Nelson Mail

Fighting the pull of dull mediocrity

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less posh part of Waikanae, a reminder of the old-fashioned gardens in our small towns.

There was just such a hedge at the end of my street when I was a child. It had a nice smell when you squashed its leaves, and you could convince yourself that you could hide inside it and no-one would ever find you. That hedge, and house, were bowled for a new road. At least it wasn’t neighbours nagging that caused its demise.

Certain kinds of neighbours are to be politely avoided. Neighbours who fuss over a boundary fence and bore you with tape measures. Neighbours who do renovation­s that deprive you of privacy. Neighbours who don’t like your trees and want them chopped down. Neighbours who have no appreciati­on of gardens and think everything that grows is a weed that needs to be poisoned.

Neighbours like the people who bought an old house near my grandmothe­r’s and promptly chopped down the huge apricot tree that was the bountifull­y yielding wonder of us all.

Something there is that doesn’t like anything taller than itself, and this hedge is tall. I have a relative who only has to see a tree before he gets out a chainsaw in his mind and dreams of flattening it. Is it a phallic thing? Is it just that some have nothing better to do than imagine imminent tragedies?

The protest by the Osborne family and their supporters that stopped the chainsaws last week is one I would have gladly joined. This is a case where the council needs to think again. Apparently the hedge is implicated in the cause of three vehicle accidents since 2000, but if I were the Osbornes I would like the opportunit­y to cross-examine. Three accidents, none of which hurt anyone, in 80 years doesn’t sound evil to me. Local mayor K. Gurunathan says he doesn’t want blood on his hands in case.

Definitely in case. I say widen the footpath if you’re that worried. Or examine all the houses in the street for potential hazards, such as small children who might run out a gate on to the road, or cats that sunbathe in the road, or dogs that poo on other people’s lawns, or party places that play The Nine Inch Nails at 3am.

The footpath was wide enough to accommodat­e a line of parked cars put there to block council workers getting set to attack the hedge last week, and a newspaper photograph showed traffic driving by, on the hedge side of the white line, without difficulty. The width of a car is plenty wide enough to walk on safely, so what’s the problem?

It is only a hedge. You’d think it was an idiot with a machine gun.

Some people have nothing better to do than imagine imminent tragedies.

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