The Babby House #100DaysOfOldDays

Day 55 #100DaysOfOldDays

Did you have a babby house when you were a child? Do you know what I mean when I say babby house? It’s what we called our outdoor playhouse. The boys played in a fort and the girls played in a babby house. (Is this only in Ireland?) Occasionally the girls were allowed into the fort and very occasionally the boys were allowed into the babby house—and only certain boys at that! 

Here’s the babby house I remember.  

It’s built from planks of woods around the bottom of a big chestnut tree in the corner of a field. The roof is a sheet of rusty galvanise. There is one window, made from a panel of tough transparent plastic. The door is a sturdy rectangular flap, also made from hard plastic, hardly big enough for an adult to pass through.  

There is a little shuck between the field and the big chestnut tree. A plank of wood forms a bridge for access to the babby house. 

The hollows in the tree are shelves, to store old food tins and jars filled with shiny red and green haws. A broken clock hangs on the stub of a branch, and two rusty enamel mugs sit on their stove which is made of four red bricks stacked into a square. 

The babby house is well-equipped with chipped plates, warped saucepans with no handles, bent spoons, and empty bottles. 

Moldy dolls sleep on a layer of withered rushes that line the bottom of a wooden crate. Dinner is cooked in one of the bent saucepans; cabbage, peas, and potatoes (dandelion leaves, green haws, all sprinkled with white clover petals). Stones are used for potatoes and eggs. 

Spiders dangling from cobwebs and creepy crawlies inhabit the babby house and get brushed out regularly only to return in the middle of the night. It’s cold in the wintertime and smells of damp soil. It’s balmy in the summertime and smells of fresh moss and chestnuts.  

The babby house was our foxhole, a place for self-expression, a place to unleash our imaginations.

Tell me, did you play in a babby house? If you had, what was it called? 


Discover more from Gloria McBreen

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

4 thoughts on “The Babby House #100DaysOfOldDays

  1. Aww no babby house here. Although we did have a play kitchen set up in my grandparents’ garden that also doubled as a home for spider squatters! At my mother’s house, there were two raised patios with a little sunken path between them. Often this led to the patios becoming pirate ships sailing the seas, as you could leap from one to the other. 🙂 KL ❤

    Liked by 1 person

    • I think kids will use whatever resources they have and their great imaginations.
      I know that pirate ship game. “And whatever you do, don’t fall in or the sharks will get you!” 🥰

      Like

  2. On the farm, I had a playhouse as a child. My dad built it for me. He also built a table and chair set, a cupboard and a play stove. I loved that place where I played house with my dolls and teddys. Until my brother and his friends smashed it with a sledgehammer. Boy did he get in trouble for that.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Your dad sounds like he was a talented carpenter! I hope those boys were grounded for a long time.
      This is exactly why most boys weren’t allowed inside our babby house. Couldn’t be trusted! 😄

      Liked by 1 person

I welcome your thoughts. Please tell me what you think!