Taranaki Daily News

An infinity of dropped peas

- Joe Bennett

Time was when supermarke­ts had freezers like sarcophagi. You had to lean over and rummage in their little arctics. But now sarcophagi have given way to cupboards with glass doors, the better to display the lurid packaging, the images of the ideal.

Peas were at eye level, presumably because they are popular. I hesitated a moment over baby peas, but couldn’t justify the extravagan­ce. Thus it was, dear reader, that I reached this morning for a packet of Wattie’s garden peas, unminted. It is always out of clear skies that bombs fall.

The packet flopped in my hand and suddenly peas were bouncing on the sleek synthetic floor of the supermarke­t. It was hard to absorb what was happening. Momentaril­y I stared at the pea cascade in a wild surmise, as stout Cortes is said to have stared at the Pacific Ocean, ‘‘silent upon a peak in Darien’’.

In youth I struggled with the concept of infinity. I accepted that something could be very big indeed, but not that it could be limitless.

I argued with a physics teacher who argued back.

He should have just opened a packet of peas. There are infinite peas in a packet. When dropped they go to every place there is. Plus 1.

The peas reminded me of the time a puppy of mine ripped open a bean bag. The only way to stop finding more polystyren­e beans was to move house.

The packet was split across the top. Why, I cannot say. I hadn’t caught the bag on anything. I hadn’t squeezed the bag. I was not guilty. But boy, did I look guilty. I was standing alone amid a sea of peas. They might as well have been blood spatter, the packet in my hand a dripping cleaver. A woman carrying a carton of milk took in my situation at a glance and passed by on the other side of the aisle. I did not blame her. We all shy from crime and disorder.

Human beings are reluctant to accept that stuff just happens. We seek meaning, cause and effect. It is both our strength and our weakness, the source of both science and religion. The rational, like Isaac Newton, discover such forces as gravity. The irrational, like myself, invent such entities as fate.

For my first thought was ‘‘why me?’’ Why had fate decreed that I out of all people should choose this packet out of all packets? Why was fate so cruel?

Statistica­lly of course I was being unreasonab­le. I was ignoring the thousands of times I had picked up a packet of peas and it had not split. But religious belief is always unreasonab­le. These were the peas of god.

The employee on the nearest checkout was about 17. ‘‘Excuse me,’’ I said. And then I was stumped for words.

‘‘I’ve spilt some peas,’’ would have implied guilt. ‘‘Some peas have spilt themselves,’’ seemed needlessly legalistic. And ‘‘I’ve got a pea problem’’ was open to appalling misinterpr­etation.

‘‘There are peas on the floor,’’ I said, which left something out but did the job. To underline the message I waved the packet. More peas fell and scattered.

The youth fetched a pan and brush on a stick and refused to let me help with the cleaning up. ‘‘It’s a break from the monotony,’’ he said.

I stayed to watch out of a sense of duty. I was amazed by how swiftly infinite peas can be removed from all places plus one, if you’ve got youth on your side and the right tools. And then I went home for a think.

Simple steps to fix the steps

Mr Langford recommends the nearby sand slide as a safe and easily negotiable (10 seconds down and 5 minutes to climb up) alternativ­e access to Back Beach.

If his isn’t a flippant comment then I am surprised why he does not also recommend the much smaller, nine metre sand slide that has now formed at the bottom of the track to access the steps?

During my visit with the Daily News reporter I said that the council needed to treat any steps/ staircase within the reach of waves as sacrificia­l. A very simple and cheap solution are two, five metre staircases anchored straight up and down on the approx 30 degree sand slope. This would connect with the permanent steps once they have been reinstalle­d.

In the national park, I had great success stabilisin­g eroding slopes with horizontal­lyanchored manuka bundles. Applied to the bottom part of the Back Beach track, above any wave action, this would create stable terraces where salvaged agapanthus clumps could be establishe­d.

Agapanthus is growing wild as storm-resistant colonies on the nearby slopes. It roots form dense soil stabilisin­g mats. Using such a low cost technique would further stabilise the sand on either side of the bottom staircases.

Let me also address Mr McAlpine’s nitpicking queries. No, I did not knock a lot of nails in. I just ran the bloody show from every angle. To my knowledge no park user came to grief on any structures we installed.

When I transferre­d from Tongariro National Park I was shocked to find almost all of the 300-odd kilometres of Egmont tracks in need of major upgrades and maintenanc­e.

Some were so badly eroded that one had earned the nickname of ‘‘The Sewer’’. I can still recall an elderly gentleman who would bring up a couple of boards on his visits to install two or three more steps on the Wilkies Pool track. We even demolished an old house in Stratford to get timber for track work.

Luckily, at the time, the government started a temporary employment scheme for unemployed youth that included tools and materials. With the enthusiast­ic help of Ms Gloria Campbell from the Stratford Labour Department office I hired up to 50 young people at a time and deployed them in 10 teams of five all around the park for working primarily on tracks.

For quite a number of years we flew in 10,000 feet of boards every six months to build steps and bridges.

The scheme was very successful. It prepared a lot of young folk for employment as well as upgrading the entire track system of Egmont National Park.

Incidental­ly, only three weeks ago I met the present Minister of Labour in New Plymouth to whom I recommende­d a similar scheme, applied nationwide as a proven way to make some challenged youths work-ready, and create and maintain much-needed eco tourism infrastruc­ture on the DOC estate.

Herb Spannagl

New Plymouth

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