Or similarly, siphoning liquid with a short hose, where the beginning is scary and creepy and doesn't seem at all like it would work, but once it's flowing, you don't have to do anything except make sure the end of the hose is below the level of the weight of the water or whatever it is.
Learning and growth are like a limitless reservoir, but we have factors in our culture that limit our access or control or faith that it could even work, or our feeling of ownership of knowledge of growth and learning. Experts. Timetables and charts.
Just in case it would help anyone else to think of it as the flow of water but siphons and hand pumps are unfamiliar, here are some pictures (and they're just interesting anyway):
The one on the left is from Bison Pumps (in Maine). It's a modern version of the cast iron pumps I knew from the mid-20th century (center photo). On the right is a pump from Finland. They're manufacturing pumps in Ghana and Tanzania too.
This one is very interesting, and leads on to another connection: The water container is plastic, but it's a traditional pottery design. In the U.S. we have plastic water buckets, but they're a traditional metal bucket design. (Thanks to Hema Bharadwaj for the link to photos of the non-plastic water containers in use in India.)
added in March 2009, another photo of those water jugs from India. Click it to go to its source (other photos of India):
Thinking about this, though, our current plastic gallon "milk jugs" are based on pottery or glass bottles, only made squarish so they can be packed in safely and tightly for transport. Here's a combo, then: older pump on a forest service site, and people filling up modern "milk jugs" (in New Mexico or Colorado, early 21st century):
Siphoning used to be common for moving gasoline. Gross. I've seen my dad do it many times. In the 70's when gasoline prices went up, people would steal gasoline from cars. Before that, I never saw a locking gas cap. They sold metal springs (like a funnel of coiled wire) to mount inside gas tanks so a siphon hose couldn't be inserted, too.
I never thought of siphoning gasoline again until this week. We have a conversion van we've used for out of town trips. I went with Keith to Costco, the least expensive gasoline in town, and we put $102 worth of gasoline in there. Then a few days later, it wouldn't start and it's in the shop. I'm thinking "We need to get that gasoline back out of there!"
If we were to decide to do that, though, I would try to rig something with the shop vac. (Ah... there are all kinds of hand-squeeze and small-pump plastic siphons for doing this now.)
3 comments:
David siphons beer out of the brew bucket into bottles. I don't think it is nearly so unpleasant. He has siphoned gas out of a car before. I can't remember why, but it was certainly done with much more trepidation than when he's bottling beer.
Those images of hand pumps brought back some interesting memories for me, of seeing them in movies or on TV as a kid and wishing we had one. I know there was the one in The Miracle Worker when Helen Keller had to know the word for "water", but there's something else I'm half-remembering and I can't think of what it was from. Maybe it was in the Wizard of Oz, or an old home movie, or a cartoon. I just remember always seeing those on TV and thinking the water looked like it would taste really good coming out of them. (Which makes me think it was something I watched at school, because I was always thirsty at school!) Whatever it was, the pictures stirred up some connections.
Oh! I remember now. There's one at a fort near here, Fort Clinch, where I went on field trips a lot as a kid. We were allowed to play with it a little but not drink out of it, and it was always late spring when we went there. So that's why the water looked so good, ha!
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