The Waiting Game

This time of year can be agonising. Out in the garden, the tomatoes, zucchini, green beans, cucumbers and carrots are all producing beautifullyโ€”thereโ€™s more food than we know what to do with.

But.

The sweet corn, melons, pears and apples are still sitting there, ever so slowly maturing and ripening. I try not to check them every dayโ€”I try to be patient. If I tested one apple on our tiny trees every day, there would be none left by the time they were actually ripe. But itโ€™s hard to be patient while awaiting such seasonal treats. And the worst thing is to NOT check and go out a few days later to find the possums have eaten them all, because they ripened while you werenโ€™t looking.

So I tap that watermelonโ€”does it sound hollow? I check its undersideโ€”itโ€™s bright yellow, but I know that no matter what the books say, it doesnโ€™t signal ripeness; itโ€™s been yellow underneath since the fruit was the size of my fist. I peel back the husks on an ear of corn to peek at the kernelsโ€”are they plump yet? I bite into an apple, hoping for sweet, not astringent.

After decades of gardening, Iโ€™m still impatient for the fleeting pleasures of fresh sweet corn and melons, apple pie and pear tarts. I reckon thatโ€™s a good signโ€”I still get a thrill from the chase, the anticipation.

And one of these days soon โ€ฆ there will be watermelon on the table.


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