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The Adequate Gardener Climbs Her Clematis
"Doesn't anyone just take it easy anywhere at any time anymore? Pass me a beer. I never studied Latin. I just want to grow plants."
I'm that frustrated, really. I'm climbing a braid of tangled clematis like it's
Rapunzel's hair. This one's a Clematis montana (what's the story with all this C
montana this and P orientale that and all those unnameable names and this part gets italicized and
this part doesn't and this part needs a capital and this doesn't? Doesn't anyone
just take it easy anywhere at any time anymore? Pass me a beer. I never studied Latin. I just want
to grow plants.) A C. montana growing all the way to the attic window, and I'm scaling it to
escape the clematis police. Look at them down there, ten prissy UK gardeners with permed hair,
pursed lips and clipboards. The first time I went to make a pruning cut, their whistles shrilled
and they forced me to hand over my secateurs, and then the bunch of them did a football huddle
around them making clucking noises. Rust, I heard, and dull cutting blade, and
Doesn't she ever oil her implements? and Probably carrying bacteria. I heard a
righteous sniff. They're just cheap clippers anyhow. They're hardly Felcos. All
this down their substantial noses. Well, darn the clematis police to heck anyway. I leaned over
one woman's shoulder chip and snatched my clippers back. They may not be the best maintained
clippers in the world, but on the other hand, I find time to watch ER. So sue me.
"...I was so bloody busy working and
cooking and vaccuming and yelling at the kids and finding time for Sex and the City that it
was all I could do just to shove the damn thing in the ground..."
"Humph," they said as one. "You are speaking,
we believe, of the genus CLEMatis. Kindly refer to said plant as CLEMatis in all
future speech."
I had no idea what they'd do to me if I guessed wrong, so I shouted, "Would it be all right with you guys if I just cut this clematis any which place on its stem?" The clematis police turned as one monolithic creature and laid half-lidded eyes upon me. Their pens poised above their clipboards. “Excuse us. Did we just hear you just say—“ And here they couldn’t bring themselves to actually repeat it. They stalled, this one-voiced creature, speechless. But then they went on. “Did we just hear you just say — clemAtis?” Darn, darn, darn. I did. I said it just like that. I suppose I should have been gnashing my teeth and renting my raiments. “Humph,” they said as one. “You are speaking, we believe, of the genus CLEMatis. Kindly refer to said plant as CLEMatis in all future speech.” “Nuts to you,” I said. And they just stood there, open-mouthed. Many of them had amalgam fillings which I hoped were leaking mercury. “You know the secret with clemAtis?” I shouted. “You know what it is? If you don't prune 'em right, they still grow. If you don't prune 'em at all, they still grow. Nothing bad happens. World War III doesn't break out. They just bloom up higher, is all.” “They might wilt,” said the officious poops. “Dudes,” I said, “pruning doesn't stop wilt. Clematis get a fungus. If I see drooping leaves, and I happen to have time, I cut the stem a couple inches down past it and hope the thing survives. Or if I'm busy, I let it go and hope that next year it doesn't wilt again. But sometimes it does.” Their Stepford mouths open in unison. “Prune your CLEMatis in its proper groups. Don't prune group A. Prune group B lightly for shape. Prune group C a foot from the ground.” And then suddenly they're chanting. “Prune your CLEMatis prune your CLEMatis prune your CLEMatis prune your CLEMatis prune your CLEMatis.” That's when I hightailed it up the C. montana towards the attic, an overstuffed chair, my TV clicker and a beer. The Adequate Gardener is published by Jane Eaton Hamilton, the award-winning author of six books, most recently the Ferro-Grumley nominated collection of short fiction, Hunger. Her stories have won many prizes, including first prize in the Prism International contest in 1999 and 2003. |
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