Story of the Day
"Gone Fishin"
It
was my third year of trying to create the perfect lawn.
I was doing quite
well this summer. I'd reseeded the bare spots from winter's ravages.
I'd found just the right grass seed for our soil conditions. I'd created a
sprinkler system that worked well for both the lawn and for entertaining my four
children.
All was going well,
until one day I noticed several sprouting dandelions. No problem, I
thought. I hurried to the store and bought an herbicide. I figured
that by the next weekend, I'd have those yellow devils whipped.
But when I got
home, I took a closer look at the instructions. Reading the cautionary
statements made me shudder; we live in a rural area with a nearby pond and have
cats and dogs and children. I didn't want to inflict toxic chemicals on
any of them. So I made the mixture weaker than the directions called for.
Weak and ineffective: By the next weekend, those tough little dandelions didn't
have so much as a withered leaf.
I had promised my
four-year old daughter Kayla we'd go fishing on Saturday. Kayla loves to
fish and is very good at it. But when Saturday arrived, I found the little
yellow splotches in my lawn had multiplied.
I'll have to
deal with the dandelions before we go fishing, I told myself. The
lawn is less than half an acre; how long can it take?
With screwdriver
and garbage sack in hand, I attacked the pesky weeds.
"Pickin'
flowers, Daddy?" Kayla asked.
"Yes,
dear," I said, digging furiously at a tough root.
"I'll
help," she offered. "I'll give some to Mommy."
"Go ahead,
sweetie," I answered. "There's plenty."
An hour passed, and
the yellow splotches still remained.
"You said we's
going fishin' today," Kayla complained.
"Yes, I know,
dear," I said. "Just a little more flower picking, okay?"
"I'll get the
fish poles," Kayla announced.
I labored on,
prying up one stubborn root after another.
"I found some
worms under a rock, Daddy," Kayla piped up. "I put them in a
cup. Are you ready?"
"Almost,
honey."
More minutes
dragged by.
"You picked
'nough flowers, Daddy," Kayla insisted impatiently.
"Okay, honey,
just a few more," I promised. But I couldn't stop. The
compulsion to finish the job was overwhelming.
A few minutes
later, a tap came on my shoulder.
"Make a wish,
Daddy!" Kayla chirped.
As I turned, Kayla
took a big breath, puffed, and sent a thousand baby dandelion seeds into the
air.
I picked her up and
kissed her, and we headed for the fish pond.