|
Christmas is now past. I hope it was a good one. On this general
festive theme I once toyed with the idea of growing Christmas trees
on a small scale - a small scale business venture really - but never
got round to it in the end. Maybe when I retire? There’s money
in Christmas trees, you see.
Mind you, many
years ago when we lived in a small house with a garden that backed
onto woods I took it upon myself to acquire a fresh Christmas tree
straight from the ground. It’s not a good idea to go digging
up trees willy-nilly of course, oh no, far better to pay fifteen
pounds for a dead and rootless one instead, but I was young, impoverished
and full of justification for such a dastardly deed; and anyway
it was self-sown, on land soon to be quarried and nobody would ever
know, or so I reasoned at the time. I would replant it after the
festivities were over of course, though not in the same spot to
be bulldozed by the quarry men, oh no, certainly not, what a waste,
but in a secluded area of the garden to be re-used again next year.
That’s re-cycling for you!
So one afternoon
in mid-December I set off into the gathering dusk with a spade in
one hand, a torch in the other, and a mind full of improbable excuses
just in case I was unlucky enough to meet anyone else out and about
at that time of day.
As I wandered
gaily along (looking for all the world like a suspicious character
about to dig up a Christmas tree to lug back to the fireside) I
saw other shadowy figures in the half-light of that crisp afternoon.
We passed each other like ships in the night, heads down, silent,
possibly the odd Highland grunt of acknowledgement, possibly not,
but all seriously intent on anonymity. They were “at it”
in the woods, doing the same as me, Christmas time was looming,
the spades were out, the goose was getting fat. I even spotted a
tree in the distance bobbing along under its own steam with a most
peculiar loping gait. Surely, I reasoned, somewhere beneath that
foliage there must be a person with a spade, for how else could
it move like that – how else could it move at all!
Once the tree
was up, neatly positioned beside the fireplace and bedecked in festive
spangly things, we eagerly anticipated the arrival of the ‘The
Bearded One’ - Santa - who always appeared on Christmas Eve
(between 6 and 7pm) sitting comfortably in the back of a pick-up
truck dispensing lollipops to the children of the district in exchange
for a wee dram from the adults of the household. Ho, ho, ho.
By the time
he reached our house many a lollipop had been dispensed, many a
wee dram quaffed, and he’d subsequentially adopted the ruddy
and brazened look of a festive beacon.
But gone are
the days of jolly Santas in pick up trucks – more’s
the pity - although in certain parts of the country, prior to Christmas,
the odd wandering conifer can still be spotted in the gathering
dusk of a late afternoon. Some traditions never die out, do they?
Not completely.
|