I was half awake this morning when I heard lots of thumping
noises. I knew Mrs Next Door was due to go on holiday tomorrow, and assumed she
was engaged in Noisy Preparations. But then I had second thoughts; the noise
wasn’t coming from her side, but from under my bedroom window. I got up and had
a look.
‘Shit! Cows! Again!!’
I got dressed and went downstairs, just in time to hear a
knocking on the door.
‘There are cows in the garden,’ said my neighbour.
‘I know.’
‘Pretty, aren’t they?’
I envy women in being able to see ‘pretty’ first, and ‘bloody
nuisance’ second. I’m the other way round.
Five young heifers were wandering around the paved area at
the side of my house. They looked at me in that way cows do when they’re
wondering why you’re walking on two legs. I shooed them around to the front and
onto my neighbour’s lawn, which is badly overgrown (courtesy of the landlord’s
agent who keeps saying he’ll send a contractor to take down the excessive
growth, but hasn’t got around to it yet.)
‘Do something useful,’ I told them. ‘Eat that.’
They didn’t. As soon as my back was turned they wandered
through the main part of my herbaceous border, and then went and trampled all
over the vegetable beds. I decided it was better to leave them to find their
way out of the garden themselves, since chasing them around would probably have
resulted in the damage being more extensive. Cows are no respecters of things which
humans consider important.
So then I rang the police because my neighbour said the rest
of the herd were making their way to the main Ashbourne road, which isn’t good.
It seemed somebody must have known whose cows they were, though. Five minutes
later a farmhand turned up on a quad bike and strung a line across the entrance
to my path.
‘We’ve got some cows on the loose. We’re just going to round
them up.’
‘I know,’ I said with ill-disguised irritation. ‘They’ve
been in my garden and done some damage.’
‘Oh, sorry about that,’ he said, and rode off.
I decided to be philosophical. This sort of thing is part of
the price you pay for living in a rural area, and I wouldn’t change that. And
the cows left me a gift in recompense for the damage they’d caused – loads of
cow dung all over the place. Free fertiliser (even though I slipped on it a
couple of times because I didn’t expect
it to BE there!)
And then I thought of all those people around the world who
live in places where they have tornadoes, and hurricanes, and tidal waves, and
earthquakes, and devastating floods... And the whole business slipped nicely
into perspective.
6 comments:
Thank you Jeff, couldn't stop laughing, "herbaceous border" sounded like a euphemism they might have used in a 70s sit com. Of course, slipping in poo also appealed to my rather dubious sense of humour!
I understand your outcry, here the pigs are escapologists and wreak havoc!
Euphemism? Certainly not, although if I were to be strictly correct, I would call it a 'mixed border.'
Escaping pigs sound very Gallic.
They're little beasties and always have to have the last grunt, I kid you not.
I watched a documentary once in which a researcher (!!) said that pigs are better at problem solving than dogs. Ask them how we can get rid of Cameron, would you?
And am I the only person in the world who preferred 'Babe in the City' to the original?
All we have to do is chop him up and they'll get rid of the evidence...
"Babe in the City"? Haven't had the pleasure!
But of course. Never thought of that.
I thought 'Babe in the City' was a bit more surreal - and darker - than the original 'Babe.' The critics didn't like it, apparently.
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