A Girl Needs Tools!

in #hive-1406353 years ago

The house was everything we'd been looking for when we unexpectedly moved in December 2020 - close to school and our business, it had a nice big garden and a bath, was private in a quiet street, 3 bedrooms with AC and 3 bathrooms and a pretty OK kitchen. It even had a fab front porch for outdoor living, and was a GREAT deal at USD $267 per month. The downside? The landlady asked us to leave the garden the way she had set it up, and to pay half of the fee for the gardener who would care for it the way she wanted. We agreed, and I justified that I NEVER wanted to put my energies into a rented garden again, and that I'd be FINE for the last 2 years until my daughter left for college in Europe and I could start over on my own land, as far from the darn school as I pleased.

And it sorta worked for 6 months. Except some weeks the gardener came 4 times a week, and then other times it was 6 weeks between visits and the grass out back was over a foot tall. It didn't bother me in one way, cos the only use we were giving the yard was to walk to our improvised clothes line, but it WAS an issue for snakes.

The real issue we had was he came unannounced. And during Work from Home it was sometimes horrendous with him buzzing and making a racket with the brush cutter while my daughter was trying to take a mid term physics exam in her bedroom, or I was on an important international zoom call. I asked him politely to please NOT come unannounced but to simply message us to say when he'd be coming, half a day in advance. He sulked, pouted and quit without notice. He didn't like having his "freedom" curtailed by a white woman. Sigh.

And so at the end of the rainy season I waited for the landlady to find a replacement. Only she couldn't find one at a fair price point, so she asked me to find one. Two months later we were still looking and the back garden was 2 feet high, starting to get snakes and giving me horrid hay fever from the grass seeds.

ENOUGH!!

The only thing keeping me from doing it myself was the landlady and the lack of tools. She'd sort of abdicated that one by asking me to find someone, and so I had a word to Santa. 😆 With the money we'd saved on about 4 months of no gardener, He was able to bring me some TOOLS!!

YAY!!

Cos a Girl Needs Tools!!

In tropical Thailand we don't namby-pamby about with silly little things like pruning shears - everything grows far too fast. So I needed a MACHETE, a LADDER for the banana trees, and a BRUSH CUTTER.

TOO FUNNY on Friday afternoon, when we went to the professional tool shop to buy them (since Santa had headed back to the North Pole and delegated to us 😆). I asked my ex-Thai husband to come with me - not cos I don't speak good Thai or cos I didn't know what I wanted, but because I KNOW after living here for 2 years that the price will be better if I bring a Thai man with me. Sigh.

I think 6 foot ladder too big - maybe you fall off with no man to help. 🤣
You need man to help you buy the petrol? Need special oil to mix. 🤣
Machete VERY heavy and dangerous for woman! You sure you want? 🤣
Need VERY STRONG MAN to use brush cutter! WE can find one for you! 🤣

I walked away with one new brush-cutter - USD $58.75 including the engine oil to mix with the petrol. One new 8 foot aluminium step ladder - USD $50. And one new hand-forged heavy-duty machete and sharpening stone - total USD $14.80.

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One of the AWESOME things about Thailand is you can buy heavy-duty knives and machetes at roadside stalls on major highways, just about everywhere. They're used for thwacking coconuts, cutting kindling, chopping down bunches of bananas, dismembering bod... OOPs. 🤣 There are no restrictions on owning them.

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Yup - that machete is pretty darn heavy and an AWESOME workout for the arms and shoulders. Yes, I'm pretty ambidextrous with it too! Gives a satisfying thwack.

The ladder is much needed for trimming trees away from the open roof area - it attracts snakes who go up there for the bats and the little squirrels who hang out there in the heat. And for trimming banana trees, which the garden has many. And for tidying up the frangipani trees, cutting out the thick dead palm fronds and trimming snarly tough vines which creep over the fence from the canal next to our house at an alarming rate.

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Tropical gardening is not for sissies.

Notice the nice new gum boots I bought? Just in case of aggressive snakes in the long grass.

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The landlady wants the back yard left as only grass. 😭 But damn it - I have some papaya trees, mulberry trees and an avocado that will "accidentally" volunteer themselves to leave their pots. And I will be making a small herb garden over the grave of our Mr Gin, not far from the back door. ALL Thai people love to eat and cook, and she'll probably appreciate the little plot of lemongrass, chili, basil, garlic, coriander & Chinese celery.

Plus she will save money on the gardener, and so will I.

Feeling delightfully sore in my 58 year old muscles after 4 hours slashing and chopping this afternoon. Happy to be staying fit in the garden 😆 and grateful for my new tools. That Santa is a pretty cool dude, no??

BlissednBlessed




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That's right my friend!🤗🤗👍🏻 Good tools. I have my sets too, one never knows when one might need them!😊👍🏻😃

It's such a nice meditation to sharpen the machete! Leaves me feeling wickedly dangerous... in a good way.

And yes, good tools are amazing, but also expensive. So it needs careful thought when you invest. I love that the machete in particular is so versatile.

Thanks for stopping by!

Sharpening bladed tools is one of my favorite things to do. The trance, the understanding, it's just good.

Once my boss came into my work area while I was sharpening my knife. I carry a fixed blade knife with about a 4 inch blade. I think that's just under 10cm. I use my knife nearly daily between the garden, the side gig, and all the dismembering. Y'know, it gets miles put on it. So my urbanite office worker boss walks in and his eyes bug out like this 👀!

"Nate, brother, do you think it's safe to be sharpening a dagger at work???"
"It's not a dagger man, it's my knife, and it's safer to sharpen it than to leave it dull!"

$15 is a heck of a deal for that machete and stone. Good on you getting out and getting work done!

ooooh - the profile pic tells a million stories. Nice to see you here Nate, under a non-steem name. 😊 Following you here. 😊 And yes, heck of a deal. I studied martial arts for a few years from a weapons master and one of the first things we learned was the meditation and discipline of sharpening blades and tools. It never fails to impress men in my life that that I KNOW what to do with a sharpening stone. 🤣 The dismembering tends to dull the blade rather quickly.... 🤣

Lol I do still use the account as a main financial and personal blog, but this one is for farm and agriculture things. Keeps me more organized, I just have to remember not to post excessively often from both accounts. Infrequent posts of higher quality are better than constant dumb updates, ramblings, and ideas like I was once prone to making.

hehehe look at you going bush madame :DDDD Looking sharp!

nothing better slashing the weeds and making everything drie meter korter hehehe..

4 hours? respect!

Not bad for a lady of 58 😆 fit & strong & getting all my stress out - is very therapeutic, actually! Good for the soul. Totally needed a long, hot bath afterwards, though. 😆

With magnesium!

LOL this is where I use up all the failed magnesium bath bombs from our trials and tests.... LOL. Won't have to buy magnesium now for eons. LOL


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Hopefully no snakes were found in the process.

Only two... just stepped back and gave them room to escape. 🐍 😆

Omg woman... YOU ARE HANDLING TOOLS!!! You should be inside cooking and knitting beanies. What next - don't tell me you drive a car or handle your own finances? The outrage.

Grass. Sigh. Love your sneaky plans to leave a bit of proper garden behind after all. Hopefully she'll be converted.

Jamie always loved the machetes in Asian shops. Unfortunately we couldn't bring them home on the plane.

So now you know why I have been absent from the garden Hive. My pot stories feel so LAME after the Mae Rim magical Thai garden.

Screw it... I'm gonna leave my footprint on this garden, and enjoy what time I have there and make sure not to invest too heavily money-wise. Which means lots of good propagation and seed raising posts. Plus I'm raising things in pots for my OWN PLACE in the next 2 years. Which feels lovely.

Worst part? Taking my ex DID save me a bomb. LOL. 🤣

Haha, well, men can be useful, and sometimes you have to roll your eyes and play their little games. Resistance is tiring at our age 🤣

I'm glad you can't stay away from the garden .. it never hurts the world to leave a plant or two behind.

It has actually been PAINFUL to sit in a lovely Thai garden (albeit with only boring GRASS at the back) and the condition is to only let someone else work on & in it. It has frustrated me beyond measure.

Oh I love me a nice machete. I got a wonderful Japanese saw from a friend a few years back and it is just the best for pruning, it's like cutting bread. I love having physical days, I ache but I feel so good after as well. xxxx

Japanese tools are next level, especially the knives! I think it's a martial arts Samurai hangover. I love the image of pruning being like cutting bread - feels so EASY. And yes, the ache afterwards is tinged with wonderful levels of satisfaction. Best workout ever!

Machetes are awesome!

Oh they are!! Such a POWERFUL feeling to thwack your way thorugh a coconut, a banana tree on its last legs of some waist high foliage that's defeating the brush cutter. Thanks for swinging by to comment!

I love how much the women on this thread are loving on the machete! It's gold.

I'm suddenly having flashbacks to when I lived on Bali and my (tiny) pembantu (house helper) laughed at me as I was trying to open a coconut to drink. She shook her head, took the huge knife off me and then proceeded to (with embarrassing efficiency) easily open my coconut for me in about 20 seconds or less. It was hilarious. And, awesome.

Haha... yes, all my strong Hive lady friends seem to be at the seriously capable end of town with a machete. Speaks volumes! 😆 These are women you want in your corner!!

Yes, I think one of my equally tiny Thai housemaids taught me how to decapitate a coconut... took me most of my first decade here to stop freaking out that I was gonna cut my hand off in the process. 🤣

🤣😍 !LUV it! Here's to strong women!


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You seem just about ready to kill some man/vendors with that machete \o\

LOL.. yeah... let's just say, "I'm ready". 😆

This cracked me up! I loved reading it. Thanks for the giggle Marike! You did well dealing with the snakes! Even as an Australian who is used to snakes I kinda cringed at the thought of having to deal with snakes in a different country!

All my Aussie brown snake training has stood me in good stead....! It's nice to be appreciated for a little humour - it's a weird thing that doesn't translate well into Thai.

Thanks for the Follow!

🐍 Hmmm, yes. I think humour is very cultural relevant. You have to speak a reasonable amount of a language and get the culture enough to know what's "mildly shocking" (to make it funny), not too shocking (as to upset people) but use things in the other person's life experience so they have some idea of what the heck you're talking about 🤣 With more than a decade over there (how long?) and fluent (?) Thai are you able to tell jokes that locals with little to no English understand Marike?

Oh, BTW, are you originally Dutch? Or with a Dutch family background??

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Thank you so much @rezoanulvibes - I have a DIY project starting this week that I'm photographing to post in your community! Stay tuned. 😊

Wow! You could have a part-time job as gardener ir landscaper! Nice new tools for the garden!👍🙀😻

Pretty important skills for a woman to have, no? After Ploi heads off to college, I'm looking to buy land and start my own Garden of Eden. And a girl's gonna need some tools for that! 😊

That machete place is the kind of place I would probably spend way too much money at... 😀

Oh my, I admire your strength, this is the first time that I have seen a woman doing brush cutting. As for me, I was not able to buy some gas for my brush cutter that I will be using tomorrow. Greetings from the Philippines!

Thanks for stopping by, @afterglow - actually it's super common to see women doing heavy field work here in the rice fields, with scythes and machetes - but they're usually too poor to afford a brush cutter. But heck, women have BABIES and are way stringer than most men!! LOL.

Hope you got some gas for your brush cutter.

actually it's super common to see women doing heavy fieldwork here in the rice fields

It is the exact opposite here in our country, only men can be seen working on the rice fields. Women can only be seen around the house doing some house chores and taking care of their flowering plants.