Toads do not mind potholes
‘I don’t know what my daughter will think,’ she says. I am shivering
in the fish queue again. For just one hour, one day a week, you can buy fresh
fish. Such a treat for us being so far from the coast. I am second from the
back. The queue stays about the same size. Too long and I would not want to
wait that time, too short and it would not catch your eye. The fishmonger is an
expert at regulating the line of people, chatting for a long time or a short
time to create an interest. ‘Where is your daughter?’ I ask.
“She is in Australia, but is coming home tomorrow, what on
earth will think of our weather?”
The only thing that takes up as much time as weather in our conversation
is potholes. But I am at the front now paying my money and I have run out of
time.
We seem to have also run out of time and money for our food
recycling bins. My sister in Yorkshire has a little food bin that she puts out
for regular Council collection. I am trying to remember what we did with waste
food when I was young. The truth is that I do not remember any waste food left
on our plates. We only ate at our meals three times a day and we ate everything
on our plates. The only thing I did not eat was rice pudding. However, it was
always served out to me and I sat there with it in front of me. Nothing else
was offered to me and my father ate it in the end.
Soon we will have our own food waste bins and the Council
will be able collect it and convert it into fertilizer or perhaps gas for
heating.
There is no waste here from the bird food we put out. The
small birds eat the variety of seeds and any they do not like are tossed to the
ground. The robin and wren along with the hedge sparrows are waiting there to devour
any discarded food. One of the birds we are seeing a lot of is the siskin. We
have quite a flock. At first you would think that it is just any old little
brown bird, but when I look closely especially through binoculars, I can see
that it is surprisingly streaked bright yellow almost like a canary.
There is a council notice of road closure here. It is not
closed for pothole repair it is closed so that toads can cross safely. Toads do
not worry about potholes, they even like them if they are full of water for splashing
about.
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