There weren’t that many wave-worn pebbles on the beach. The beach was mainly sand. But there were enough pebbles for Otis to walk the beach and fill his not-so-big cotton bag.
The not-so-big cotton bag was also, in fact, not-so-small. Once it had been filled with pebbles (each between one and two inches big) the bag was considerably heavy. He should have started at the far end of the beach and worked his way back towards the carpark. But now he had to lumber the heavy bag all the way along the beach to reach his car.
“Never mind,” he thought. “I’ll make my way back slowly, without overdoing it, punctuated by many rests!”
Some of the pebbles were rather beautiful, especially when wet. The variation in colour was amazing. Some were clearly marble, worn down and polished. Others were simply grey rock, but they were important because they provided a contrast to the lovelier stones. Not everything ordinary is out of place. In fact, without the ordinary pebbles the multi-coloured pebbles would possibly look gaudy.
By now, Otis must have carried the bag for about half of the return walk. He stopped to rest.
The tide was coming in, and the bag carrying was made more difficult because he had to walk higher up on the beach in the dry and loose sand. Walking and carrying was definitely more challenging. But he had all the time in the world!
It was when Otis was only a stone’s throw from the carpark that the not-so-big, not-so-small cotton bag tore asunder. All his collected pebbles fell out into the sand. He had no other container to put them in.
“Blow it!” he thought. “I shall have to collect the pebbles next time, and next time I shall start at the far end of the beach.”
Otis wasn’t the sharpest tool in the shed was he?
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If you’re a rake it doesn’t pay to be too sharp.
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If you’re a rake it doesn’t pay to be too sharp.
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Well either way a rake will not be in my shed. I don’t understand the art of raking leaves. I do everything else…but that. I personally like leaves…long may they lay.
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I see this as a story of appreciating beauty, and patience.
But, yeah, Otis could smarten up just a tad.
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If my name was Pole you could’ve said – Otis could smarten up just a tad, Pole.
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Oh, I shan’t touch that with a ten foot pole, Pole.
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Hmm, I used to collect pebbles!
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I shall greet you pebble collection with a stony silence.
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I like Otis, he reminds me of me!
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There’s probably a bit of Otis lurking in all of us…
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I wonder how Otis is going to keep his pebbles wet when he finally does get them? It would be a shame for them to dry out and look boring.
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It certainly is not boring to see Otis water his pebbles.
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I think I have a pretty good idea about the answer to my question now.
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It could also be a practical solution to watering pot plants.
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The last time I tried something like that my Mother did not approve. The female mind can be strangely impractical.
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Nature designs things to perfection.
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Exactly.
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Pockets.
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I never thought of that.
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Neither did he.
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Ha!
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There is a wonderful Haruki Murakami story where a wave swallows someone. The story prepared me for the worst, but it seems the inevitable has been postponed for some other day.
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Yes – the inevitable just won’t go away.
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On Walney we had a fellow who had filled the back of his big car with cobbles from the beach (presumably for his garden). He stopped my friend Bill and asked “Which road do I take for getting back to Barrow?” “Take whichever you want,” replied Bill, “You’ve taken every ….thing else!” (I’ve cleaned that up a bit. Bill was known to be a little coarse at times>)
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Ha ha! That is a very good story! Even without the the adjectives! My sister and her daughter were tourists in Devon – and they took their rental car down every little rural-cottage road they could find. At one stage my sister stopped the car and asked a man on the side of the road (still on an isolated Devon track) “Is this the road one stakes to get to Scotland?”
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I feel for Otis. So disappointing when that happens.
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Otis rocks.
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