27 September 2025

Watch

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Are you sitting comfortably? Let me tell you the story of my Mondaine wristwatch.

It was given to me fifteen years ago by my immediate family. It suited me from the first second it ticked. A simple, easily-read face with no distractions like a date dial or the time in Tokyo. An elegant, unfussy watch that tells the time accurately.

Every two years its battery runs out and I need to have a new one put in by someone who knows what they are doing. For the past ten years, I have gone to a jeweller's shop down the road from us at Hunter's Bar and in all that time nobody else has interfered with the watch. Normally it's a half hour job. I drop the watch off, toddle off for a drink or some lunch and then pick it up a bit later - job done.

At the start of July, this summer gone, the watch had stopped ticking again so I went to the jewellers and as usual I was asked to come back in half an hour. However, when I returned, the friendly middle-aged woman who was doing the job said there was a problem. She couldn't get all the tiny screws out and two of them just kept turning round.

"Where did you last have a new battery fitted?" she said.

"Here," I replied. "And it was you who did it!"

"Well. Something's gone wrong and we're going to have to send it off to our watch specialist."

"How long is that going to take?"

"Three to four weeks."

"What? That seems like a long time just to get a new battery but okay I will go with it."

"First, he will have to tell us if he can actually do the job."

Anyway, four weeks later, at the very end of July, the shop phoned me back to tell me that their specialist could indeed do the job and did I wish to proceed? What? Of course I wanted to proceed. I asked how long it would take and the woman at the other end of the line said "three to four weeks... if the specialist can source the required screws".

At the end of August I phoned them back to say, "Where's my watch?" 

They said, "Oh it takes six to eight weeks. We weren't expecting it back yet!"

Meantime up at the pub quiz, my friend Mick was advising me to play hell with them and demand my watch back but I explained that I just didn't want the aggro. If I lost my rag with them, I knew that I would regret it and the resulting scene would play out over and over again in my mind. Experience can be a great teacher. Better to stay calm and patient, eventually get my watch back and then never visit the jeweller's shop ever again.

This morning, the long awaited phone call happened. The sloth-like specialist had finally returned my watch and I could pick it up - almost three months after  I had taken it in. Oh joy of joys! Ring the church bells! Beat the drums! Christ is risen! 

I strolled down the hill to Hunter's Bar and as I told the smiley woman behind the counter, it felt like reuniting with an old friend. Hello Mondaine - how have you been? I have missed you mate!

There might have been an argument that the jeweller's shop should have paid for the service since the issue with the tiny screws was probably caused by them but I just did not want the hassle. I paid up and left with no intention of ever going in there again. It has been quite a saga, I can tell you.

43 comments:

  1. I fully understand why you didn't want to press matters with them. As you say, experience can be a good teacher. Let's just hope the specialist didn't cause any more problems to arise next time the battery needs changing.
    By the way, your definition is excellent: "An elegant, unfussy watch that tells the time accurately." If I were wearing a watch (I've stopped in the mid-1990s), that's what I'd be looking for.

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    1. Our Frances has got tired of fishing her smartphone out in order to check the time so she asked for a simple digital watch for her birthday. Also the two little girls won't see the smartphone out so much.

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    2. Good point!
      I stopped wearing a watch long before I had my first smartphone. At work, every computer screen and also the desktop telephone showed the time. At the train stations, there used to be (not reliable anymore) a big clock. And at home, I have a wall clock in the lounge, in the kitchen I can see the time on the stove, and there is a small alarm clock on my bedside table.

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    3. It used to be that just about every adult wore a wristwatch. Not any more.

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  2. Customer service here in the USA has been going downhill for many years. I'm not sure one could even find a shop to change a watch battery today. I took my wristwatch off when I retired and haven't worn one since. You were extremely patient.

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    1. When I was younger I would have complained strongly but I just could not be bothered this time round. Does that make me a chicken?

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    2. Not at all, you've just learned to pick your battles!

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  3. Nothing is simple these days. I thought you were going to say that they couldn't source the screws, as it is an "old" model, and you would have to buy a new watch. Now THAT would be infuriating. I am sure they do these things to make you pay more.

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    Replies
    1. The screw thought crossed my mind too.

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  4. I stopped wearing a watch when I realised I have a strong sense of the time. Except when it had to be exact for work.

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    Replies
    1. Don't your offspring call you Father Time?

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  5. I, too, would be looking for a new watch shop.

    PS I believe your second line should be "given" rather than give. Does this make us even???? 😁😁😁

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    Replies
    1. Thank you Bob! Yes we are even now (well, almost!).

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  6. Glad they finally got it fixed for you. Can't imagine why it would take so long. Strange.

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    Replies
    1. I certainly was not expecting a three month wait.

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  7. I never liked wearing a watch. When I had to, I would take that and my bra off the second I walked in the door. (To my house, of course.)

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    Replies
    1. Working as a teacher, it was vital to keep a close eye on the time.

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    2. I just had a good chuckle imagining you walking through the door - any door - and taking off your watch and your bra, Ms. Moon. Thank you :-D

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    3. As a gentleman, I tried hard not to imagine that scenario but then The Devil got the better of me.

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  8. I live in a city of 5 million people and it is hard to find a jeweler who will change batteries now. Everyone seems to have a smart watch, or just uses their phone

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    Replies
    1. Do you live in Melbourne or Sydney J?

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  9. Should have gone to Walmart. I have four or five watches. They're all together in a drawer, batteries run down, not working. Can't remember the last time I wore one. It just became an aggravation.

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    Replies
    1. Thankfully, we do not have Walmart stores in Great Britain.

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  10. Service these days can be difficult. Nice watch. I took my watch off the day I retired and have not worn a watch since.

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    Replies
    1. Hey, you really went wild that day! Did you also throw away your chalk?

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  11. Like Catalyst I have several watches with run down batteries and I don't bother getting a new battery because they are so expensive now (so were the watches) and certainly don't last two years. I remember when a battery lasted five years! Now I have a cheap $10 watch that only keeps time accurately if I am wearing it. If I leave it in the drawer for several days or even weeks I have to reset the time before strapping it to my wrist.

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    Replies
    1. The £7.99 subsitute watch I bought to replace the Mondaine is still functioning perfectly.

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  12. I got fed up with the hassle of battery replacement, so switched to a Seiko solar powered watch some time ago. So far, so good.....

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    Replies
    1. That crossed my mind too Will. I have shelled out far too much on watch batteries.

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  13. Watchmaking is a dying and unappreciated art. I'm not at all surprised there was a delay. Nice watch!

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  14. How frustrating YP! It might be wise to have a cheap watch as back-up just in case the same thing happens again.
    Last Spring I had a new battery put in my watch, which I always take back to the shop I bought it from - 23 years ago. Cost me 5€ and took about ten minutes and will hopefully be good for another three or four years.

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    1. Actually, I did buy a cheap substitute watch in July Carol. It cost me £7.99! The "repair" and new battery for the Mondaine watch cost me £35!

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  15. I remember buying my grandson an ordinary watch when he was about 10/12 years old and he couldn't understand how to tell the time from it. Already the smart phone had its grip.

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    Replies
    1. Don't they teach them anything at school these days?

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  16. Sometimes the easiest option costs you, but it is worth it. I hope the price wasn't much more than you've paid for a new battery in the past.

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    Replies
    1. Mondaine batteries are special ones. With the repair the bill was £35.

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  17. Well, that's an unexpected annoyance, but I'm glad you got your watch back. I gave up on wristwatches about 15 years ago. I just use my phone nowadays.

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  18. A quick google search, that is a good watch, and the expensive repair was less than 10% of the replacement cost, so a prudent expenditure, even for a Yorkshireman. I have a couple of expensive watches, and wear a cheap Casio all the time (I can't remember the last time I took it off.)

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  19. Bloody irritating. I hope they put in new screws while they were at it, and good on you for not blowing your top:)

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  20. How extraordinary! You just can't get the staff these days . . .

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  21. I used to take watches and clocks to a watch repairer in Chester and then one in Glasgow who knew them inside out and back to front and wasn't expensive. Since my last visit many many moons ago to have my wristwatch cleaned I've just had the battery replaced every year or so at branches of Timpson the 'shoe repairers'. If they are busy they suggest I get a coffee over the road and give them a little time. Hopefully it will keep going for a little while yet.

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  22. Just caught up with Sunday's blog - I have the ladies' version of your Mondaine watch. I have to get my battery replaced in Shrewsbury - a 20 mile journey. But I love my watch, it was given to me by my husband over 20 years ago, I think it was an offer in one of the Sunday papers. These watches are very expensive now.

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Mr Pudding welcomes all genuine comments - even those with which he disagrees. However, puerile or abusive comments from anonymous contributors will continue to be given the short shrift they deserve. Any spam comments that get through Google/Blogger defences will also be quickly deleted.

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