Garden Vigilantes

I don't like generalizations, but here goes: Gardeners are nurturers. Tending and turning the soil, nursing fledgling plants through disease and drought, they have an abiding respect for life.

Yet, at every garden gathering, the topic turns to pests and how to dispense with them. It starts with slugs, then moves up the food chain.

One woman shared her foolproof method for catching voles: bait a mousetrap with peanut butter and place the trap near their hole. Cover the trap with an overturned flowerpot to simulate the vole's dark den. The peanut butter lures these late-night snackers faster than a pack of Hostess Twinkies draws my husband off the sofa during a football game. Then comes the sound of success: smack, followed by a few helpless heaving thumps against the sealed death chamber. "Does this work on chipmunks?" asks a fellow gardener. "Well, it doesn't kill them, but we have a pond nearby and guess what?" "What?" we ask in unison. "Chipmunks can't swim." A churlish grin. Heads nod in approval.

On to bigger game. "A garden hose attached to your car exhaust pipe shoved into a raccoon's den works nicely," one woman says. She sat in her car listening to All Things Considered as she asphyxiated a whole family who had devoured her sweet corn.

One gardener asks, "Why didn't you just use a HavahartTM trap and relocate them?" Turns out game, at risk for carrying rabies, cannot be transported, so she was forced to dispense with these raccoons while listening to the news. Everyone pats her on the back as we marvel at her ingenuity, her effective use of time, and her ability to multitask. The group casts a collective glance of disdain at the gardener who questioned this brilliant tactical maneuver.

Another woman offers a flambé forget-me-not: add two parts lighter fluid to one part gasoline in a soda can. Stuff a rag into the opening, light, lob and take cover. "Wait," says a retired firefighter, "you don't need both lighter fluid and gasoline. One would be enough." "But the lighter fluid makes a really big bang," she says.

Finally, the biggest game of all: deer. "There's something that works every time," one man says. We move closer to him. He lifts his hand in the air, makes the shape of a gun, takes aim, and his air gun kicks back from the force of the shot. He brings his smoking weapon to his mouth and blows.

Among gardeners, there's a begrudging admiration for every critter's determination. But, at the other end of the weapon of their choice, there's an equally determined gardener. So we begin again, to devise new ways to nurture the life we love and murder what we don't.

Free Weights

I’m off to the gym. Off to build bone density as I wait for the free weights and the lat pull machine to free up. Spandex is as far as the eye can see as I work my biceps, my triceps, and my wallet with full flexion.

I’m ashamed to admit that I’ve been doing this on and off, mostly on, for the past thirty years. Wherever I’ve lived, I pay the monthly fees, I drive to the gym (Hey, shouldn’t I jog to the gym?), and I drive back home — three times a week.

I have forked over millions in monthly fees. Plus, I've paid for all those classes: Jazzercise, aerobics, step, Pilates, yoga, spinning, kickboxing, core, high-intensity interval training, toning, strengthening with bands, ThighMaster, you name it.

Well before I even get inside the gym, it gets crazy. It starts in the parking lot with everyone vying for a spot closest to the gym's front door. God forbid we should have to walk too far for exercise. Things get even stranger inside, what with the grunts and groans.

I have always known there was something terribly wrong with all this.

Maybe it’s because of my grandmother.

Lack of bone density never occupied a nanosecond of her consciousness. Not because she was ignorant of it. She trained as a nurse at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and knew plenty about good health. But then she didn’t spend hours on the Internet; she didn’t have an in-box clogged with e-mails; she didn’t have iPhone chats; and she didn’t sit for long periods in a car or on a plane.

No, she worked a 19-hour day nearly all of her 91 years. She was on her feet all day. She grew enough, cooked enough, sewed enough, and cleaned enough to keep a family of eight thriving.

She also worked in the family business — a gas station on the edge of the prairie on Highway 60 in Mountain Lake, Minnesota. When Grandpa came home from work to eat the meal she cooked and laid out for him, she (wo)manned the pumps.

And while I’m at it, she didn’t have to learn to live in the moment either. When the tomatoes were ripe, she picked them. If she had more tomatoes than eight mouths could eat, she canned them. When the sun was out, she hung laundry on the line. You get the idea?

But back to that weight room.

Sometime in her early eighties, I noticed my grandmother’s heavy cast iron skillets were no longer on the lower kitchen shelf. As I struggled to put them away to their new higher location, I asked her about this move. She told me she had purposely moved them higher to gain strength.

It took awhile for my addled brain to comprehend what she had just said.

Geez, that’s a muscle-building maneuver with each meal; a home gym with every home-cooked meal.

Twenty-five years later, the inventiveness of this move makes me marvel at her ingenuity; it makes me mindful of the over-engineered, overrated, and overpriced workouts I’ve subjected myself to.

And don’t even get me started on how she cross-trained her brain.

Trust me, there wasn’t an electronic device in sight.