Thank you guys for making this thread a lot more interesting than I could have hoped.
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Thank you guys for making this thread a lot more interesting than I could have hoped.
I believe that I now remember where I first became aware of people using tyres to make footwear. I was looking at some of the remains of a Handley Page Hamden bomber, at the RAF Museum, that had crashed/been shot down over Russia during WW2. This wreckage was subsequently purchased by the RAF Museum after being salvaged from it's crash site in Russia. Most of the rubber had been cut off the landing wheel tyres by locals for making footwear, if memory serves me correctly.
Yes............... but it hadn't been recovered when I saw the VC sandals so to me, a 20 year old in 1967, abroad for the first time from sheltered boarding school, apprentice school background, tyres converted into shoes were a real eye-opener.
Me too, when I first saw those aircraft wheels with all the rubber cut off and just a tiny bit of the tyre remaining around the rim of the wheel.
They were also called 'Ho Chi Minhs'. They actually were for when you really needed to get the boots off for a bit.
The only things I sent home that I can admit to without raising the possible interest of a Crown Prosecutor was an Ao Dia for my then fiancé, later wife, (miles too small for her) and a kiddie-sized set of 'tiger stripes' for a neighbour's little boy at my mother's request.
RE the above - Typo. It should read: They were actually good for when ...
I like the photos of the auxiliary fuel tanks made into boats.
Inventive farmers build vital river boats out of fuel tanks jettisoned from U.S. planes during the Vietnam War | Daily Mail Online