Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Is A Year Long Enough?


At the end of the year we review the past growing season and plan for the next. The year becomes our test period before we review again. Our bodies are attuned to follow the seasons. Writers seek a framework to support the story they wish to tell. What then would come more naturally to a garden writer than the progression of the gardening year.  But is a year giving us enough? A quick search on the Internet provides me with a slew of  gardening books, how to's and memoirs, all with the word year in the title. Yes, some of them are classics or hilarious or incredibly informative but the arbitrary cut off leaves me asking, Well what happened next? Did you stick it out? Solve the annoying neighbour problem? Get more hens?

Give me the equivalent of Two Years Before the Mast by Richard Henry Dana Jr, Five Years in Revolutionary Cuba by Carroll English, Den of Lions: Memoirs of Seven Years by Terry Anderson or even Thirty Five Years of Newspaper Work by H.L. Mencken (though can't help thinking you could have come up with a snappier title H.L.)

In this frame of mind  I chose Paul Gervais' A Garden in Lucca for my entry to the Garden Book Review.

It is a twenty year memoir of transforming an abandoned garden in Tuscany into a personal paradise. Gervais embarks on some serious research, devouring books, investigating garden history and exploring significant gardens. The author has a lyrical style which is a pleasure to read for it's beauty alone.

Unfortunately I found the tone to be more than slightly pretentious at times. The use of foreign phrases and Latin names without explanation becomes tiresome. I have taken to ignoring the parts I don't understand and adopt a "Oh, Paul!" defence to examples of pomposity. Truth be told this Quaker girl finds them rather delicious.  I keep going back for phrases like these:

"There's a flood of white "Sea Foam" roses cascading off a low ledge, and there are pink and yellow honeysuckles, mauve "Marie Viaud" roses, and a sky-blue California lilac trained up on a southern, framing wall."

"In late winter, the young, bare-limbed cherries wade in deep floods of yellow and white narcissuses"

" ...a three-hundred year old Zizyphus tree, all wretched and thorny, like something a not-terribly-wicked witch would grow."

and give a wry smile at

" my salone, the nineteenth century style room I'd always thought of as quite Lucchese in style"

Twenty years gives both the writer and reader scope for reflection, a quality that attracts me to this book, despite it's flaws.

Garden at Lucca from Villa Massei website

Friday, 12 October 2012

More House Hunting Hell

Last time out my husband was in the burning grip of a viral infection. Not to be out done, on our current trip I have wilted from the lingering effects of bronchitis. "Mother's weak chest" as it is so dismissively referred to by the rest of the family,  is the legacy of a childhood  spent in a charming but chronically damp 17th century English farmhouse. Thus a hint of damp in any structure can send me into a tailspin. Alas, such was the case regarding house B, as featured in my last post. We had our offer accepted, proceeded with an inspection, received the damning report, and through a paroxysm of coughing I indicated the need to call the thing off. Homeless again, and fading fast, I've begun to look longingly at the small cemetery we pass each time we drive into town. "Oh look at everyone having a nice nap," I think to myself, "Perhaps if I could just have a little lie down..."

We have decided to rent over the winter and see what comes onto the market in the Spring. Meanwhile I can't help wondering if the universe is trying to tell us something.

Tuesday, 2 October 2012

This One Or This?

I am exhausted from the constant "what shall we do" "which one is best" debate.  In an effort to save my sanity, or perhaps just losing all perspective from sleep deprivation, I'm seeking your input dear readers.

House A: View

                                               
You have seen this before.

House B: View

This is the view if you were standing in the back yard.

House A: Kitchen

This is far beyond the requirements of my culinary skills. I could, however, amuse myself by pretending I was the host of a cooking show. Everything in this baby is HIGH end.

House B: Kitchen

I'm not saying a word.

A peak into the master bedroom of House B:

                        
               

and in House A:

                        


Heart or head folks, that is the question.

More to come next week as we head out again.