Scottish Daily Mail

Gardening isn’t a chore, it’s a constant joy!

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I can’t understand why Marion McGilvary regards gardening as simply more housework, though outdoors (Mail). I agree with her that gardening isn’t a hobby; it’s a passion. What an awful idea, putting down paving and doing away with your garden.

My fear as I grow older is that I might end up having to move to an apartment and not be able to walk out into my garden whenever I want to. a garden is to be enjoyed, it’s therapeuti­c and relaxing — whether you’re sitting in it or pottering around.

new shoots appear day by day, tomatoes ripen — and oh! that heavenly smell. It’s like tomatoes used to smell and taste, not like the many awful ones offered for sale in supermarke­ts.

there’s also the joy of watching children work in a garden. I used to help run a school gardening club and they loved to plant seed, dig up worms and watch nature at work. Of course there’s work to do in a garden, but at least you can see the result of your work.

When you dust in the house, no one notices, and the dust just returns. Gardening is a pleasure, not a chore. and if you fill your garden with enough plants, weeds aren’t a problem as they have no room to grow. and yes, we do need lupins, Marion. they bring a lot more joy than a feather duster. Mrs CAROLE LEE,

Mytchett, Surrey.

Are all statins the same?

I Was one of many people advised by a doctor to take statins (Mail). I was prescribed a top-quality tablet and for several years experience­d no side-effects.

then I was informed that a similar, cheaper tablet was available, but I resisted any change as I felt fit and well on the brand of statin that I was taking. However, the doctor, on the advice of the Primary care trust, changed my original statin for the cheaper version.

Within a short time I began to experience side-effects. another version of a cheaper statin was then prescribed to me. I persisted throughout the two changes for several years but the side-effects intensifie­d. I realised that I had a choice to make: continue with a tablet that was impacting on my quality of life or stop, I chose the latter.

My symptoms were a regularly disturbed sleep pattern, fluid retention and cramps in both legs, severe backache, muscle cramps and tingling in my arms. My libido was also affected.

Having weaned myself off the tablets the symptoms described disappeare­d, and I am back to normal and again enjoying life.

From my experience I feel that, having been taken off a tablet that suited me for cheaper versions, which did not, a political decision based on financial cost and the drug companies’ profits came before my health and wellbeing.

JOHN LONSDALE, Robin Hood’s Bay, N. Yorks.

Stay-at-home statesman

So chris Deerin (Mail) is riding to the rescue of Labour.

If he was serious, he would seek selection as a candidate, build support around his brilliant ideas and — no doubt how he sees it, anyway — soon be carried shoulder-high down Downing street as the party triumphs.

But instead he makes a pointless gesture by joining the party and will do no more than continue to carp because Labour isn’t what he wants it to be — the way it was under tony Blair.

Yes, Labour has serious issues. Yes, they may lead to a split between the corbyn section and the old Blairites.

But Labour will sort it out without so-called friends like Mr Deerin. ALI SMITH, Glasgow.

Boris’s doubtful claim

OF THE many inaccuraci­es Boris Johnson has expressed in recent days, his claim that the Bundesverb­and der Deutschen industrie (BDI, Germany’s CBI) said ‘there will continue to be free trade, and access to the single market’ is the exact opposite of what the BDI actually said.

Its statement leaves no doubt that Brexit will cut Britain off from the single market and this will be a heavy blow to the UK economy.

the BDI says the EU is still the engine for growth and employment and urges the need for immediate negotiatio­ns to soften any negative effects for the economy.

the political chaos in Britain shows that the alliance between the nationalis­t mob and an irresponsi­ble conservati­ve elite has divided the country and threatens to put Britain’s system of parliament­ary representa­tion to the axe. Referendum­s are easy prey for political liars and mavericks. Dr THOMAS SCHUHBAUER, Hamburg.

Mirroring America

I’ve just returned from a holiday in Las vegas, which I last visited 14 years ago. these days, the streets are full of homeless beggars sleeping rough. Just like home.

talking to a policeman, patrolling in tandem with a paramedic, both on bicycles, I asked: ‘as this is the richest country in the world, why are so many people sleeping rough?’ He said they were all alcoholics or drug addicts who refuse to go on rehab programmes.

I pointed out that there were just as many drug addicts and alcoholics 14 years ago but they weren’t sleeping on the streets. His detailed answer was confirmed by several other americans I spoke to.

the country is in recession, which has hit the most vulnerable the hardest. the psychiatri­c hospital has been closed in favour of ‘care in the community’, which means psychiatri­c patients sleeping on the streets — just like Britain.

america’s manufactur­ing industry has mainly been transferre­d to Mexico or the Far east to take advantage of cheap labour. Just like Britain. national and local government have cut down on frontline staff but stuffed their offices with bureaucrat­s.

Like Britain, america has thrived and prospered on immigratio­n, but some immigrants now refuse to integrate and preach hate against the country that has taken them in. Just like Britain.

Both local and national government are so busy debating issues such as transgende­r use of public toilets that they haven’t time to deal with what matters to the majority of americans.

no matter how much americans find Donald trump offensive, they’re going to vote for him because he speaks out on issues that matter to the average american who could not care less about transgende­r use of public toilets. What they care about is being safe and secure in their own homes, their own towns and their own country. We have much the same problem in Britain.

STUART BOWER, Hove, Sussex.

Leaving Britain out

as the Queen opened the new session of the scottish parliament, she urged leaders to be calm, thoughtful and considerat­e of others, while Presiding Officer Ken Mackintosh spoke of healing the divisions of Yes/ no and Leave/Remain.

By contrast, nicola sturgeon spoke of working tirelessly ‘for the good of all of scotland’s people and in doing so play our part in a stronger europe and a better world’, with a deliberate and glaring omission of any mention of the UK or Great Britain.

such childish behaviour is not befitting of a First Minister and is an embarrassm­ent to us all.

A. WYLLIE, Largs, Ayrshire.

 ??  ?? Passion for plants: Carole Lee takes great pleasure from her garden
Passion for plants: Carole Lee takes great pleasure from her garden

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