Keeping a large garden with its many fruit trees, vegetable patches and flower beds required a great deal of pottering so it was as well that there were many hands to make light work. Grandpa also kept bees and so of course there was plenty of honey to spread on one’s bread. Being the kind of inventive and practical man that he was Gramps decided that he needed to sink a borehole to keep his property watered. Good idea – but was there any subterranean water on the plot? There was only one inexpensive way to find out – use a divining stick. And this is where Granny had a super power. She took the forked stick and walked all around the acre until she was brought almost to her knees with the force with which the stick told her that here there be water! And sure enough when they dug down an abundant supply was to be found and this was used to do all the watering of the vast garden.
Big Brother found some very old photographs, scanned them and emailed them to me. I mentioned the dog – Atom and here he is with my brother aged about 6 or 7.

The house in the background – Big Brother standing in the area where the swing (out of sight) hung from the tall denne tree. – Note the cars of the day. It was a long driveway and there were a few visitors on this day.
The kitchen was the hub of the house and those who popped in for a chat and a cuppa simply sat at the table and were entertained right there. Granny always said, No matter where I serve my guests, it seems they like my kitchen best!
But the bathroom is what brings back the most vivid memories. You got to it through a door from the kitchen. It was narrow and had a ball and claw tub with a cold tap and a geyser in which we burend denne balls. A thin copper pipe allowed the water to flow, piping hot into the tub. When we were small all three of us older kids we bathed together and then taken out onto a wooden board, toweled dry and dusted with Johnson’s Baby Powder. The smoky smell of pine and powder will forever be in my nostrils.
The sun did shine a great deal at Quintella but I also remember the icy winter days when a huge fire would be lit in the enormous open hearth in the lounge which was furnished with huge comfy chairs. The pets – of which there were many – 7 cats at one stage and two or three dogs – would flop down on the mat and we the kids would flop down with them and watch the pictures in the flames, listen to Springbok Radio or read the comics that Uncle Toto got us weekly. Little Sister and I got Princess and School Friend while Big Brother enjoyed Beeno, Look and Learn and Knowledge.
During the school holidays, our cousins would be there too and we’d gather in the outside room where they slept and play Monopoly – and this game would last for days! Big Brother was always the banker. The cuzzies and I started off with great enthusiasm but somehow one or other of us ended up with the Go Directly to Jail Card and do not collect Two Hundred and while we were languishing there Little Sister with her savvy business mind bought up our properties so we could buy ourselves our or something like that. Big Brother was not far behind with his smooth talking and it was always he or she who won! I became so sick of this game that one day I threw in my charm and said – that’s it I’m never playing this game again and I never did! Today my siblings are hugely successful in business and perhaps playing Monopoly honed their skills.
Another place we used to play when the weather was bad was The Clubhouse. It was a wooden building that my grandfather built next the house and it bordered the fish pond. A youth club called the Plumstead Young People’s Association or Pypas used it weekly for their meetings. It was also used for Scottish Country Dancing and we used to love to watch them at it. Of course it was also great for family celebrations and I remember our grandparents having their Ruby Anniversary there.
In those days we still made a huge thing of 5 November – Guy Fawkes Day. Grandpa used to make a straw guy and burn him on a bonfire before giving us the most magnificent fireworks display ever. Big Brother and later Baby Brother used to love the big bangs but Little Sister and I contented ourselves with sparklers. Everything was beautifully controlled and Gramps ensured that we were all safe when he sent of rockets and spun catherine wheels and it all seemed to go on for hours!
The other big celebration was of course Christmas. What a magical time it was for us. There was a Big Christmas tree in the garden that Gramps put flashing, coloured lights on. Each year the neighbour’s kids all came to see it. Gran would cook a traditional Christmas dinner and there were tickies in the Christmas pudding! Gran’s custard was made with fresh eggs and milk and was the best in the world. A week or two before Christmas our big treat was to go to the city with Granny and Gramps and get a Lucky Dip from each Father Christmas in each Department Store – Garlicks, OK Bazaars, Suttafords and Woolworths. Then we’d go to the Wimpy in the OK Bazaars – it was the only time in the year we ever went out for a meal!
Our grandparents certainly shaped much of our lives but there is a poem that I have remembered throughout my life and often think of although I’d forgotten which grandparent or parent had first read it to us. Big Brother reminded me that it was Grandpa and that made perfect sense!
Abou Ben Adhem —by James Henry Leigh Hunt
Abou Ben Adhem (may his tribe increase)
Awoke one night from a deep dream of peace,
And saw, within the moonlight in his room,
Making it rich, and like a lily in bloom,
An angel writing in a book of gold:—
Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold,
And to the presence in the room he said,
“What writest thou?”—The vision raised its head,
And with a look made of all sweet accord,
Answered, “The names of those who love the Lord.”
“And is mine one?” said Abou. “Nay, not so,”
Replied the angel. Abou spoke more low,
But cheerly still; and said, “I pray thee, then,
Write me as one that loves his fellow men.”
The angel wrote, and vanished. The next night
It came again with a great wakening light,
And showed the names whom love of God had blest,
And lo! Ben Adhem’s name led all the rest.
And Grandpa was certainly one who loved his fellow man and it’s his and Granny’s example that my siblings and I strive to follow. May they rest forever in peace.








