The myth of the wet-weather gardener
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The Front Lawn
Over the years I've created for myself the myth of the wet-weather gardener. A gardener who fearlessly brushes past soaking greenery, who sits down on the wet grass to weed, not bothered by her wet bottom getting wetter.
A gardener who even refuses to notice persistent drizzle. And who keeps on gardening when water starts dripping off her fringe and down her nose.
A soggy mind...
Funny how a soggy garden creates a soggy mind. There are exciting things one can do in a rainy garden. A wet day is the perfect time to clean out the glass-house, for example. But I don't. Take loads and loads of atmospheric photographs? Nope. Not even some raindrops on roses? Hmm...
I often start a rainy day wearing my shabbiest gardening jeans, just in case. And then I challenge my friends by turning up for a cafe lunch without changing - obviously it's never too wet to go out to a cafe.
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Wet Mahonia Foliage
I will do wet-day dog walks around the driveway in my Goretex jacket, though. I admire the dogs, the way they ignore getting their fur wet. And they never care if water drips down the back of their necks.
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Wet Dog Walking
And I'll slosh through the puddles in my lawns and driveway, experiencing a frisson of five-year-old glee. Puddle splashing never goes completely out of fashion (unless one is a cat, of course).
All is not lost?
While all may not be completely lost, the brave and determined wet-weather gardener certainly is. She must have transformed into water molecules and drained away into the river gravels. Oops...