Thursday, April 29, 2010

Yippeeee !



Finally ! Finally we have found a chap to clear away all the rubble, waste, plastic etc. and clean up the entire garden !

On Saturday Smita and I went to Aanandi. I immediately noticed that the angles and wire-mesh on the wall adjoining the PMC nallah, were missing ! Also, there were small gaps created in the wall ! ‘Now what ?’ I wearily thought and called Arunkaka and got to know from him that previously his workers had affixed the angles simply by nailing them into the wall, assuming that this was the side wall and nobody would do anything (!), but somebody stole it ! So they had made those gaps in the wall to cement in the angles this time around ! Each time we go there, some new incident awaits us ! Since there was not much we could do about this issue, we just went about our work after this phone call. We called one construction supplier chap to come and survey the site and give us an estimate regarding time and cost for cleaning work. We waited and we waited and we waited and he didn’t arrive at all nor did he receive our calls ! So we just plucked as many leaves of the fallen mango tree as possible and then left, dejected. On Sunday Smita and I were joined by Ashish but none of us was motivated to work since we were worried that we weren’t getting anybody to clean up and unless that work is done, digging the lang, airing it and planting cannot begin…and monsoon will soon begin. So we simply watered the plants. We noticed that the gaps in the wall now contained the angles which were cemented in.

Then we went to the terrace. Going to the terrace is a mini-adventure. On the first floor, there is a small opening in the ceiling where there is a hatch. When you open it, there is a narrow landing (where only one person can stand at a time) with a door that is locked. You place a ladder (we have a bamboo-one) to the hatch and climb up. When your head touches the hatch, you push it open. It gets fixed to hooks in the side-walls. Then you climb on the landing and balancing yourself you open the lock and enter the terrace ! So, this is how we went to the terrace. :) We removed some kadipatta seeds (I have planted them in a pot at home…let’s see…) and generally looked around. There is a carpet of leaves and we discussed that either we should remove them and use them for compost or we could lay thick plastic sheets under them and plant vegetables in them…vegetables grow very well in a pile of dead leaves…especially chillies, tomatoes, brinjals. Let’s see.

Then as we came down and sat in the garden, I said, “It is really most frustrating not to find somebody to do the cleaning work. We are not equipped to do it and so we are searching for somebody. We will pay them. Yet nobody responds to our calls ! Why ?” Suddenly Smita and Ashish remembered that for a recent landscaping assignment they had enquired with this chap who is a little more expensive than others, but seems quite sorted. So we called him and to our surprise, he arrived within a short while. This chap means business. He looked around, we discussed in detail and then gave us an estimate of time and cost (which we found to be on the higher side). We said we would let him know by end of the day so that if we gave the green signal, he could begin work immediately on Monday. After he left, we made a cost-estimate and found that he was quoting only slightly higher.

Then I called and discussed the whole thing with Mama. He cautioned us about how these people find ways to con people and asked us to make sure that he didn’t con us. I assured Mama that this work had to be done and we would take care that all of it got done without us being conned. Also, we would negotiate the price with him.

Then we called him again, negotiated the price and settled at a figure acceptable to both. We met him in the evening to make a semi-formal document that contained a checklist of the tasks we agreed upon and the price and mode of payment.

So now there will two sets of workers working at Aanandi – one set of Arunkaka’s working for the plumbing etc. and wire mesh work and one set commissioned by us ! It is going to be one big circus !

Then Smita, Ashish and I made a time-table of people who would supervise the work. Smita, Ashish, Pradeep, Amruta, Saurabh and I will take turns at visiting the site and give feedback to others.

There is this huge miscommunication about the stolen angles and wire mesh. When Pradeep had gone to Aanandi to supervise on Wednesday morning, TU (=tenant uncle) told him that only one angle was stolen and he noticed it and made the workers remove the remaining angles and wire mesh and keep it inside and then cement them in the wall to prevent theft. But what Arunkaka had told me on Saturday was that all of it got stolen and they had to replace the entire thing. This morning when I called Yuvraj, the in-charge of Arunkaka’s workers, he had something else to report ! He said that the first time, 2-3 angles and a little wire mesh was stolen. Then the second time (when they were cemented in) somebody cut off and stole one angle !! There is too much confusion. On Saturday Pradeep and I have decided to meet Yuvraj, Arunkaka and TU all at the same time and get it sorted. I want to launch a police complaint. It is too much if angles get stolen each time we put them up !

This morning when I called Yuvraj, I also warned him to take away all the rubbish he’s throwing in the garden from his work…the other day he simply threw broken window glasses into a very well-cleaned patch. I also asked him upto where they are going to put up the wire mesh and he replied, only up to the Chikoo tree ! I said, that will not do ! The wire mesh should be put up along the entire wall adjoining the nallah and also near the triangular patch behind the tall coconut tree. I said I’ll talk to Arunkaka and he said he’ll talk with his immediate supervisor and then we can talk with Arunkaka. So there’s that issue to sort out as well.

Now, on to a more pleasant topic – the cleaning work :) - the work began on Monday and will end on Saturday. Since Monday, turn-by-turn, we are going to Aanandi and coming back very satisfied. He is working in an extremely systematic and organised manner. He is very thorough. My turn was on Monday morning and directly on Saturday morning and evening. So when I reach there on Saturday, I expect to be very pleasantly surprised :) I shall write a detailed post of the stages of work and also upload photos of each stage after the whole work is complete.

So, Yipppeeeeeeeeee :)

Monday, April 19, 2010

Testing times…and a looming deadline…


It seems that we are going to be tested right and proper before we can see Aanandi garden restored.

On Saturday I was alone at Aanandi. As soon as I reached, I rushed to the back garden to have a look at the fallen mango tree. It was so sad to look at it. It was infected by termites through and through and finally fell. The leaves had wilted and the huge tree is lying diagonally across the drumstick patch. While falling, it took with itself part of the drumstick tree, the entire closed hibiscus and a little zaadu plant. Every couple of days there seems to be a new challenge. I’m not at all tired, but it forces us to review and reset our timeline and that exasperates me a little. I watered the plants a bit, looked around a bit and left. Also we have gotten the contact number of some new chap to take away the rubble. I tried calling him several times for as long as I was at Aanandi, but he was unavailable.

On Sunday Amruta and I reached early but the keys were with Smita. So we just took a round in the garden and then started to water the plants. I had a specific agenda…to water the plants, to call the rubble-chap and get and estimate and fix up the day he will work in the garden, to remove the bananas, some limes if ready and a jackfruit if ready. While we were at the pomegranate plant watering it (which, by the way has about 25-30 pomegranates now), we saw a mongoose in the garden ! It was wandering about quite languidly and went past us at a very close distance. We were thrilled to see it at such close quarters. It was quite chubby, furry with a thick furry tail. The coat was shiny and dotted brown…and the eyes ! The eyes were like glass beads, with lights being shone through them. As it passed us it looked straight at us, or so I’d like to believe :) They say it’s a good omen to see a mongoose. It is also supposed to be good for a garden to have a mongoose present…I mean ecologically.

Just a little later Smita arrived. Then we took the chopper and two other sharp implements and decided to chop off as many branches of the fallen tree as possible, so that when the workers came to take it away, it would be easier for them. The task was tougher than it seemed :) After just half an hour of chopping, my hands and arms were quite heavy and aching a lot. So we stopped that. Then we found two wooden stools that we kept one on top of the other under the banana plant (tree?). Then Smita climbed up and with the chopper she removed the bananas. We were so thrilled…it’s a small bunch, but had about thirty bananas. Then we marched to the lime tree and saw that some limes were ready to be removed. So the stool was put to use once again and we got eight limes. There were two jackfruits at about six feet from the ground. On Saturday I noticed that one was missing. I’m guessing TU (tenant-uncle) removed it and took it. I only hope he didn’t remove it before it ripened. More importantly I hope he doesn’t remove the remaining one before it ripens and lets us have this one !

We also discussed that we have got to get the clean-up job done before the month ends, in any case, since after that we have to prepare the ground and plant before the first rain ! On Sunday too we tried calling the rubble-chap but he was unavailable ! Now Pradeep or Smita will go some time mid-week to his shop nearby and take him there are get an estimate and set a date. Also, in this week Smita and I will initiate procedure for getting the Ashok trees cut.

On Sunday I had gone to Aai’s place and she said to me, “I had gone to Aanandi in the last week and took a round in the garden. I can’t see what motivates you to go and work there…it is in such bad shape ! I was so frustrated to see it.” I replied, “Aai, three things. Firstly, we have done quite a bit of work and arrived at this stage. If you find this frustrating, imagine where we started from ! Secondly, we don’t see what you saw the other day. We see the picture that we have in our minds…about how Aanandi garden is going to be once we are through with it. That is how we can keep working there; And thirdly, we do have our low points, but almost immediately we get up and get going…because we tell ourselves, we have work to do and can’t afford to lose time over such thoughts :)”

In our theatre group we say, if there is an electricity failure in the rehearsal hall one day before the show (most crucial day), the show’s going to be great :) So, bring on the challenges…we’re ready…the garden’s going to turn out great ! :)


Monday, April 12, 2010

A long overdue update and some photos


On Saturday 3rd April, each of the Aanandis except me had some other commitments to attend to. So I was by myself in the garden. At first I decided to take a quick round and to my dismay I found that the workers coming to re-do the plumbing had also cleaned up the Ashok passage and dumped all the dried leaves at the foot of the Prajakta plant. The poor Prajakta plant is already quite scrawny and ill. A couple of weekends ago, Smita had cleared up the ground under it and watered it. The last weekend we noticed some new healthy leaves and this Saturday, the tree was buried up to 4 feet in dried leaves ! I was so angry ! Immediately I decided enough was enough and deicded to burn them all up. There was other piles of dried leaves made by Smita in the adjoining patch to put in a compost pit. But I had no patience for that any longer. I simply made a fire in the usual place and then for the next hour and half I just kept on putting dried leaves into the fire, basket by basket. Midway through the exercise I took pictures of the leaf-pile and the fire...just for the record. In the end I managed to clear up the ground under the Prajakta tree again...and my legs and back were protesting loudly :)

On Sunday the 4th, Saurabh, Ashish, Smita, Amruta, Prajakta and I were in the garden. There were some more saplings to remove (The Indian Cork tree saplings this time...and they seem endless, isn't it ?). So the boys did that. So did the girls except me. I watered the plants...ALL of them...in the front garden, the side, the back...each and every one. All of us also took a round and discovered many more guavas on the guava tree :)

On Saturday 10th and Sunday 11th, none of us could go to Aanandi for various commitments. On Sunday evening, one of the workers called and reported that the Mango tree had fallen down :( I was in a workshop, teaching, and couldn't leave. So I asked Ashish to go and find out. I was very upset thinking it was the big mango tree from which we took some raw mangoes two weeks ago. I kept wishing it was the smaller one already infected by termites. A little while later Ashish reported, much to my relief, that it was the smaller tree. Manavendra had come down to Pune on Sunday and he too went and had a look. I have rehearsals today and a show tomorrow. So I can go and see for myself on Wednesday. And now we have to assess what to do about this.

We still have had no luck with the truck-to-take-away-the-rubble people...but we have heard of another source and we shall attempt to get the on the forthcoming Saturday.

Now here are some pictures:

Dried leaves under Prajakta



Burning dried leaves



Rahul and Amruta taking the saplings to the Garden Department of PMC...on a motorcycle !




Madhumalati



Madhumalati creeper in full bloom



Ripe Ramphal



Raw mangoes



And the one I took home :)



Drumsticks



Closed hibiscus



Limes



Guava



Exora



Bananas