I have
treasure in my garden, lots of it, but please, don't rush over with picks and
shovels. Before I have to bar the gate and electrify the fence, I should
clarify my concept of treasure. There is nothing remotely of value buried in my
garden apart from the composted remains of numerous plants that were not as
hardy as I'd hoped. The ones that are healthy can be found in any nursery or
garden centre. Of these, I do have a few favourites that I'd hate to lose. But
there are a number of items that I do treasure, things that I couldn't leave
behind I were ever to abandon this garden for another.
I think
most gardeners feel this way. A friend once wrote to me of her cherished items
— a collection of rocks (just shy of boulder variety), cement planter
"bowls" made in an art class, an old piece of fence from an address three
moves ago, and a the hunk of barbed wire and wood from a rotted fence post, all
of which she would be moving to any new address.
The
treasures in my garden are similarly varied, and just as eccentric. Many are
hidden from sight, but I know roughly where they are. They turn up when I'm
weeding or pruning and I delight in rediscovering them. I also rediscover other
items that needed to be hidden — garden show paraphernalia that is not to my taste.
I don't have the heart to junk it, so back it goes, under the shrubbery.
Amongst
my oldest treasures is a huge chunk of root from an ancient cedar tree, a
remnant of the giants that once grew around here. It's somehow symbolic of the
loss of forest and farmland within this region. The place where I discovered it
has long since been swept away by urban sprawl and is now closer to downtown
than the present edge of the city. Root, as I call it, has travelled with me
from home to home and garden to garden. I think by now it deserves to be
designated as a heritage artefact.
Beside
Root, attached to the trellis, are three, nifty, glass insulators that might
vanish from view for a while if the new
climbing rose stops lolling about and puts a little more effort into doing what
it's supposed to do. Glass insulators aren't particularly rare, but these three
came from an old telephone post on my late Grandfather-in-law's farm. I tell my
wife that they might be useful in case he ever tries to reach us.
Nearby,
in the side yard, are a few railroad spikes and a handful of dated nails driven
into a post. I found the nails along a stretch of disused railroad track where
I used to walk a dog I once knew, many years ago. They would have been used to
record the date when the ties were originally laid — 1937 is the earliest.
At the
corner of the pathway stands a slender piece of rock. It is, in fact, two
pieces of rock, the smaller one balanced on the other. The smaller piece is a
piece of weathered limestone which, when approached from the right direction,
resembles a face. I call it Albert, the garden guardian, after my old dad.
Across
the lawn, beneath the hibiscus, stands Gneville the gnome, a gift from someone
special who believes no garden is complete without one. He is of unpainted
concrete, wears a wry smile, and believes the garden is his domain. Interestingly,
an internet poll lists the acceptance rating for garden gnomes at roughly fifty
percent — about the same as cats. Providing Gneville stays put, and stays out
of trouble, he is welcome to stay and believe whatever he likes.
There
are other miscellaneous items about, including a few best described,
charitably, as objet trouvé. I even have a pair of small, plastic rabbits,
gifts for a pair of small non-plastic boys. The rabbits disappear for months,
even years, one of them even passed unharmed through the compost heap, but they
always return, just like the real ones, but with far less frequency.
These
are my treasures, as is the compost heap, and as I wander the garden I'll
occasionally reflect on the nostalgia of the inert items that make up my
garden. I'm sure you do the same.