Hedges in Winter, Hares in Summer
In winter, Olwen lays the valley's living hedges by hand. In summer there's no hedge to lay, so she does something else: she heads out before dawn to count hares for the county census. She walks the boundaries, stops, writes the exact number down in a notebook with an elastic band round it, and doesn't speak to anyone for hours. She discovered the first summer that it was the closest thing to rest she knew. The price is discussed once and doesn't come down; the census numbers she hands over without comment. Laying in winter and counting in summer are, to her, two halves of the same thing.







