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Anyway, I returned from the Girt Clog
Club to find that I'd got a mole making one hell of a mess
of my garden.
I'd never come across them before. Born in Acocks Green you
don't get a lot of moles around. If they found a mole in
Acocks Green they'd eat it. It took me just a few days to
realize this mole was driving me bonkers. I'd spend hours
and hours mowing the lawn and getting the lines all
straight. Then next morning you wake up and it's like
looking at a sea of zits. There just doesn't seem to be any
mole catchers left. So it's a DIY job with moles (Destroy It
Yourself).
So I bought a mole trap: a big metal thing you have to bait
with worms. A pretty revolting job, so I used spaghetti and
hoped they wouldn't know the difference. But I put plenty of
bait in the trap, set it and the mole came along, ate all
the spaghetti and pushed the trap out of the way. It took me
two months before I realized that there was no way he was
going to go into it. He was just getting bigger on all the
spaghetti he was eating.
Then I bought a firework, called Molesmoke, which is like a
Roman candle. You light it, shove it down the hole and then
cover the earth over. The instructions say: 'The smoke,
which is heavier than air, lies in the run, is poisonous and
kills the mole!'
No, it doesn't.
They love them. You can hear them giggling. And after a
while you begin to get the mole twitch. You got a mole?
'Yeah,' you say, with a tick in your face. People come up
with loopy ideas of how to get rid of them. 'There's only
one way to get rid of a mole - you've got to shove garlic
and mothballs down the holes. They don't like the smell.'
'Really?'
'Never fails.'
So I was there for two weeks shoveling the stuff down. They
ate the lot! Just got enormous moles and bigger hills.
Then this other bloke says: 'There's only one way to get rid
of a mole.'
'What?'
'You've got to buy those plastic windmills you get from
Woolworths.
'They are like long sticks with a plastic bit at the end
which whirls around. You get one of them,' he says, and you
stick it down the middle of the mole run. When the wind
sends the whirly bit round it vibrates the stick and the
noise scares the mole away.' I fell for it. I've got two
hundred of them in my lawn. The first big gust of wind blew
my fence down, yet the moles, far from being frightened, ate
all the ends of the sticks.
About five weeks ago I was in the local boozer having a
drink when this guy comes in: "Ere,' he says. 'I ‘ear you
got a mole.'
'Yes.'
'There's only one way to get rid of a mole.'
'Really...'
'Blow its bloody head off!'
"What with?'
'A twelve-bore.'
'What do you do? Stick it down the hole and…
'No, no,' he says, shaking his head. 'But it costs you a
night's sleep, mind.'
'Anything. I'll sacrifice anything.'
'What you do is stay up all night, When it's all quiet Moley
starts digging, pushing up the earth from your lawn. When he
does that he's only half an inch from the top. Then you
start blasting away.'
'Does it work?'
'Never fails!'
'But where do I get a twelve-bore from?'
'You can borrow mine for a fiver.'
Sure enough, he delivers the gun and a box of cartridges -
enough to do a bank raid. I'm there on a Sunday night with
this great big gun. I have strapped a torch to the barrel so
I can see what I am doing.
And I sit on a swivel chair.
All the neighbors are watching from their bedroom windows.
'What's he doing?'
'I don't know. Imitating a lighthouse?'
So it's about half past three on a Sunday morning and so
quiet you could hear a leaf drop. Suddenly I hear a
scratching and five yards ahead there's a mole coming out of
the lawn. I turn on the searchlight. Now, I know this sounds
stupid, but I'd never thought to practice with the
twelve-bore. I had never fired a gun that size in my life.
So ... BOOM! And I flew ten yards off my stool. The only
thing I hit were all the apples in my tree. I was incensed
and started shooting everywhere. B 0 0 M! B 0 0 M! B 0 0 M!!
Shooting like a maniac. The garden was like the Somme.
Then I noticed this blue flashing light. There were a couple
of coppers standing there:
'What are you doing Carrott?'
'Mole-catching.'
They wander over. Luckily, one of them had suffered the
ravages of a mole so was sympathetic. He muttered: 'Carry
on. But be quiet.' They're still there, of course, digging
up the garden.
'What's on tonight?' 'Beetroot.' 'Oh, not so good as
mothballs and garlic.' 'No. And we could do with some more
fireworks to see what we're doing.' 'I wonder if we'll get
any more wind-sticks again.’ Hope so. They're delicious.'
'Bloody noisy up there last night, wasn't it?
Reprinted with the kind permission of Mr.
Jasper Carrott.
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