Gardener's World or Sod's Law
I’m all in favour of self sufficiency and turning over the
sods. But enthusiasm should be tempered with caution. I say this having read
that in March there’s Waltham Forest's own Urban Food Growing Festival.
Growing your own is all well and good, but I feel it’s my
duty to warn my fellow Walthamstownians of the perils. I speak as an
experienced allotment plot holder.
Little did I realise that the simple joy of tilling the soil
could be fraught with such trials and tribulations.
Forget the aching back, the fork impaled foot or the stench
of rooting compost. It’s your fellow allotmenteers you have to watch out for.
Watering cans at 50 paces is not an uncommon sight. Wild
accusations of theft, treachery and wilful damage rend the air on quiet Sunday
mornings as plot holders face up to each other over a cup of (green) tea or
something stronger. The innocent family barbeque that can so easily turn into a
scene from “The Sopranos”.
Often I find myself muttering foul incantations under my breath as
I sow my broad beans or plant out my pak choi. This time it’s my neighbour’s super
charged motor mower driving me insane. He is completely impervious to the
hideous noise as he wears ear guards.Or it's the kids of that “lovely new couple" - you know the one's with the gorgeous Labradoddle pup - who run amuck across my
allotment. Fancifully, I picture them fetchingly impaled as living scarecrows.
Then there’s the “know it all”: worse than a dose of potato
blight. Been on the site since the Norman Conquest and Chair of the Allotment
Committee!
“Well you know if
you’d asked me”….”My brassicas always do well, but you can’t help being a
novice.”
And after all that? A
trip to Lidl to buy some edible fruit and veg…..
Comments
Dear JtH, likely to be a try out this spring or earlier.
Dear Mr&Mrs, shame..but I can understand.
Dear Bojo, Something to do with the obscenity laws?