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Garden
machinery seldom causes mishaps independently of course and generally
requires human intervention of some kind before things go wrong.
I remember
he was mowing the grass, smoking a cigarette and looking somewhat
disheveled, his movements moderately deranged, quite clearly a case
of 'the morning after the night before', I thought, if ever there
was one.
The lawnmower
spluttered to a halt. Something wrong here. Puzzled, he transferred
the cigarette to his mouth and bent down to unscrew the petrol cap
before peering quizzically into the ‘hazard’ zone; then,
as the petrol ignited and flared about him with a breathless sort
of gush, a whispered sort of whoosh, he executed a number of acrobatic
feats rarely seen outside the Olympic Arena, a truly magnificent
performance.
As luck would
have it, though, he was not badly hurt, not in any physical sense
anyway, a bit singed perhaps, although the shock was certainly a
major one.
He gingerly
picked himself up and surveyed the surrounding area (as you do after
an embarrassing mishap) to determine who, if anyone, had seen the
chain of events leading up to his acrobatic display. Satisfied that
there was no one, he buried the still smoldering cigarette beneath
the newly scorched purple foliage of a Bugle (Ajuga reptans 'Atropurpurea')
and rearranged his expression into one of glazed dumbfoundment as
people began to gather around the burning relic of what was once
a prized garden implement.
There was a
lot of talk about spontaneous combustion, singed eyebrows and the
inherent dangers of gardening over the next few days, of course,
but as for me I said nothing. Sometimes it's best to speak out,
isn’t it, and sometimes it’s best not to. On this occasion
I adopted the latter approach.
A number of
years ago now I worked as a Gardening Instructor at an establishment
for adults with ‘multiple’ needs, a place that catered
for a variety of folk wishing to participate in the activities on
offer. And so it was that Robby came to work in the garden on a
voluntary basis - a spot of weeding, a spot of planting, a spot
of convivial conversation, that sort of thing, all liberally interspersed
with coffee breaks. Now Robby - if I recall correctly - was an amiable
man in his mid-fifties, an ex-builder who'd been robbed of his short
term memory at a remarkably young age. It was a cruel blow. I was
strimming in the garden one afternoon when Robby asked me if he
could have a go. Well of course, I said, thinking nothing of it,
although by rights he should have attended a Council half-day strimming
course first. But he was an ex-builder, a ‘man of the world’,
and didn't need me to undermine his already battered self-confidence
by insisting. So I gave him a quick lesson in strimming techniques
(in essence how to switch the thing on and off) and then turned
him loose to have some fun. A good strim is both creative and destructive
at the same time, don't you find ?
A mug of coffee
and a custard doughnut later, however, it dawned on me that perhaps
a man with a short-term memory loss might not grasp the fundamentals
of strimming in the time that it would take you or I. And I was
right. I will not go into details, but I'm painfully aware that
the most important information required before operating any form
of machinery is knowing how to switch the thing off. Luckily Robby
survived his experience with the strimmer - and hopefully soon forgot
it - but before the strimmer could be deactivated both Robby and
I danced a good many tangos together on the lawn. Strimmers can
be painful things, you know, and for weeks after my lower limbs
bore the marks of our cavorting
In the light
of my 'Robby' experience a neighbour asked me recently to sit at
the controls of his dumper truck while he attempted to tow it out
with his JCB. (It was bogged down in the mud, you see).
'Ok', I said,
'but where’s the ‘off’ switch?'
Unquestionably
this is the right response to adopt with any piece of machinery,
irrespective of your capabilities, because machines have well developed
minds of their own, you see, and are just waiting for a lapse in
concentration to wreak havoc, chaos and mayhem - not to mention
the ever-present dangers of hospitalization - if you’re not
careful.
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