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Gardening is a pursuit I had little interest in until we bought
our first house. This is often the case. Beyond the confines of
the bricks and mortar, through the window, there’s a garden
that can’t be ignored because it grows and you have to do
something about it. So when the grass had reached knee height, even
longer in some places, it was time for action. I found a rusty scythe
in the garden shed, sharpened it and set about cutting grass with
relish. The neighbours watched from a distance with a degree of
reserved amusement, clearly unsure whether they should offer me
the loan of a lawnmower or whether using a scythe was my unique
way of expressing a lifestyle preference, back to nature or something
like that.
Some hours
later, finished, rested and re-hydrated, I assessed my scything
skills. Not very good. No, not very good at all. Most of the grass
remained long and straggly, much of it of varying heights, and –
even worse - some areas were actually bald where I'd ripped the
soil with the blade! Two weeks later – and with another cut
looming - we opted for a second-hand lawnmower and confined the
scythe to the back of the shed from whence it had come.
The next job
was to construct a fence to keep the dogs off the road as they had
a tendency to wander. One dog in particular had been hit twice,
you see, once by a motorbike, once by a car, and still survived
to tell the tale. Both drivers had been remarkable understanding
at the time, of course, but there's a limit to how many accidents
of this kind can be sustained before somebody gets seriously hurt.
So a visit to the local sawmill was arranged to buy fencing materials,
a trip to the hardware shop for nails and then fencing commenced.
With most things
practical, I’ve found, it's not possible to become an over-night
expert until you've had a few failures first, a few botched attempts,
and for a first attempt the results were largely predictable. It
did the job alright, no doubt about that, and actually looked quite
respectable from a distance, but I told the neighbours not to lean
on it as it had a tendency to keel over under pressure. It took
a week to complete, two months of 'fine-tuning' to sustain the weight
of a small neighbour and then a further month before it acquired
the stability and strength to contain the random weight of a casual
passer-by who might be stopping for a chat, a rest or a nosy peer
through the window into our front room. But it was a learning process,
a useful process, and I’m now aware that satisfactory fencing
requires big nails, big wood, cement, a spirit level and holes dug
deeper than twelve inches to put the posts in.
The next project
was a plot for vegetables, a patch of ground where we spent many
pleasant afternoons weeding, hoeing and cultivating as a family.
And when I think back to those formative vegetable growing years
one particular moment comes to mind, a piece of advice crudely administered
by the owner of a small Garden Centre when we went to buy bamboo
canes to stake our fine crop of peas.
"Don't
be stupid, man," he barked, which isn’t the sort of comment
you expect from your local horticultural supplier, is it? "Get
your sticks from the woods."
So we duly
thanked him for being so insulting - as you do - and returned home
empty-handed. I think we must have caught him on a bad day, you
see, though strangely enough it didn't put us off from returning
on other occasions, and occasions when he was always most helpful.
Not for bamboo canes though, no, no, most certainly not, but for
other gardening items.
Yes, gardening
is a pursuit I had little interest in until we bought our first
house, as is often the case, but from then onwards it acquired increasing
significance in our lives. We’ve had a few gardens since then,
and our horticultural and DIY skills have improved beyond recognition,
but what remains fundamental to the whole process is the rich and
humourous fund of horticultural mishaps, disasters and misdemeanours
that would fill a book if only I had the time to write one.
Now the moral
of the tale – if there is one – goes something like
this (I like a good moral, you know):
If at first
you don’t succeed, then have a good chuckle and try again.
Or alternatively,
if your peas need staking, head for the woods!
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