Every now and then you smell a smell and it brings on a
memory. We all have them but what do we smell that our ancestors would
recognise.
No I’ll start with 3 smells that always remind me of my
childhood. The first is swarfega. For those who don’t know it a hand cleaner
for getting bad muck and grim off. It’s used a lot in industry and most people
doing engine work will know about it. It has a really unique smell and is green
so it looks a bit like ectoplasm from Ghostbuster. Now when I smell it I think
of the end of the day when I was a kid coming in from helping my family in the
garden or having had my hand in an oily engine. Ah nothing better than sitting
trying to work out how to sort the electrics out on an original Mini. It evokes
happy memories.
The other 2 smells are linked as they were always used in conjunction.
The first is Dettol. The brown liquid poured into water and used to clean out
all the cuts and scrapes I got playing outside and falling over or off my bike.
I remember one liberal dose of the stuff after a bamboo cane was thrown at me
on my bike and by sheer luck when straight through the spokes of the wheel and
over the top I went. Lots of Dettol that day! The second is Zambuk. This is a
herbal antiseptic ointment used on cuts and scrapes to aid healing, and I can
say it works. It’s made from eucalyptus amongst other things and smells really
great. I had a lot of it on me as a kid. I used to fall over all the time and
usually had scabs on my knees and my toe ends held on my Zambuk and plasters. I
have to say it worked really well and I have no scars at all, which is a miracle.
I still use it today and in fact have some on my finger at the moment.
So what smells are still around that our ancestors would
recognise? Well there are the obvious ones from nature shall we say, especially
with my ancestors that had a lot to do with horses and other animals.
Now it may surprise you to know some of the perfumes that
are still on the market today have been around for a long time. Some are even
pre Victorian era. Even some of the big branded perfumes have been around since
the 1920’s. So if you think about it most of my great great Grandma’s were
alive then and even some of my great great great Grandma’s. This means they
would recognise these smells if they went into the perfume shops today. Even
now the smell of a perfume can remind me of my Grandma.
Now off to the kitchen. Here we find smells that will never
change as they are the smell of the natural product. But brands were emerging
that may have been found in our ancestors homes. Worcestershire sauce is a
prime example. That was developed in the early years of the Victorian period.
The Sheffield version came along in the later Victoria era but both may have
been used by our ancestors so if they entered our kitchen they may find it
interesting to find it. I mentioned Dettol earlier and that would have been available
to our ancestors. I can just imagine my grandparents as kids sitting on the
kitchen table having their cuts cleaned out before being sent back out to play.
Zambuk was available in the 1900’s so my great grandparents may have been sat on
the kitchen table.
So have a think about the smells that remind you of memories
from your past and of your ancestors and add them to you family tree. Who knows
in the future your descendants may read it and think I know that smell and it creates
a link to the past.
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