Saturday, December 13, 2008

What child is this?

'Tis summer here in Auckland.  People are walking to the beach in their togs (swimsuits) and towels, the city is quieter because the locals have packed off on vacation, and the ice cream truck is touring our neighbourhood more frequently.  It's a franchise of the Mr Whippy chain, which serves soft serve ice cream out of a window in the side of an orange, pink and white van.  Most towns in America no longer have an ice cream truck, let alone a rolling soft-serve stand on wheels.  My only recollection of any ice cream truck from my youth is from re-runs of old '50's TV shows.  In my day we had to hoof it down to the A&W for our cones of summer.

This particular van is a bit different from those of the Beaver's day in that it plays religious tunes.  Well, one Christian tune in particular.  "What child is this?", aka "Greensleeves", beeps mechanically through Pohutukawa and ferns from a Midi track, rolls across laws and in through our windows.  I have no idea if any kids, or adults for that matter, go to the curb to give it business.  The thing drives down the street daily now, and the music occasionally stops, which leads me to think that it's worth somebody's time to troll our neighbourhood.

We laughed at the choice of music when we first moved into our apartment.  "What kind of song is that?" we asked each other, and as non-religious people refused to rush to the curb on sheer principle.  It does make us chuckle, though.  What child is this / who comes to call / when Whippy comes along tinkling?  I guess it is December and the Holiday season, but to play the thing year round?  Really?

This is a typical Mr Whippy van (the photo was taken from the internet; we have no idea who the guy is).  They're a New Zealand icon and can be seen at pretty much every tourist beach.  The ice cream's not bad, either, and come with sprinkles, wafers, strawberry sauce, dipped and all of the standard trimmings.

3 comments:

Linda said...

Somehow "Greensleeves"--think of it as that and it is no longer seasonal or religious--sounds better than the tinkling, nerve jangling music our local ice cream trucks bring our way each summer.

Yes, we do have at least one independent ice cream truck in Ann Arbor. They just sell ice cream bars, ice cream sandwiches, and fancy popsicle things--none of which have much quality or taste involved.

Remember, you folks grew up in Montana where they still had A & W. Here we have to drive to a little town to find the one remaining A & W. It is a drive-in so it is a real blast from a past. It is perfectly designed for roller skating wait staff, but I don't think they ever do that.

Have a happy holiday season in the sun. We have almost a foot of snow we would be glad to share with you.

Roni said...

Thanks for the offer of snow. Somehow I'm a little jealous. I think it's because we really only have two seasons here: rainy, and not so rainy.

As a footnote to the habits of our ice cream truck, I was talking with our neighbours this afternoon while their son jumped on their new trampoline in the front yard. The ice cream truck pulled right up in front of the house and literally parked right there. The kids didn't seem to notice, much to my surprise, and my neighbour said in very exaggerated tones, "well, the truck is playing music, and that means that he's out of ice cream, right kids?" Her daughter nodded calmly. The boy kept jumping and nodded his head back and forth to the music. According to this logic, the ice cream truck never had ice cream, but just played music in their neighbourhood.

I thought this was brilliant. She does have a PhD, but this was just too clever.

Anonymous said...

The guy looks like Chris Woodhams who used to run Mr Whippy - but he always wore jandals