Author's
note: Today, September 7, 2015, is a major holiday at our house.
Benjamin BadKitten is ten years old and celebrating his Labor Day
birthday by committing no labor whatsoever.
I
eagerly ripped off the August calendar page this week. It's time to
move forward from heat and smoke into the red, gold and bronze of
September. On Tuesday morning I smiled at the back-to-school photos
of children on Facebook, carrying new backpacks and wearing
still-spotless sneakers. With a mix of joy and melancholy, I thought
of our son and daughter decades ago, as they paused at their
classroom doors and looked back at me with wobbly smiles before they
took the next steps to becoming big kids.
The
beginning of the school year is more of a red-letter marker for me
than New Year's day – filled with plans, important dates and
deadlines, long to-do lists, and a shift from afternoons in my garden
to longer writing sessions at my computer. And there is a cozy attic
room in my mind that I've already peeked into. I store holiday
memories in there: the golden fragrance of a fat turkey roasting, an
autumn centerpiece on our holiday table, set with my grandmother's
china, and the laughter of three generations of family waiting for
pumpkin pie with extra whipped pie. Then, quickly, the door opens
farther to the bright glow of the holiday lights my husband hangs
from the eaves and weaves through our shrubbery, the green scent of
the Christmas tree that touches our ceiling, bright wrapping paper
and ribbons on the table, and the joyous rush of rehearsals for our
church's Christmas pageant, which I write and direct. Ideas for that
pageant script already have floated down from the attic room and
taken center stage in my mind, because a cast of kids, from
preschoolers to high school, will expect roles that reflect their
personalities, show their humor and goodness, and include their
requests for a slightly creative gathering in Bethlehem on Christmas
Eve.
This
year I'm more willing than usual to start shutting down my gardens
for a long dormancy. The summer drought and wildfire smoke not only
affected my vegetable and flower beds, but my own confidence, too. I
made some big mistakes this summer, the result of impetuous
gardening, and am feeling quite discouraged. By allowing volunteer
sunflower seeds to sprout and grow in the tomato and broccoli beds, I
ruined the possibility of successful crops. (With my history of
vegetable gardening, the “possibility” of success is as definite
as I can hope for.) Our neighbors' gardens seem to have thrived
through the heat and smoke. This week my husband attended a meeting
with a friend of ours, who asked him to bring me one of her
home-grown tomatoes. It was a Brandywine, I think, and so plump,
juicy and gorgeous that I wanted to keep it as horticultural art. But
we ate it as the star of a dinner salad, and I savored every
tangy-sweet bite. It wasn't easy, because I kept comparing that
perfect tomato to the thick-skinned, pallid little orange golf balls
I'd harvested from my own plants.
It's
me, of course. I am apparently not equipped with the combination of
self-discipline, preparation and follow-through that healthy veggie
crops require. I've used red plastic, wrap-around trays to aid
watering and warmth for the tomatoes, and found no difference between
the red-trayed wonders and the ones I allowed to go commando. I've
let big, skulking sunflowers invade the beds, because I love feeding
birds and find joy in the cheerful flower heads. (Being able to grow
a big-honker-anything, even a sunflower that could grow in gravel, is
a cheap ego booster.) I let the neighborhood bunny use our veggie
beds as an all-you-can-eat buffet, because I can't imagine not
feeding a hungry little animal. (Just ask the squirrel that hangs out
in our apple tree, for whom I regularly buy big bags of unsalted raw
peanuts.)
My
personal staff has not helped to raise the garden odds in my favor,
either. I employ a frail and elderly Old English sheepdog (retired
now, but still able to pee on the grass and in the flower beds;) a
chief of staff aptly named Tessa the Vague, who still has trouble
finding the garden, and a chief-staffer-in-exile, Benjamin BadKitten,
who poops in the blueberry bed. When I demoted Benjamin and sent
Tessa up the Rozen corporate ladder, I expected a sweet companion,
peaceably settled near me in the garden as I worked (but not too
close, because she is not sure she is acquainted with me.) Now, after
a few weeks of observing the effects of the changeover, I'm worried.
On the few recent days when the fire smoke has cleared, I did some
work in several gardens. Tessa knew how to find each of those
locations, but I did not see her at all, even though she had followed
me (in her vague, meandering way) outside. She could have set out for
the side yard and ended up in Kooskia, so I slowly circled our yard,
checking shrubbery, flowers, raised beds, and the compost pile (not,
unfortunately, an inconceivable possibility.) I finally found her,
asleep, under a chair on the patio. When she heard me approach, she
blinked. “I am taking my afternoon break,” she seemed to murmur.
“My new best friend Benjamin said that now that I am chief garden
staffer, I am entitled to four 15-minute breaks every hour. He said
you can do the math.”
If you can't commit a direct overthrow, you can poison the pond. Very crafty, Badkitten.
ReplyDeleteHe is so proud -- and not even slightly ashamed of himself for taking advantage of his Aunt Tessa's trusting nature. Bad luck for BBK, though -- he will have to start all over again at their next encounter, beginning with introducing himself to Tess....
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