There is a spring onion on the path to the church.
I’m not sure how it got there but maybe it’s a sign of spring.
I have visions of it having fallen from someone’s rustic basket as they made their way back from the community shop.
Maybe it made a break for freedom in a sort of stop-motion animation in the style of The Herbs, the children’s television programme by Michael Bond and starring Parsley the Lion, Dill the Dog, the rather fat feathery owl called Sage and those cheeky little Chives belonging to Mr and Mrs Onion, along with a bunch of other herbal characters.

In this episode, the Chives catch a cold.
And to think as children we were captivated by this show. Still, it helped me know my onions (and herbs) and I can still sing the song pertaining to each character.
I’m Dill the Dog, I’m a dog called Dill…though my tail I’d love to get, I’ve never caught it yet!
I’m Bayleaf, I’m the gardener, I work from early dawn, you’ll find me sweeping up the leaves and tidying the lawn…
I’m Constable Knapweed, and I keep law and order. I watch to see that all is well along the garden border.
The spring onion on the path to the church is silent though, probably embarrassed at being named after a season which can’t make up its mind if it’s coming or going.
It was fine earlier this week but now it looks like we’re back to winter again.
I fully expect to find winter greens waltzing along the path the next time I go that way.
See you later in the week.
Love, Maddie x
* The world is just a great big onion / And hate and fear are the spices that make you cry, oh, baby / And the only way to get rid of this great big onion / Is to plant love seeds until it dies, uh huh (woo!)






