STOP WHAT YOU ARE DOING.
Petrol is so cheap, you need to go and get amongst it: Smell it. Bathe in it. Bask in the chemical glory.
For the first time in approximately one bajillion years (since dinosaurs were flipping their caps and pumping up with unleaded), petrol has dropped to below $1 per litre at some stations, and is averaging around $1.06.
This time last year, it was more like $1.56 per litre. I’m no mathematician, but I’m pretty sure I’ll be able to afford a house tomorrow with all these extra fifty cent coins I have lying around, thanks to the low petrol prices.
I’m so pumped about the pumping, I can’t calm down. Every time my petrol needle drops slightly below F (I think the F stands for Full. Or Fuel. Or Fast. I don’t know, something car-y) I race back to the station and fill it up again, just out of fear that petrol will suddenly soar back to the “choose-between-me-and-groceries” kind of pricetag.
Opinion: Petrol, tampons and other life necessities that should be free.
So what’s the best way to celebrate the golden glory? Here’s six ideas that you can suddenly .
1. Have a Zoolander-esque petrol fight.
Orange Mocha Frappucinos! Nothing cheers up male models like crossing petrol streams over an open Jeep. Until Brint lights his cigarette (model idiot) and the party goes up in flames. But what a great way to get amongst the gas. Grab three of your closest model friends, blast ‘Jitterbug’ through the speakers, and let the petrol fly.
(PLEASE NOTE: DO THIS AT YOUR OWN RISK. AND YOU WILL PROBABLY BE ARRESTED AND/OR DIE.)
2. Become a petrol-sniffer.
According to Mr Google, the immediate effects of sniffing petrol are hallucinations, aggression, and increased libido. What’s not to love?! Also, hunger. Fortunately, there’s a petrol station RIGHT THERE, and you could spend all the coins you saved from the cheap petrol on Curly Wurlys.
(PLEASE NOTE: DO NOT SNIFF PETROL. IT’S APPARENTLY BAD FOR YOU, ACCORDING TO MR. GOOGLE)
3. Fill up more things than your car.
You don’t have to stop when your petrol tank makes that clicky noise. Fill your pockets. Got an empty water bottle in your car? Top that guy up. Don’t ask questions. Just do it because it’s cheap.
4. Start selling petrol.
With all that petrol you’ve stored in empty water bottles and your pockets, go home, squeeze it into a big bowl or an urn or something, store it in a safe place (you know, the petrol cupboard or somewhere) and wait until prices rise again. Then SELL THAT BABY OFF. Ka-ching. You’re a petrol tycoon, and a genius.
5. Make make-up.
Mr. Google (he is SO handy and knowedgable) has just informed me that petroleum is used in make-up. I’m not sure how or why (or if I ever want to use make-up again now that I know that), but surely we can find a way to profit from this. Mix a bit of petrol with some face powder, and you’ve made yourself a lovely foundation. Add a splash of petrol to a jar of hand cream. See what happens.
(PLEASE NOTE: PROBABLY NOTHING GOOD).
For non-petrol related beauty: 14 beauty hacks every woman should know.
6. DIY Petroleum Jelly.
Everyone needs some Vaseline around the house. I don’t know how to make it, but I’m thinking that petrol + jelly = petroleum jelly. Mix up some Aeroplane Jelly, stir in some unleaded, and pat yourself on the back.
So there you have it. Six things you can do with your new found best friend, petrol.
Just think of all the money you’ll save.
Please note: Most of those will end in arrest, fire, or death. If you want to be safe, just appreciate the new petrol by filling up your car obssessively. Until the petrol prices go back up… in which case, I’ll be selling some out of my kitchen window.
What are you going to do with your excess cash? Let us know in the comments.
Top Comments
Let us not forget all the people who live in regional areas of Australia who pay well over $1.
On a more serious note... you make reference to the fact that you were paying $1.56 per litre for your fuel just a few months ago. Oil is now HALF the price it was a few months ago so why is our fuel here in Australia still well over $1.00 per litre and not HALF the price it was a few months ago? Going by the cost of Oil, we SHOULD be paying no more than $0.85 per litre. Can anyone explain why we are paying through the nose for a product that should be so much cheaper?
You still have to factor in things like increased insurance costs, increased wages in the drivers who deliver your fuel, staff who work at servos, companies involved in actually bringing the stuff into the country etc over the year(s). Petrol doesn't just magically appear at the bowser.
There's also a bit of greed I'd say, I mean if I have a product that's worth 50c but people will give me $1 for it then I know what I'm going to charge.