Bottling It
Let’s be clear, I am not some sort of rabid
anti-capitalist. I don’t much like
Tesco because, well, need I go on? and I don’t really like the idea of the
exploitation of children manufacturing garments, because in the age of the
sewing machine, you don’t need tiny hands to sew small stitches and, if you do,
hire some fucking elves.
Indeed I like shops.
I like my local greengrocer. Obviously I don’t buy my groceries there, because Waitrose
is more convenient and, frankly, I find his purple sprouting broccoli a mite
intimidating. But I certainly buy my Christmas tree there, and last year hauled
it home myself. This turned out to
be slightly more effort than I had anticipated. It took fully twenty minutes for a) feeling to return to my
fingers and b) my opinions on child labour to self-right; if I had seen a
couple of kids on the way home, I’d of bribed them with Haribo to cart the
bloody thing to my door.
One of my favourite shops is the petrol station I gas up at
prior to coming home from visiting family. It’s the last stop before the motorway and so obviously the
place where I load up on diesel and wine gums and, if I’m feeling flush, a
Costa from the machine. (Fuck
Nespresso, when I win the lottery I am having the ultimate bean to cup machine,
a full sized Costa vending machine in the hall. Where else? The
kitchen? You need a vended coffee
when leaving the house. If I want
a coffee in the house, I’ll get the model I’ve had re-trained as a barrista to
make it. In this fantasy, I’ve won
the lottery, remember?)
It’s a fairly interesting place. As well as dispensing much needed four star or whatever to
local white van men drink, it does a roaring trade in those other staples of
white van man life, porn and sandwiches (a sandwich being a lunch you can conveniently
eat one handed in a secluded layby).
Below the porn though, are an interesting selection of
magazines. How many petrol
stations stock ‘Horse and Hound’?
I suspect what we have here is a corner shop with pumps.
This would explain why whenever I’m in the queue, the people
ahead of me are greeted by name, and why they are buying booze, and why they
walk off the forecourt rather than drive.
Obviously, I buy my bottled water there and obviously, I try
to avoid that filthy French stuff, meaning I go for the own brand, ‘Spar’
mineral water.
Putting aside for one moment the delicious irony of a shop
called ‘Spar’ selling water, let’s settle the whole bottled water thing.
I was pretty much convinced it was a sign of the end of days
when I saw that you could buy mineral water from Fiji in the supermarket. Now, I don’t know much about Fiji, but
I didn’t think fresh water was something they had in abundance enough to
export. I may be wrong.
Certainly, there are those that bang on about the health
benefits of mineral water. I’m not
so sure, especially when it comes to that glacial water stuff made from, well,
glacier ice that is supposed to have formed before the industrial revolution
and various exploding volcanoes made the atmosphere as dirty as a Yewtree
suspect’s past, as it may also contain traces of stuff our ancestors were
immune to, but we’re not, like smallpox or racist remarks at the dinner table.
The virtue of the mineral water bottle is that you buy it,
and then refill the bastard from the tap for the next year. I have been doing this for a while now
and really must remember to give my bottle a good clean, the rim has probably
got more culture than BBC4 on it.
But I love my Spar bottle of tap water. It says ‘Man of the people’. And ‘hydrated’.
It also makes me feel somewhat smug when I see the tribe
that have gone one better than the mineral water carriers; the people who make
their own mineral water. Have you
seen them? They have a bottle that
looks far too much like a Tommee Tippee toddler drinking cup for my liking,
which has a filter in it. This is,
presumably, to strain out the worst of the pigeon essence that is an essential,
accepted part of any water tank in an office building. They are also ruinously expensive.
The one thing I’ve learned about filters is that you have to
change them. And in this case,
it’s pointless. It’s turning water
into…water. What the fuck is the
filter actually trapping anyway?
Unless the water company are putting plutonium in the supply, how
worried should we be?
So, until they invent the Jesus filter, that turns H2O into
ViNo, I’ll stick with my water, direct from the Spa(r).
Labels: Bottled water, Consumerism, H2O, Magazines, Shopping, Shops, Water
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