Anyway I keenly asked where all the empties were and they casually advised that they just toss them out!


Cheers,
TL
Pickaxe was a brand of bottle made by the South Australian Bottle Co-operative. The SA breweries - Coopers, West End and Southwark (and possibly others in earlier time) - all bottled in Pickaxe bottles. When the beer was consumed the idea was that they'd be returned, cleaned, distributed back to the breweries and refilled. A current-day equivalent of this concept is the Chep pallet. Of course, not all bottles made it back, but a large proportion did, although the proportion being returned diminished as beers began being sold in other states.was Pickaxe a bottle brand, or a beer? Coopers used them (I did use the search function on them) - so the bottles I use might have been sold directly, or as Coopers and the label fell off?
Pickaxe was the South Australian bottle. Each state had its own variation. There was a NSW bottle co-operative, a Victorian Bottle Company (usually with CUB on the neck where the pickaxe logo is on the Pickaxe bottles) and the XXXX bottles in Queensland (which were dropped in the late '90s so were the second-last to survive after South Australia's) had the man with the XXXX hat on them.Why are some marked as property of NSW and others property of SA?
1953 Similar style to today’s long necks with rounded bottom in amber and clear dates on base between 1953-55 PX on base for the next years after.
You better get it back to them quick smartPogierob wrote:This bottle is the property if the Adelaide bottle co-operative