"What are we doing this weekend?" asked daughter last week.
"Well seeing as your dad and I are standing in a hole in the garden with spades in our hands, it looks like we are making a pond this weekend.
"Would you like to help us?"
"No thanks. God you two are too sad to be true," replied daughter. "What do you want a pond for?"
I have always wanted a pond. They are interesting. Bit sad I know, but quite permissible once you are in your 40s.
It has taken me two years to persuade him indoors to get outdoors and dig my pond. I didn't plan a huge pond, just a little one in a corner under a tree, that I could sit beside when the weather was nice.
The sort of pond that has a couple of water lilies and a few fish and ofcourse tadpoles that turn into hundreds of tiny baby frogs. All I needed to find were some tadpoles.
"Would you like to come for a walk?" I asked daughter.
"Why?" she asked suspiciously.
"Just a walk to be healthy," I said. "I thought we could go to Queens Park. It's pretty at this time of year."
"If we are just going on a walk to be healthy and because it's pretty, why have you got a carrier bag containing a fishing net on a stick and a jam jar in your hand?" she asked with some sarcasm.
"Oh that," I said. "That's just in case there is anything interesting in the pond."
"Like tadpoles?" said daughter "Well, yes," I admitted sheepishly.
"You do realise I am fourteen now!" she said.
"I no longer go tadpole hunting, I am a teenager. I go shopping and to the cinema and bowling and things. I do not stand in muddy ponds trying to catch tadpoles.
"The only frogs I am interested in are the type who turn into princes when you kiss them. When are you going to grow up Mum?"
In the end I persuaded her to accompany me on the basis that she was allowed to walk away if she saw any of her friends, and so long as I took her shopping the next day.
Unfortunately there wasn't a tadpole in sight.
I couldn't persuade her to come with me to any other local ponds because she said they were private property and it would be stealing so I had to wait until a friend brought some tadpoles from his pond.
The next day I kept my promise and we went to the bank holiday market at the racecourse.
Daughter went to look at the shoe stalls but I was distracted by some huge ferns that I thought would look great around the edge of my pond. They were so cheap I bought four.
"How are you planning to get them home?" asked daughter when she saw me sweating under the weight of the large plants tucked awkwardly under my arms.
"Well I thought maybe you could help," I said.
"I am a teenager, I do not carry plants in public . . .
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