If
I was ever in any doubt, we now have proof that Mothball wombat is an animal of
extreme intelligence and
initiative.
As
I mentioned last month she was a bit miffed at first that we built our
extension over her hole in the bank behind my study. (A bit miffed means she
chewed up the washing line. We now have a new washing line)
But
then she realised: not only does the extension mean she now has a verandah over
her hole, it also means that her hole no longer fills up with water whenever it
rains - a side effect of Mothball's lack of any engineering talent whatsoever.
It's
a myth that all wombats are great engineers. Either we have really dumb ones in
this end of the valley, or most wombats are pretty clueless about dirt and
building. Nearly every hole that's
been dug here in the last thirty years has collapsed. Most wombats actually live in old holes - 10, 20, 100, 1,000
years old maybe, dug by the very few wombats who can manage one of those lovely
long twisting tunnels that actually works.
They
do renovations pretty often though, digging out collapsed tunnels and enlarging
others. And they START dozens of holes: usually in the nice soft spot in the
middle of the lawn or the rose garden. They like dust baths too: Mothball is
particularly fond of the dust in my car shed, and has a lovely dust bath there
most nights, which means my car is an interesting shade of dust as the dirt
flies everywhere. Mothball is a very energetic bather.
Anyway,
back to Mothball's hole behind my study: now that her hole is protected from
the weather she's moved back into it.
She dug out about three wheelbarrowloads of dirt outside my study door
the first night and more after that. Mothball too is doing extensions.
It
sounds like a happy ending: we get a new bedroom and Mothball gets a veranda.
BUT:
Actually
our extensions aren't finished.
There's still another wall to go up - right in front of Mothball's hole
(well, we thought she wasn't using it any more!).
Either
we have to engineer a wombat hole extension in OUR extensions, or Mothball has
to move.
Human
versus wombat: will tell you who wins next month!
Books
Ooof...
have almost finished writing ‘Golden Valley’: won't be out till
next year though, so don't hold your breath. I THINK it works, but am always unsure about every book till
it comes out and people say what they think of it.
So
the most recent book is still ‘Ride the Wild Wind’, the stories
about the history of horse and humans; and it's still selling wheelbarrowsful
each week. (Not the same
wheelbarrows filled with the fresh dirt from Mothball’s hole.) And ‘Blood Moon’, of
course, the sequel to ‘In the Blood’, but I have no idea how that's
doing because I haven't got round to asking. (I only really find out how books have done when I get the
royalty statements six months later: even if a book's reprinted at once you
don't know if 1,000 were reprinted or a million. No, I take that back. If it
were a million I reckon the publishers would tell me. Or maybe not.
You can never tell with publishers... )
But
‘The White Ship’ will be out this month. The cover is stunning, and the book: well, I desperately
hope it works. It's one of those
books which has wriggled into my heart and the story has been yelling at me to
tell it for years. I hope
I’ve done it justice. I
think i have- it's one of those stories where I can't quite belive it was me
that wroite it, and if i start reading it again I can't stop. But we'll see.
The
White Ship is probably my 100th book (haven't really counted yet!). It came to me years ago, on an island
up on the Great Barrier Reef at sunset, that moment when the sea was dark and
the sky still red and on the horizon I was sure I could see sails, black
against the sky.
I
walked down to the beach every day after that, and each night it was there,
just at the moment of sunset: the silhouette of an ancient sailing ship, poised
between the day and the night.
So…
‘The White Ship’ was born.
It's really two stories that come together.
One is the story of a sea captain at the
time of the Saint Bartholomew Day’s massacre (when Catherine de Medici
had the French Protestants murdered) who fills his ship with children and vows to keep sailing until he finds
a world that is free from religious persecution.
The
second story is about a girl on an island off the coast of Australia who sees
the ship on the horizon each sunset, as I did. The White Ship has been sailing
for four hundred years, but is tugged off its endless course when a boy on
board hears the girl’s cries for help.
Phredde
And
‘Phredde and the Demon Duck of Doom’ has just been renamed
‘Phredde and the Leopardskin Librarian’, because Demon Duck of Doom
sounds too much like the last Phredde book – ‘Phredde and the
Temple of Gloom, or A Story to eat with a Mandarin’.
Phredde
and the Leopardskin Librarian’ will be out in October - there's always a
Phredde book about then, and I'm just beginning to plan the next one, which
will be the sixth. (But we're
running out of fruit, so any suggestions about what fruit to name the next one
after will be grateully appreciated. If your whole class can agree on a piece
of fruit and we choose it, I'll dedicate the book to you!)
Travel
This
month I'll be giving talks at Nowra and Ulladulla, including one that's open to everyone at the
Nowra Library (I think) on the night of Wednesday 15 May, and then to Charters
Towers at the end of the month.
And
also to the dentist again for yet another go at drilling a post into my jaw, to
replace the tooth the dentist accidentally knocked out a couple of years ago
and then.… but the least said about that the better. Just please cross your fingers for me
that this works, because I'd really love to be able to bite into an apple again
and give a talk without worrying
that my temporary front tooth is going to fall out. (It has on a few occasions
in the past two years; large reward offered to anyone who sees it and catches
it!)
Help!!!!!!!
Sometimes
when I answer letters the person I write to writes back again... and doesn't
put their address on the letter!
I
don't keep the letters I get or copies of the ones I answer: as I get many
thousands of letters a year our house would be full of paper after about six
months (we have to get rid of a large box of mail every week, sometimes a lot
more).
So
if I have written to you and you have written back and not received a reply, it
may be because you didn't put your address on the letter.
And
if Georgina Igoe is reading this: I don't have your address either!
Pen Friends
Haylee Tunks of 22 Cheswick Crescent,
Hobart, tasmania 7030 would like
any pen friends who like Jackie French books. She also loves wombats, (yay!) the bush and horseriding.
In the garden
The
tree dahlias are out! Great shaggy purple things, about 6 metres high. They'll
last till the first really big frost- another week or two of them would be
stunning!
The
cumquats are ripe- see below, and the limes just ripening, and we're picking
the first of the new season's avocadoes and about three ripe kiwi fruit a week- most won't ripen for another
month at least yet. the parrots are chewing into the pomegranates, but they
look so lovely that I'm as happy to have parrots on the tree as pomegranates,
and anyway it keeps them away from the lady Williamns and Sturmer Pippin and
French crab apples that won't ripen for another month or two.
Just
a few quinces left now and the medlars are fat and brown: I'll make jelly from
them after the first frost, when they start to soften. Also ripe feijoas, which
are great stewed with apple: look a bit dog turdish if you eat them fresh, but
they're okay with your eyes closed.
And
in the veg garden once again the
cauliflowers that we let the caterpillars eat are just as big as the
ones we dusted with diatomaceous earth to kill the caterpillars. As long as
they are REALLY well fed the poor things will just grow more leaves: but they
have to be REALLY well fed for this to work.
have
also been pulling out plant 'failures' ie new plants that I grew to see how
they did, and if they were actually as good as their advertising. (Too often
newly imported plants are sold without being trialed in enough different areas
in Australia to see how they do).
The
pink arum lilies are a good example: they're white here in winter, not pink at
all, and only pink for a short time before they die down in summer. Salvia
'weswue' that was supposed to be stunning had almost colourless petals that
soon died to a messy looking brown; the so called purple elderberry that was
supposed to have purple leaves doesn't even have a hint of purple, and the red kiwi fruit is dull old green.
Am hauling out the new viola that was supposed to bloom all year round too:
it's been in for three years and hasn't had a single flower yet!
Some
companies are much worse than others at this, but I have a horrible feeling
they'll sue me if I name them. But the lesson in all of this is: beware of all
advertising, even in the world of gardening. It may not be a con (though it can
be, like the supposedly genetically engineered mosquito repelling geranium:
wasn't a geranium, wasn't
genetically engineered and certainly did not keep mozzies out of the garden!)
But
often plants are trialed in only one spot, and if your garden is hotter or
colder or dryer or shadier, the plant may just not perform in the same way: the
colours may vary, it may not flower as much, or it may just lay down it's
little petals and say goodbye.