Herb and Dorothy
It's coriander rustling season
again.
Reports of the herb being unbecomingly beheaded by person or persons
unknown are circulating amongst the gardening aficionados hereabouts.
It is a heinous crime, and
portends a growing season full of stripped trees and yanked out veggies. The
pictures of headless corpses and Margaret Thatcher in her bag swinging prime
having had no effect.
More must be done to curtail this
wanton thuggery. The solution proposed by one of our more creative
allotmenteers - genetically modified beetroot - was reluctantly rejected.
The suggestion of introducing the chemical
components of TNT into the beetroot gene was enthusiastically applauded by
the growing fraternity at a special meeting called to draw up an action plan.
The graphic full colour illustrations showing bloodied hand stumps, along with
corpse strewn rows of runner beans drew cheers of approval.
Our enthusiasm was
only curtailed when we were reminded of a most distressing incident on an
allotment site in Ashby under Lyme. The mislabeling of a row of beets had
resulted in one of that town's oldest families being completely wiped out. Also, the genetically altered veg was highly
unstable: the detonation of one beetroot setting off the whole row.
However, it was pointed out that
exploding rows of beet were the ideal solution for infirm allotmenteers who
could not lift a spade or fork.
The alternative suggestion of
crossing the tasty, if innocuous, loquat with 400 metres of WW1 vintage barbed
wire was accepted as a pleasing compromise.
You may recall that a spate of
parsley decapitation at about this time last year was successful halted through
the judicious use of capital punishment. The rotting dangling corpses a
powerful disincentive to obnoxious herb rustlers.
Although the stench of said
corpses did, on occasion, distract from the bucolic charm of my purple
sprouting broccoli, the lack of rustlers and marauding highwaymen rampaging
through my swedes and turnips was a blessed joy.
Someone has just offered me a
booby-trapped apple tree. One bite into that tree's fruit will leave the thief
toothless, and chin less, and nose less.
Well worth planting this season,
remembering, of course, to correctly label.
Comments
Dear Bojo: your comment is up to your usual standard.
Dear JtH: Interested in joining our allotment association? We could do with creative thinkers like you.