Exposed roots
By Parson Thru
- 1904 reads
The tomato plants are surging. Great, boisterous bull-terrier plants with heavy gold chains slung between stem and cane. The floods of water and feed they require have eroded the soil, exposing a fine root structure. This seems a way in for disease. A couple of handfuls of loam will fix it for now.
The clouds are thinning. Rain-heavy brutes giving way to something approaching a delicate blue. The grass sparkles, silvered with points of moisture. Gert lush greenery from path to border. Border control – how it exhausted me in early spring. My mother congratulates herself on her beautiful garden, noting what she has bought, forgetting the nine fallow years. Gardening. Working with nature, or setting oneself against it?
I’m breathing the heady fumes of tomato sap. This week, I learned about side shoots and stopped snapping off productive leaf stems. The broiling tips exert themselves in seeming gratitude, though not being Romantic, per se, that might be a step too far.
I have Heaney on my lap, Jack Daniels on the table. Today, I took the bull by the horns and bought my mother a simple DAB radio. One button, on and off, which I’ve picked out with nail varnish that would put the geranium into the shade. Preset one: Radio York. She stuck her head round my door twice today to say how excited she was. Malton bypass closed – one direction or two, I couldn’t establish, but the thrill was tangible.
Now the curtains are prematurely drawn (I try not to see the stains) to guard against unfathomable terrors. Once in a while, they twitch, or a grey mop appears in the kitchen window, mistrustful of anyone or anything that would spend its time of an evening among tomato plants and geraniums.
We can’t all be the same. To speak about moving on would imply too much, but the universe exists because everything that forms does so from what has decayed. Standing still goes against the most fundamental of laws. Pride doesn’t exist outside the human mind, which is a hopeless attempt at representing the…. Oh, why bother? Life's too short. Unless you’re eighty-four and the whole thing was always beyond your ken.
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Comments
Loved this Parson-san, side
Loved this Parson-san, side shoots...a side shoot is the best place of all on the river, im after one myself, off grid place to have some quiet in my language. JD write. I had a bar in brasil where the tap was always behind me. I was a cook, waitress, bartender and a DJ. Bouncer sometimes too! The punters would come in for requests, a quiet ear and a tune...brutes and poets, 'rain heavy brutes giving way to someting approaching a delicate blue' struck me, reminded me. Sorry to ramble. Been in a zoom call for drinks amd only had a bottle of Port. So im a drunken sailor! :D watch out for the sauce xxx
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Oh hello! I shouldnt be
Oh hello! I shouldnt be commenting drunkenly. Glad and relieved you liked! X
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I forgot to say some hippy drivel -
Geranium oil is a heady elixir.,.those weirdos say its healing and uplifting. I happen to no this is true as i snort it like cocaine! In the burner tho tis sickly endless. C'est la. We live. We learn x
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I used to have a greenhouse
I used to have a greenhouse full of tomato plants. I used to sit in it too. Usually to shelter from rain when I was having a cigarette. I wrote a poem about the smell of tomato plants and that greenhouse, lost now. I quite like the smell of them. Geraniums too. I think they have a similarish smell. I'm less likely to trust those who wouldn't understand spending time with tomato plants and geraniums, but there you go, as you said, we are not all the same. I always enjoy your philosophical tomato plant themed writes. And I am glad I read this too so that I got to read ld's port fuelled comment which I agree is brilliant. Don't stand still for too long is good advice. Rachel :)
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