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A Copper Beech Blether
(or a chainsaw pruning!)
I was hanging out the washing in the
back garden, as I do infrequently, when a woman who was walking down the road
strolled into the garden and stopped for a chat about the weather, the state of
the nation and such matters. In those days the garden was unfenced, you see, but
not any more. Staring at her in some amazement I wondered if this was just a
localized way of introducing oneself to new people, or was it - I suspiciously
conjectured - simply a short cut habitually taken? After a couple of minutes of
one sided idle chit-chat over the washing line, during which my growing
annoyance was camouflaged by inane grinning, she continued diagonally through
next door's garden and casually left the premises via a small gap in their
leylandii hedging.
This incident happened a number of years ago now, shortly after we moved into a
nice little cottage with a half-acre garden in the Scottish Borders and reminds
me of another strange encounter that happened soon afterwards. I was struggling
to erect a fence around the property, a fence to keep strange women out, the
sort of strange women who wander willy-nilly about your garden, when I spied an
old lady leering at me over the Copper Beech hedge. She looked me in the eye,
very canny she was, and barked: "Are you married?"
Well of course I was, I assured her, even though I wasn't at the time, and this
seem to do the trick. I grinned inanely at her throughout the duration of this
short interrogation and then, looking supremely satisfied with herself, she
strode manfully down the road and out of sight, never to be seen or heard of
again. Once more I had encountered strange behaviors whilst pottering innocently
about the garden. Whatever next?
This nice little cottage that we moved into, with its half acre garden, was our
home for a number of years. It came with an untidy garden, a sort of rambling
mix of over-grown vegetable patches, a few apple trees, a neglected but
productive plum tree, grass for the children to run about and play on and a
large area overtaken by broom, thistles, long grasses and nettles. It was our
'wildlife garden' as we came to call it, for it was clear that lack of money to
buy basic tools, let alone hire a strimmer or a cultivator, meant that we
wouldn't be reclaiming it for many years to come. But a messy patch of
over-grown garden can be transformed into a 'wildlife' garden by a simple leap
of the imagination of course, and so that's what we did: we simply called it a
'wildlife garden', then admired any wildlife that we spotted in it!
Along the western boundary of the garden we also inherited a Copper Beech hedge,
a hedge in need of some care and attention, and the aforementioned Copper Beech
hedge across which the old lady had leered at me. During the early years I
spent a lot of time on this particular hedge until finally it became a source of
much pride and joy. Initially it was a low and straggly thing, a bad excuse for
a hedge really, over-run with ragwort, nettles and weeds. There was even a giant
rhubarb in the middle of it. But I tended it, I shaped it, I nurtured it, and
eventually it blossomed into a fine specimen of hedging, a hedge to be proud of,
a garden feature, an horticultural achievement. I concentrated on height as
well, for I wanted it high enough to ensure privacy - and in particular privacy
from the likes of strange old ladies and nosy passers-by.
Then we went away on holiday, a Summer break in the sun, returning two weeks
later to discover that the Copper Beech hedge had lost two foot in height. Good
grief, it was two foot shorter, not the sort of thing that you expect to happen
when you go away on holiday, is it? Good heavens, what sort of character lops
two foot off your prized hedge when you're back is turned?
After a great deal of detective work I discovered that it was Roger, the
taxidermist next door, so a few days later I confronted him as he was putting
out his dustbin.
"Do you know, Roger," I said, "some swine cut my Copper Beech? Now who on earth
did that?
"It was me," admitted Roger, tugging nervously on his white beard before going
on to tell me sheepishly that he'd chopped it with his chainsaw. And why?
Because his wife had told him to, you see, as it obscured visibility turning out
of the shared driveway onto the main road, a problem that had been driving her
'nuts' for months apparently, although for some strange reason they'd neglected
mentioning it to me.
For the sake of neighbourly relations I refrained from depositing him upside
down in his own dustbin, sorely tempted though I was, but instead vowed to
mutter and mumble loudly "Some swine cut my Copper Beech" whenever he ventured
within earshot.
And so the moral of the tale is clear: "Never trust a bearded taxidermist
called Roger, particularly if he lives next door, for as sure as Winter follows
Summer, or Summer follows Winter, he'll mutilate your Copper Beech with a chain
saw and blame it on his wife."
Now let that be a lesson to us all.
(Copyright: Patrick Vickery)
OTHER BLETHERS!
A
Tomato Blether - January, 2002
A
Tree Blether - February, 2002
A
Hare Blether - March, 2002
A Surreal Blether - April, 2002
A
Slug Blether - May, 2002
A
Goat Blether - June, 2002
A Half-Man, Half-Garden Blether - July, 2002
A Blaze Blether - August, 2002
An Inanimate Object Blether - September, 2002
A Notable Quotable Blether - October, 2002
A Plant Blether - November, 2002
A Compost Blether - December, 2002
A Heron Blether - February, 2003
A Bergenia Blether - March, 2003
A Rose Blether - April, 2003
A Critter Blether - August, 2003
Blether Home
Patrick Vickery is a garden
writer who lives in the Scottish Highlands. He runs a small perennial
plant nursery and has one book published to date: 'In Pursuit Of Perennial
Profit - The Pot Of Gold At The Bottom Of The Garden' (Capall Bann Publishers.
ISBN: 186163 1480), a 'How To' book about the propagation of hardy perennial
plants in an environmentally friendly way, and how to make your garden productive in a variety of ways for both expert and
gardening enthusiasts alike - at minimum cost and in an innovative and exciting
way. And - of course - how to sell the plants you grow (should you wish to) to
raise money (not a fortune) for yourself or a particular charity or cause.
Patrick is married with
three children, lives in a two acre wood in a wonderful part of the world, uses
a raised bed system of propagation and has two dogs, a cat and two goats. His
second book - 'Gardening Tales - Blethers and Grunts' - a collection of anecdotal tales concentrating
on the more humorous side of gardening (particularly the things that go wrong!)
has recently been completed.
Patrick's book can be
bought from an absolutely fascinating website full of gardening, herbal,
mystical, and magical books that one would never find anywhere else. The
address is www.capallbann.co.uk.
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