Interview With A Milkman -1996- -2021- Here
In 2012, plastic bottles finally infiltrated the dairy. Arthur hated them. "They felt dead in your hands. No weight. No music." Glass has a specific chime when you set it down on a stone step. Plastic just... thuds. That thud, Arthur says, was the sound of the end.
And it is fading fast.
But look, by ’96, the papers were already saying we were a dying breed. The supermarkets had been hammering us for a decade. But you know what? I had 422 customers. Four hundred and twenty-two households that trusted me. The milk wasn't just milk. It was gold-top [Jersey cream-on-top] for the old ladies on Acacia Road. It was semi-skimmed for the young families in the new builds. And it was orange juice in the little cartons for the hangovers. Interview With A Milkman -1996- -2021-
By Thomas Ashworth
Clink.
I drove the route slower than usual. 15 miles an hour. I wanted to see the dawn one last time from the driver’s seat. The sun came up over the bypass. It was a good one. Pink and gold. I finished at 7:13 AM. Last drop was a pint of skimmed to an empty house on Fern Grove that hadn't updated their order since 2014. I left it anyway. Habit. In 2012, plastic bottles finally infiltrated the dairy
(He pulls a crinkled, faded route sheet from his wallet. It is worn to tissue paper.) No weight