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I know a bus driver called Rocky.
Rocky has two dogs, Ricky and Reggie, and a cat called Buster.
Rocky, Ricky, Reggie and Buster.
It has a solid ring to it, don’t you think? Something of a
London Gangland feel, from another era, the nineteen-sixties perhaps?
Rocky lives
in the suburbs of Inverness and has a wonderful rambling garden.
Not too neat, not too wild, just perfect for a spot of pottering
about and being ‘at one’ with nature, and just the sort
of garden that I would wish to have if I lived in town - a pond,
a shed, a compost heap, garden chairs, a table to accommodate a
bottle of wine after an arduous day’s work in the garden,
a greenhouse, somewhere for the kids to play and a woodland area
at the far end to get away from it all and commune with nature.
Perfect.
Now Rocky had
a problem with his pond. It was well-stocked with fish, you see
(Japanese Koi), when a local heron of the district flew in and scoffed
the lot. Now Rocky was not pleased with this, no, in fact he was
distraught. And what do you do when something like that happens?
Shoot it, I suppose, although that’s hardly the done thing
in today’s society, is it? No, you can’t be doing that
sort of thing in the suburbs - shooting indigenous wildlife - whatever
next. But you can’t really blame him for considering the idea,
albeit briefly, now can you?
Then Rocky
hit upon a solution: a solution given to him by one of his fare-paying
passengers as he was bemoaning the plight of his Japanese Koi and
ranting on delirious about the need to relocate the entire heron
population of Inverness to the Shetland Islands.
‘Git
a plastic one, Rocky,” said the fare-paying passenger, “that
should do the trick. Git a plastic heron.” (‘Git’,
of course, in this context should be ‘get’ - for that’s
what he meant – only ‘git’ is what he said, which
fits in neatly with the London gangland ‘feel’ mentioned
earlier, don’t you think?) “Git a plastic one.”
Brilliant,
thought Rocky, just the thing, so he popped down to the Garden Centre
to buy himself a plastic heron.
Now it came
in a box, you see, this plastic heron, a sort of ‘do-it-yourself’
kit, fifteen pounds, very realistic, and in five pieces: torso,
two legs (one folded and one extended), a head and a length of dowelling
to stick up its nose with feathers on the other end that flapped
in the wind. What a brilliant idea.
“Stand
by Garden Pond,” said the instruction manual. “Deters
all herons.”
Rocky was ecstatic.
But unfortunately there was a problem. It didn’t work, you
see, that was the problem, not in Rocky’s case anyway (which
isn’t to say – before any plastic heron manufacturing
company decides to sue me – that it won’t work for anybody
else). No, the real heron wasn’t deterred by this at all -
useless in fact - and if anything visited Rocky’s garden on
a more regular basis than before. Rocky was not amused.
“Git
a plastic heron, my foot!” he muttered to himself (or words
to that effect) as the two birds snuggled into each other beside
the pond.
As a temporary
solution to this problem and just for the time being, nothing permanent,
he opted to forgo Japanese Koi and make do with dwarf water lilies
and marginal plants instead. But what to do with a redundant plastic
heron? Far too expensive to throw away. And then he hit upon the
ingenious idea of recycling it - an idea given to him by one of
his fare-paying passenger as he ranted on delirious one morning
about wasting good money on plastic herons.
“Bury
it, Rocky,” said the fare-paying passenger, “upside
down, neck deep, drill holes in its bottom, grow flowers ‘out
it’, trailers, ivies and the like, an horticultural innovation…”
What a brilliant
idea, thought Rocky, and so that’s what he did. Indeed, so
enthusiastic was he with this idea that he popped down to the garden
centre to buy himself a plastic gnome for similar purposes.
So there you
are. All’s well that ends well. And if the sight of two protruding
bottoms – heron and gnome – with accompanying foliage
doesn’t keep the local heron population at bay, then nothing
will.
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