Skull wrote:
The reality is around fifty jobs on a busy night, and it doesn't get any better than that.

Well I would agree with that, for a twelve hour shift at least.
But that's in a city-style environment. I've worked in a small city, and the best I did on a normal Saturday was bang on 50 jobs, that was from 4 til 4 or possibly a bit longer.
I recall working one Christmas Day and must have easily done another 20 jobs on top of that, but can't remember the precise figures. But the shift were certainly a bit longer, perhaps 15 hours, early afternoon till the clubs kicked out.
I've also worked in a small town just a little bigger than Skippy's manor, and I would say that job-total wise you could easily add on another third to that, which would be the thick end of a hundred jobs. (Of course that's assuming non-stop jobs coming over the phone - you won't normally get non-stop street work in a small town, or anything like it. And of course they'll tend to be going a bit less distance-wise than in a bigger conurbation.)
I'd also say that working in the city on Christmas Day the jobs tend to be a bit shorter than on a normal Saturday (say) and will be more inclined to avoid the city centre and there will be a lot less traffic generally, thus the ability to do more jobs than would normally be the case. All this is consistent with what Skippy said earlier.
And in a small town like Galashiels that Skippy has worked for about 150 years he'll know addresses like the back of his hand, so no faffing around looking for house numbers or whatever.
Thus I don't disagree with Skippy's claim that he did 87 jobs, but where I would doubt him is that he did this in seven and a half hours or so, but who knows?
Why I also doubt him is because according to him his town's ranks are usually crowded with dozens of taxis and drivers earning tuppence ha'penny an hour, yet only five drivers came out on Christmas Day when they could be making megabucks
