Six whole months ago I joined the Pilsdon community. The Earth has
spun halfway round the Sun in the meantime. Spring has sprung, Summer has been
summoned and Autumn is beginning to Fall.
An entirely new person has since been ushered into life in the form of baby
River. Thirteen entirely new piglets have also been welcomed to planet Earth
although sadly their mother had to be taken to the abattoir yesterday as she
had developed a malignant tumour on her udder. Twelve lambs have been born,
lived their lives, been dispatched and are now in the freezers. One bullock was
slaughtered in May and has since been consumed, four remain out in the fields
looking over their shoulders nervously.
The vegetable garden has blossomed, bloomed, fruited and in large part
been harvested and filled our collective stomach.
The community has grown slightly in numbers but is always evolving
through the interplay of relationships. Friendships are struck up, and are
either deepened or soured. Enmities also are forged as harsh words are spoken
at the wrong moment. One gruff old bloke only ever smiles when he is playing
with the baby. Tempers occasionally flare but shortly everything is calm again.
Everyone on the whole cares for one another. If someone is not at the meal
table, they will be looked for. People help with the washing up after supper
despite not being on the rota for it. Some agree to have their portraits
painted by our resident artist-thespian although not many could sit still for
long enough (blame the medication). I very kindly looked after baby River while
his mother took my job of shifting a ton of compost from one compartment to
another. (She offered!) It’s been said that the key to sustaining a community
such as this is simply people being able to say “Thank You” and “Sorry”.
I still consider myself very much a novitiate in the dark arts of
gardening but I have perhaps progressed a rung or two. It seems to require the
ability to keep a lot of plates spinning very slowly. Weeds don’t grow
especially quickly - if you stare at one it just stays still and stares back
insolently - but if you get on with the hundred other tasks of sowing, potting
on, watering, erecting cane frames, mulching, forking the soil, turning
compost, harvesting, etc, they just silently take over. However the sheer delight in
being able to pick a few sweetcorn for the kitchen from the six foot high
plants knowing that a few months ago they were just tiny seeds has not yet worn
off.
There’s talk of putting together a pantomime for Christmas. I should
still be here for it as Pilsdon have agreed to extend my six months by at least
another three, and possibly till next March. Time to dust off my
back-half-of-a-donkey suit I guess.
2 comments:
Very well written. I didn't realise you were so literate!
Why thank you.
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