Tags
Food, Fruit, Gardening, Los Angeles, Nonfiction, Stories, Travel, Vegetables
We have moved into our flat in Hampton (hence the silence, sorry) and I am thinking of getting an allotment. We went to Bushy Park Allotments on Sunday, to see if we could get in and at least get a good view of them, and there was a couple opening the gate carrying in a compost bin. We stood a way off looking at all the plots; they were untidy, shabby even, but there were also a lot of trees, and it looked both unkempt and rather beguiling; little portions of garden side by side as far as the eye could see.
The gentle hum of an engine, and I looked back at a man in a very low open-top car, with a bucket in the back and heaps of pink geraniums. He too looked unkempt and rather beguiling. He hadn’t sounded his horn, just sat in his very low down slightly rusted car waiting for us to move. He had shoulder-length sandy hair and was what people used to call rakish. My grandmother would not have trusted such a man; she would have said something about him being ‘freelance’. But there was a glamour about him and that he’d given us just the right amount of smile, to show he didn’t think we were in any way an irritant, made him alright.
The car rattled through the gates and disappeared into the thick brush of trees and stalks and general vegetable matter. That’s when we could have gone, but the couple smiled at us now and so I went up, leaving Joe to loiter, and said hello. Can I put my name down for a plot? (‘Put your name down!’ ‘Have you put your name down?’ has been a mantra of my mother’s since childhood). “Yes, you put your name down,” the lady nodded. And then they gave me advice along the lines of: make a nuisance of yourself, wear them down, and eventually someone will break and give you a piece of earth. “You need to not be afraid of hard work”, she said, looking me up and down in the way people do, thinking they’re being subtle.
They didn’t have much to do; it was cold and rainy and a few minutes later they’d emerged. ‘Put your name up on the gates and ask if anyone wants to share a plot’, the lady who was called Roz now said. I have to put my name up now as well as down. She said they’d picked some roses and they had some nice kale and they were done for the day. It seemed rather a bleak enterprise; coming to pick kale. I like roses but it wouldn’t occur to me to grow them on an allotment.
I think if it was me, I would take my lead from the freelancer driving through the gates and plant things with colour, a bit of rakishness, and some sweetness, some fruit, otherwise it all gets a bit Eastenders. A bit Arthur Fowler.
When I started this blog in LA I wrote about lemon curd. The curd was made from the very few Meyer lemons I’d eked from the tree we’d bought from an extremely rakish garden nursery on Fairfax and Santa Monica. We were promised ‘lemons in abundance’ from the nice stoned man and although the tree was initially heavy with fruit, it never fulfilled its promise. As Joe Queenan likes to say, it wrote a cheque it couldn’t cash. But the sweetness of those lemons, their strange hybrid flavour and the thin mellow peel, started me off. I loved the colour too, a happy, acid yellow. I was never devoid of fruit thereafter. I fell in love with fruit, probably because there was an awful lot of it about in LA – orange trees mainly and their rampant, swooning blossom – and it was the first thing I genuinely liked about being there. It was growing, it was nature, it was beautiful to watch.
Perhaps I have not got the point of the allotment quite. Although I would be happy to share a plot and I wouldn’t be shy of digging, I’d need to insist there was a splash of colour, some orbs, some blossom, a cage, a tree, some espaliered plums and some brickwork to keep them warm. In the meantime I think I can live without kale, a terrifyingly healthy leaf.
Welcome back to UK – and you’re living very close to me! But what a change it will be for you – kale instead of lemons! Hope all goes well and maybe we’ll bump into each other one day.
Kale instead of lemons sounds a better title for the post. Happy you are nearby. That hasn’t happened before 😄
You’ve moved! Wow, I look forward to hearing your lush words about the soil, the food and the sensorial pleasure of it all in your posts, Sophie! You are always dear in my heart!
Hello dear Kim. I know, I am very far away. It’s hard! You are very dear in my heart too. Xxx
Lovely. You reminded me of LA – so sweet. And, that my lemon tree here has given us nothing. Still sitting barren on our deck. 😏
Beautiful writing.
I miss you Jen. Hope your barren lemon tree gives you something xx
It took my Meyer lemon tree many years to have enough lemons for my family and friends. I have seen citrus trees in pots growing inside. Good luck with finding a good plot.
Thank you. Yes, you’re right, the Meyer lemon tree rewards the patient… I still miss it though for its blossoms. I’ll be updating about the plot. X
Missing my Meyer lemon tree enourmosly for years (had to leave it in CA with friends when we moved), I have found one in a German nursery two years ago and it keeps on growing on our balcony here.
Welcome home to the UK, quite a culture shock coming back from LA. It was for us and took us (I’d like to say a few months but) a good year to feel at home again. Something to inspire your mixed plot – check out an older Alys Fowler programme: eye-opening as to what is possible in a small plot regards having it both and more: blooms and vegetables and fruit and chickens.
Nicole
Thank you Nicole. I love Alys Fowler. That’s great to know about a mixed plot. Chickens would be wonderful but may have to wait!
Still feeing a little Lost in Translation? Moving is so difficult. Even when it is going home.
Yes you’re right. Going home is a minefield.
So glad to hear you’ve found a new home. Go on, get your name up and down! You won’t regret it.
Spoken like a pro, as I know you are. Yes, I need to get digging xx
The kale has been wearing me down, little by little and I have been learning to really like it and I almost miss if from my salad of mixed greens if I’ve run out. And the good thing about kale, (since I started defending it 🙂 ) is that it can stand a bit of a frost which is great here in Finland. Yes, I think you should put your name down for a plot.
Ha! Very well defended Laila. I too have succumbed since writing this post, and floated some kale in a broth and yes it was good and very wintery. I will put my name down, promise x
your photos as always make me scream with delight. LOVE the wooden gate and the lock and the little square of background….
I don’t think I’ve ever made anyone scream with delight. Thanks, Matt, that was lovely xxxx
what GORGEOUS photos!
Thank you x