OK, this is a consistent, albeit minor annoyance I've noticed since moving here. For some unfathomable reason, the British seem to insist on having separate hot and cold taps, rather than a single, adjustable one. Now, on the face of this, who cares? They're taps, it's not the end of the world. While this is true, it leads to the totally flummoxing situation where I have two choices when washing my hands; nearly-glacial cold water, or water so hot I cannot hold my hands under it (seriously, without hyperbole, the taps in the men's room in my office building dispense water so hot it steams). How is this useful? Who uses the hot one and where did they get the sub-dermal asbestos? But more importantly, is it really that tricky to get a tap which has an adjustable temperature?
See the rest of my "What's with the British..." series.
4 comments:
That is something that has bothered me too. What is even more baffling however is their idea of "mixer" taps. Unlike ours that actually mix the cold and hot water so that one may have warm water from the tap, theirs have the hot and cold coming out of the same tap but the streams of water don't combine and so one manages to simultaneously burn and freeze ones hands. I lived with two of these taps for four years -- one in the kitchen and the other in the bathroom. Ridiculous.
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=12860331647
Says it all really.
P.S. my word verification today is 'nalkshys'. A phonetic-ish spelling of noxious?
The reason for it is that bugs and other nasties used to lurk in a hot water tank. In order to make the cold water potable, the law therefore said that the two waters cuold not mix.
Well, OK, Liz. But here's the thing. {Checks calendar...} it's 2009. Shouldn't the law now say that the hot water tanks must be kept bug-free. We have the technology to carry 10,000 songs in our pocket and lands a man on the moon. Maybe we can keep spiders out of our drinking water?
Or else, just enjoy the free protein?
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