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I saw Bob Dylan last summer, a sprightly looking
chap for his age. I didn’t meet him in person of course, no,
no, afraid not, but saw him in concert at Stirling castle. Bob “the
stuff legends are made of” Dylan strutting about in a skin
tight suit in front of 7000 adoring fans. Some of them were grannies
too, you know, and what energy they possessed, hip-hop folk from
another musical era.
“I’m
a granny, you know,” screeched a youthful pensioner in delight
as she twirled past us to the doleful sounds of ‘himself’
singing “Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands.” He did well,
too, for a man of his age, sixty and still going strong.
Now I think
Bob likes his garden, he could be a gardening man, you know, that
song of his, “Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands”, has a
bit about geraniums in it, a Geranium Kiss of all things,
could be an indoor plant man perhaps, and one with a particular
penchant for Pelargoniums? I must ask him sometime. Well I might,
you know, I just might, although it’s not easy to get in touch
with such an iconic figure as Bob for a chat about gardening these
days, is it? No, no, certainly not - not in such times of cult superstardom
anyway.
“Do
you like your geraniums then, Bob?” I might say. “And
how do you propagate yours?”
“Most
likely you grow your way and I’ll grow mine,” he might
say. (Or was it “Most likely you go your way and I’ll
go mine.” I’m not sure. I must look it up. On the album
anyway, Blonde on Blonde).
You never know
though, he might like the occasional blether about horticultural
matters, mightn’t he? It’s not inconceivable.
Now after picking
up on Bob’s reference to geraniums I wondered whether anyone
else waxed lyrical about the gardening side of things? (Didn’t
Tina Turner sing about a Nut Bush? I’m sure she did).
There’s
a castle near here, you know, not far from Dornoch, a sort of exclusive
guest house concept for the rich and famous, the sort of establishment
that Bob might frequent, short breaks away from the hurly-burly
of busy life, celebrity weddings, that sort of thing. I can be out
in the garden, you know, pottering about, a spot of weeding, taking
cuttings, that sort of thing, when a low-flying helicopter ‘whizzes’
past en-route to the castle. Film stars, Rock stars, Presidents,
Kings, they’ve all seen me. Well I think so anyway, and I
always wave, make a point of it.
Now once a
year the castle is open to the public, just the estate grounds,
in aid of charity, a summer fete to raise money for good causes,
and so we set off after lunch - the whole family - for a pleasant
afternoon of meandering amidst shrubberies and glasshouses. We always
check out the new plantings too, to see which guests, if any, have
planted a tree or a shrub to mark their visit.
Now occasionally,
just occasionally, mind, if the opportunity presents itself, I might
have a furtive peer through one of the ground floor windows in the
hope of catching sight of somebody famous. Never spotted anybody
yet, of course, not really, although just possibly – there’s
a slim chance - I may have seen that guy who used to advertise fish
fingers on the television, ‘Captain Bird’s Eye’,
that was his name, but I may be wrong.
One year perhaps
they’ll have Mick Jagger on teas (‘Brown sugar with
your cuppa?’) or Bob ‘the stuff legends are made of’
Dylan in the glasshouse tending to the geraniums. Now that would
be a summer fete with a difference, wouldn’t it?
Anyway, Bob
Dylan or no Bob Dylan, it’s certainly a pleasant way to spend
a leisurely afternoon.
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