海角大神

Corbyn, leader of the Queen's loyal opposition, putters about in the garden

In a nation of gardeners, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn鈥檚 pastime is run-of-the-mill. But keeping up a small plot within a London community garden fits his popular image as a modest, unmanicured politician.

|
Simon Montlake/海角大神
A view of a community garden plot, or allotment, in Finchley, London, that belongs to Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn. Mr. Corbyn grows fruits and vegetables on his 250-square-yard plot.

The single-track road dips at a stream cloaked by nettles and blackberry bushes. Across the bridge, up a gentle incline, lie more plots of land planted with fruits and vegetables and tended by the amateur gardeners who blossom across this nation.

The plot beside the stream is typical: Beds of corn and beans, trees bearing unripe apples and pears. A pile of compost under a blue tarpaulin awaits a rake. A few weeds are poking up.

The owner of this particular plot could be forgiven for taking a back seat to nature. Jeremy Corbyn 鈥 Labour parliamentarian, leader of Her Majesty鈥檚 Loyal Opposition, and, after June鈥檚 election, a serious contender to run Britain 鈥撀爈ately has more pressing matters to attend to.

While serving in Parliament, Mr. Corbyn has found time to farm his allotment, as community gardens are known here. He mostly comes on Sundays, say fellow gardeners, and gets to work, rain or shine.

Three plots uphill, Jim Flanagan is forking his first potatoes of the season. As a retiree who comes on weekdays, he rarely sees his famous neighbor, but he admires what he鈥檚 done on his plot. 鈥淗e knows what he鈥檚 doing alright. But he hasn鈥檛 got the time,鈥 he says.

In a nation of gardeners, where TV call-in shows dispense tips by the bushel, Corbyn鈥檚 pastime is run-of-the-mill. But it fits his popular image as a modest, unmanicured politician who prefers his bicycle to a chauffeured car, a vegetarian who makes his own jam from the fruits of his labor.

During the election campaign, he presented a jar of his apple-blackberry jam to the hosts of a popular daytime show. In another interview, Corbyn was asked if he might prefer to stick to his allotment rather than occupy 10 Downing Street, the prime minister鈥檚 official residence.

鈥淚t鈥檚 possible to do both because if you grow plants and look after your garden, it gives you time to think, it gives you a connection with the natural world and makes you stronger in everything else you do,鈥 he told Channel 4 News.

A nation of gardeners

Corbyn-as-gardener is fodder for critics who see him as a political naif not fit to run the government. One unkind comparison made is to Chauncey Gardiner, the simpleton gardener played by Peter Sellers, a British actor, whose gnomic utterances propel him towards the US presidency in the 1979 film 鈥淏eing There.鈥

Yet in a time of populist distrust of establishment politicians, the plainspoken allotment man who pulls his own weeds may have an edge over his smoother rivals.

鈥淗e鈥檚 the perfect man, I tell you. He doesn鈥檛 bother who he鈥檚 talking to, he鈥檚 the same,鈥 says Joe McLean, who grows flowers, fruits, and vegetables on his allotment. He pulls out his phone to show a photo taken with Corbyn聽in June, just 10 days after the election.

That day, Corbyn stopped by Mr. McLean鈥檚 plot to sample his cherries and Persian cucumbers (McLean was born in Iran). Corbyn also praised the trimmed flowerbeds (鈥淭hat鈥檚 my son, he did all that鈥) and the two cracked a joke about how McLean couldn鈥檛 rely on his daughter anymore to lend a hand as she had moved to Dubai for work.

That a bountiful 12.5-acre community garden persists in a crowded corner of London is testament both to Britain鈥檚 passion for gardening and its habit of self-reliance amid wartime privations. The land was first leased to the local council to grow food during World War I; this year鈥檚 open house聽celebrated the 100th anniversary of East Finchley Allotments.

Allotment diggers got another boost in World War II when public and private land, including Royal Parks and the lawns outside the Tower of London, was converted into vegetable gardens as part of the Dig For Victory campaign. By 1945, the number of allotments 鈥撀爐ypically a plot of 10 poles, an Anglo-Saxon measure equal to 250 square yards 鈥撀爃ad swelled to 1.3 million.

Today, according to the National Allotment Society, Britain has around 330,000 allotment plots. Most have long waiting lists; plots are often handed down within families. At East Finchley Allotments, more than 100 applicants are pending, says Janet Francis, a member of the committee that runs the site. Turnover is low.

As a public garden, rents are modest. Standard plots rent for 拢85 a year (about $110), with a discount for seniors (Corbyn is 68), which covers water rates and property maintenance, says Ms. Francis.

'His private space'

Asked how long Corbyn has farmed his spot, Francis says she has no idea, but adds that it precedes her own arrival, 13 years ago.

Mr. Flanagan has tended his plot for 18 years. He grew up on a farm in County Cork, Ireland, one of nine children. Since he didn鈥檛 stand to inherit the farm, he moved to England and went into the building trade. Retirement has meant more time to plant and poke, trim and turn. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a hobby for me. It gets me out of the house,鈥 he says, leaning on his fork.

How much time Corbyn still devotes to his allotment is unclear. A weathered wooden-and-iron bench sits under an apple tree. Masking tape covers cracks in the window of a 6-by-6-ft. shed; inside tools are neatly stacked and a wheelbarrow rests on its side.

Other allotments show grander ambitions: trellis archways, paved pathways and lawns, new greenhouses. One boasts a kids鈥 trampoline. But many also reveal a make-do spirit, like threaded CDs hung to deter pigeons and plastic bottles atop poles so gardeners don鈥檛 poke themselves in the eyes.

At one such plot, a bearded gardener stops to talk to a reporter. He points out his corn and other vegetables, the tree fruit coming in the fall. But asked about sightings of Corbyn, his tone changes. 鈥淚t鈥檚 his private space and we don鈥檛 intrude,鈥 he says, tartly.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
What is the Monitor difference? Tackling the tough headlines 鈥 with humanity. Listening to sources 鈥 with respect. Seeing the story that others are missing by reporting what so often gets overlooked: the values that connect us. That鈥檚 Monitor reporting 鈥 news that changes how you see the world.
QR Code to Corbyn, leader of the Queen's loyal opposition, putters about in the garden
Read this article in
/World/Europe/2017/0831/Corbyn-leader-of-the-Queen-s-loyal-opposition-putters-about-in-the-garden
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe