Thursday, August 10, 2006

Getting ready for company


Editor's Note: Commedienne Pam Stone writes her column for The Tryon Daily Bulletin twice each month from her office in the "Unabomber Shack" on her Gowensville farm.

There truly is nothing like having someone from out of town (or out of country, in this instance) to trip one into overdrive and actually finish all the half finished odd jobs around the house. It’s either self-pride or an elaborate masquerade in not wanting others to know what lumpish, heaving, layabouts we really are...

Paul has a rather important business contact who, with barely a week’s notice, is flying over from France to meet Paul in the flesh and iron out the details of a contract that would make Paul the exclusive representative of these enormous, blowsy, roses. The gentleman will inspect the nursery and stay as our guest in the house. Luckily, early in the summer, we replaced over half the fencing in the fields, put a new roof on our cottage and had it pressure-washed and stained. Funny, regardless of what one does to an A-Frame, it’s still essentially an IHOP. However, there are hanging pots of neon orange geraniums hanging by the front door and freshly painted, adorable green wooden shutters Paul made to frame the front windows.

But because this man is European and, more importantly, French, I’m looking around in utter despair. Forget a “Honey-do” list, it’s much more of a “Damn, Paul, we’ve got to haul this crap outta here,” list. The six foot pile of twisted boughs, limbs and twigs that once began as “oh, this’ll do nicely as kindling come winter” has been dragged away. I feel sorry in a way, I’m sure it had been a most appreciated rat condo. Then both fields have been freshly mown by Paul, who, despite drinking lots of water beforehand and donning a large straw hat, began to mow in odd, ‘crop circle’ shapes as the heat began to overtake him and cause him to loll listlessly mere inches above the PTO. If you don’t understand that reference, you live too close to the city and you probably think a bush hog is an exotic bikini wax....

I’m in charge of cleaning (ahem) and putting fresh jugs of flowers throughout the IHOP. I pulled out the Hoover and went to town, amazed that still, at the beginning of August, there seems to be Christmas needles in the one corner we put our tree. “How can this be?” I called to Paul who had just come in and stuck his entire head in the freezer. “How can there still be Christmas tree needles on the floor when I vacuum?”

He didn’t turn around and put a packet of frozen blueberries atop his head.

“The vacuum’s probably spitting them out behind and you’re not seeing it until the next time you clean. When was the last time you changed the bag?”

I merely gaped. “Tell me of these strange things you call bags?”

That’s one way to get out of cleaning!

3 Comments:

At 5:18 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Okay, apparently I do live too close to the city, what is PTO?? I do however know what a bush hog is!

 
At 9:36 AM, Blogger Katie Bonk said...

'Atta girl Pam! I've been known to "accidentally" drop a dish or 2 when cleaning before also...
You are soooooo missed from 10-noon Mon-Fri!!!!

 
At 7:59 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Judy:

Love reading your column. I was and still am a big fan of "Coach". Loved you and Dauber (sic). Would be interested in your critique of my TDB column, "Staying in Touch".

Stephen Hefner
"Staying in Touch"
Tryon Daily Bulletin

 

Post a Comment

<< Home