hydrant. When summer came around, we could not wait to find someone who had a hydrant wrench and could open the plug for us. Once they had it opened, they'd hide it in someone's house and we'd all have some fun for an hour or so, or as long as we could before the cops would come and turn the water off. And this wasn't with a sprinkler rig attached, this was with the fire plug opened full bore! The only thing close to a sprinkler in those days was someone pressing their butt up against the opening and causing the water to fan out in every direction. The only friction we'd ever get besides the cops was a neighbor who would complain (maybe he called the police) and said that the water would flood his basement. Every kid on the block and from other blocks would be out there having fun.





Photo from: https://ephemeralnewyork.wordpress.com/2012/07/12/how-city-kids-cooled-off-in-the-heat-wave-of-1953/ (That kid has long pants on!)

Somewhere in the 80s, someone got the idea that it wasn't a good thing for kids to be doing such things. It was easy to say that it didn't matter, that we were adults and there were more important things to do than play at the fireplug. But still, a part of our heritage started to disappear. Kids were told that it created a danger for firefighters because the pressure dropped low when the hydrant was opened. Why not use one of those sprinkler caps instead? You could get them at the local firehouse and no one would have to worry ever again about low pressure or water levels. The argument was bogus, except for one year when there was an extreme drought.


Don't worry about kids getting swept under car tires by the tremendous pressure of the hydrant. Hey, we never met one kid who that happened to, but then again we would always open them on side streets like our own Chadwick Street, not on the more well-traveled streets like Oregon Avenue. We did have common sense. But still, the Eighties were the beginning of the end for that summer ritual of cooling down with water that didn't pass through the meter at home and everyone enjoyed.

In the past decade, I think I've seen kids using the sprinkler cap on a fire plug all of one time. Not once in the past few years have I seen an fully opened hydrant. Where are the kids at? Parents, let your kids go out and have some fun! When kids of today get older, what are they going to talk about when they reminisce about their childhood? "Hey, remember summer, when we got out of school and..." And what? And waited for the back-to-school sales in August so we could buy our pencils and copy books and uniforms? Get out there and do something already! You've got a few  weeks left before the bell rings again. Go out and find someone with a wrench and have some fun, or do what some of the kids of our era did and make one out of a pipe wrench and section of pipe. If someone asks what you think you're doing, tell them that you read it would be a fun thing to do and be respectful. Just hide the wrench so they don't take it away and you can turn the hydrant on again when the cops leave. And leave the bicycle helmet at home. A gush will rip it off or cause a neck injury. You're going under the hydrant, not riding a bike. Just use common sense and pay attention to what's going on around you. You'll be fine. Get wet and have fun.


2 comments:

gypsyniece said...

I was looking for a pic of the kids in the plug, & couldn't find a recent one that I could show my friend about it who lives in Hawaii & grew up in California... I lived in South Philly on 31st & Tasker in the 50's... & my parents told me if I went in the plug I would get polio... funny how all the neighborhood kids including alot of my Italian cousins never got polio... but I remember watching them on the corner having so much fun, & making sure my shoes didn't get wet for fear of the twisted parents finding out I was there...& they always managed to close the plug before my mother got off the bus @ the same corner... & the water was all dried up by then ! I loved to watch & still have a great memory of it... funny the stuff you remember...

Brian R. Bennett said...

Ah, 31st and Tasker. I'd say you're an Irishwomen (since your name is gypsyniece - and I hope I didn't step in it here).

Anyway, if you want photos of kids under the plug, you can go to Google and click on Images at the top. Type in "playing under the fire hydrant" (without the quotes)and you'll find a number of pics that you can used as an example. Sorry I don't have any myself. I didn't want to glom someone else's from the web and violate their copyright. I hope this helps.