Monday 6 June 2011

After the Rain

There has to be something about the structure of my garden that both reflects and feeds into the structure of my writing. And the moods of the garden surely affect the way I work. A garden is like a novel, really, you have a plan, but it modifies as you go along and encounter the realities of the plot (unintentional pun, but it works!) I told a friend recently that the garden's like a piece of music, always moving, always changing - but that applies to fiction, too. It has its own rhythm and pace, its moments of splashy excitement, then the quiet sections that build up to new intense action.



The garden also feeds me and my husband in a real, corporeal way. And the slugs feed, too, though so far only one of my lovely Salad Bowl lettuces, with their yellow wavy-edged leaves, has been munched. They're pull and come again lettuces, and keep going for six weeks or so if I keep picking, giving us generous salads several days a week. They have a faint bitterness that intensifies as they get older, but never too much, and make a wonderful salad just on their own, with oil and vinegar dressing.



and today there are redcurrants ripe, two bushes in the fruit cage, one outside. Like strict Islamic women, the one that's gone outside is veiled, though you can see its berries, so maybe not so strictly veiled after all. It's the birds who have to be kept at bay, though, not the male sex. I guess the black netting is rather sexy veiling, actually, like the little hat with a black net veil that my grandmother used to have, and that I used for dressing-up when I was little.



After the rain, most of the flowers are sated with wetness, drugged with it, hanging their heads. But the bearded irises are alert, bright and cheerful, odd for flowers that flourish in dry conditions.



The garden is a thing of viewpoint. I tend to plan it to be seen from the house, but it opens up vistas, as I walk round it, that I never expected, and because the viewpoint is new, it's more attractive to me. I like it that not all of its sights are visible from the house. Going inside the corkscrew willow isn't just a way to get a fine shower-bath, but is another way of seeing the garden.

I think this also has something to do with the novel - writing first drafts I always have to stop myself just pushing the plot forward '- and then this happened, and then that happened -' Bah! but to change authorial position and look at the narrative differently.

My rain-tubs filled up again last night, for which much thanks. Oh, the blissful sound of water gurgling into them, after I'd almost emptied them. I have five rain-tubs, with a combined storage capacity of about 1400 litres, but it's amazing how they empty in dry summers.

I was glad, though, to have the one that drains the shed roof empty, as the water smelt of old cabbage leaves, and when I got down to the bottom it was full of worms. How they got in, I have no idea; all my rain-tubs are covered, and worms don't live on shed roofs, surely? Or in the gutter round the shed? The Germans do call them Regenwürmer, which means 'rain-worms' so maybe the clouds are full of worm-eggs.

I cleaned that one out with liquid soap and now, hopefully, it will smell nice till the next lot of worms come out of the sky.

2 comments:

  1. Lovely photos Leslie! I'm envious of your irises. I do think gardening is like writing...both very frustrating most of the time.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I find gardening pretty satisfying, compared to writing, though there are always the slugs.. but right now I'm about to get spring cabbage for dinner and pick some redcurrants, and that's a good feeling! And I was stuck with the novel, but writing the blog post has sorted me out.

    ReplyDelete