There are times when something is bugging you and you just don’t know what it is. Occasionally it niggles away at you for days, a sense of something not done, or that needs fixing – except that the feeling is so vague that you can’t pinpoint it. You can even wake up, as I did this morning, feeling out of sorts and wishing you knew why.
I was far more pleased than you might think, because over the past couple of weeks I have watched wave after wave of fat, greedy grasshoppers crawl all over that bare earth; and I’d convinced myself that they were eating the seeds, as well as any emerging shoots, and that my efforts had been wasted. It could be that they were doing just that, but I have sprayed the area against insects twice in the last few days. Maybe there’s a connection, maybe not. I sowed the seed in the hope that I might walk away from here in a week’s time with fresh green sward in place against the newly painted façade. I had a clear picture of it in my mind – red against green – and the idea that I’d failed was getting to me. So, fingers crossed.
Yesterday I drove Mercy to town to put some gas in the tank, and while I was down there I took a bit of a farewell tour. I realised that I’d yet to take any photos of Merriman, other than from the air – and since I’m already booked in to give a talk on my adventures to the University of the Third Age (U3A) next spring I want to be able to show a British audience what a town of 118 people looks like. So here’s what you see as you drive into town along Hwy 20.
While I was down there I called in on a guy I’d met at one of the parties I’ve been to. I found Will doing what proprietors of small businesses always end up doing, sweeping the place out. He has a body shop tucked away in an alley off
I was wrong. It’s the rotted hull of an old sailing-boat, made of steel, with lead sealing the joints. That, my friend explained, was brought to the Sandhills by an English nobleman who bought a place just north and east off the highway, back in the 1890s. He had a lake on his land, fancied the idea of sailing on it, and had this craft, along with several others, shipped out. Will salvaged it from a blow-out. So what happened to my fellow-countryman? It seems he had a rather good racket going on, a sort of dude-ranch set-up where he fetched in Englishmen who wanted a taste of adventure and the cowboy life, put them to work on the spread and charged them for the privilege. It all went to pot when he took off to