andygates: (Default)
andygates ([personal profile] andygates) wrote2007-10-06 04:23 pm
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Things that make a house a home

What makes a house a home?  For me it's not much, a cat and a teapot and an apple tree (I used to say "and lots of friends and family" but I've gotten used to this solo lark and enjoy the peace).  I wonder if it's what you're raised with?  Vertical meme transmission at its best.  For the last year, I've missed my apple tree: the small north-facing yard didn't look like it would grow anything or have the space for anything worth growing.  It would need a dwarf-stock espalier-trained tree, something good and native to handle the possible damp and gloom and scorching. 

Today I found a dwarf-stock espalier-trained Cox's Orange Pippin, two tiers, just perfect for my sunny wall.  The last year has proved that my assumptions about the garden were all false: Devon is a trump card over all growing conditions.  Play Devon on your hand, and slide Fecundity to max.  Weeds hip-high in February.  Wheat as a weed.  Slugs the size of ferrets.  If you look closely on a bottle of Pathclear, you'll see small print next to the claim, "Keeps paths weed-free for six months" reading, "Not applicable in Devon where only Biblical salting of the earth will slow anything down, and even then, keep a flymo handy."

So tomorrow I'm planting an apple tree.  This is the very best of domestic chores.

(Anonymous) 2007-10-07 05:33 pm (UTC)(link)
I just googled your apple, and found it to be a synonym of our apple, which I have NEVER heard rattle. I feel I've been cheated out of something. Which just goes to show that I'm tilting towards the pessimistic, since I could be eagerly looking forward to shaking apples all winter, but I'm not. Much.

Should I be worried?
-Jeanne

[identity profile] andygates.livejournal.com 2007-10-07 07:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Leave 'em to ripen longer.

And probably, yeah.