
During the Sixties, as I’d walk from my Balham flat towards Wandsworth Common to reenact famous Gerd Müller goals, I’d wonder at some of the imaginative creativity in the gardens along the way.
Many people clearly took great pride in sculpting various shapes and sizes on the bushes in their front lawns.
One day, on the way to the common with my football tucked underneath my arm like Anne Boleyn’s head, I noticed that there was some vigorous pruning activity going on. However, the tools being used were tiny. I wasn’t allowed scissors as a kid, but I think I could have got away with playing these, such was their incredibly small size.
At this time we were being read The Borrowers during school. The town where they lived was never mentioned; now I had living proof. As I passed this house, they were, like the gardener in Bill and Ben, temporarily absent; but, to me, The Borrowers clearly lived in Balham.
In addition to the tiny scissors there were tiny pliers; tiny wire-cutters and a tiny penknife. Obviously, Swiss Army knives didn’t come in XXS.
There were never any competitions held down the street but, for me, the giant cockerel at number sixty-nine always won it.








