|
I remember Mr. Slayter well. He must have been about seventy if
a day, rolled his own cigarettes, was never seen in public without
a soft brimmed hat and rode a bicycle that was at least as old as
himself. He 'did' the garden weekly - Tuesdays if I recall - covering
the 5 miles from 'his' to 'ours' on his bicycle, an Old Holborn
dangling from his mouth and his trouser bottoms tied tightly with
twine, a sort of do-it-yourself bicycle clip notion. Years later,
when I became interested in gardening myself and came across the
ornamental grass ‘Gardener's Garter’ (Phalaris arundinacae
'Picta'), an evergreen perennial with broad white-striped leaves,
I realized that this was how he tied his trouser legs, not with
twine at all but with an invasive ornamental perennial. A Gardener
of the 'Old School', unlikely to frequent new-fangled Garden Centre
places, he possessed the serenity and wisdom of one who knew what
he was about. In essence: ‘half-man, half-garden’. Even
in his youth, many years ago, I can still imagine him as being a
‘half-man, half-garden’ sort of person. And they certainly
don't make them like that anymore, do they?
Now this brings
me on to Mr. Sprats, who - in a similar vein - could be described
as a ‘half-man, half-ladder’ sort of person on a bicycle,
if you follow me.
Mr. Sprats (now there's a name to conjure up images of rustic simplicity
from a by-gone era) was the man who mended the many windows we broke
playing football in the garden. We seemed to break them on a regular
basis, you see, so this must have been before toughened glass was
invented.
"A
superb pass from George Best, a cracking shot from Pele, tipped
over the bar by Banks and bang goes the bathroom window."
(Parents can be very understanding, can't they? “Was it an
accident?......well accidents will happen......try not to do it
again.")
Mr. Sprats
would be telephoned and, if available, would come cycling recklessly
up the High Street with a 14 foot extendible ladder balanced precariously
on his shoulder and a pot of putty dangling from the handlebars.
(Just imagine if that was to happen these days?) It never crossed
my mind at the time to ask him how the panes of glass reached our
house, a fact that I would dearly love to know, for as the years
go by this mystery becomes more intriguing. Did he carry them on
his bike? Too late for an answer now, of course, because Mr. Sprats
is no more, although fond memories of him - and also of Mr. Slayter
- linger vividly on.
Now occasionally
Mr. Sprats and Mr. Slayter would be in the garden together, one
mending the windows, the other hoeing the flower beds, and both
possibly muttering good-naturedly to each other about football,
kids, weeds and the meaning of life. But at half-past three everything
stopped for biscuits, tea and a cigarette. Not much change there.
The Council Workers have been digging up a nearby road recently
and, at prescribed times, times known universally to Council Workers,
Carpenters, Brickies, Gardeners and JCB Drivers to mention but a
few, everything still grinds to a halt for tea. And quite right
too. Some traditions should last forever, shouldn’t they?
The only difference these days is the transport employed. Instead
of bicycles, it's vans.
(Postscript:
Mr Slayter had a remarkably effective device for eliminating weeds
from the garden - the garden hoe. He used this weekly – fifteen
minutes only – in the vegetable plots, the flower beds, everywhere
in fact where bare soil was in evidence, and no weeds were ever
spotted in ‘his’ garden.
The moral of the tale: weed before the weeds appear!)
|