Wednesday, October 06, 2021

More than conkerors

A question for readers not in Britain: what do you do with conkers?

Here conker collecting is a traditional feature of autumn. Some people, children especially though not since it was banned in some schools for  health and safety reasons, play the age-old game of conkers. 

Pierce a hole through a conker, thread string through and knot it, and try and wallop your friend's conker. Champions are those who can crack everyone else's conkers while theirs remain intact. A variety of cheats can be used to make your conker harder, such as soaking in vinegar I believe.

I've never been successful at conkers but that doesn't stop me collecting them with a passion. A newly-collected conker has the glossiest, the most beautiful sheen. It is said that keeping bowls of conkers around your home deters spiders but I'm not convinced of the deterrent value.

I ask what you do in other countries because in Italy we came across a patch of grass with several conker trees and hundreds of conkers just lying there on the ground. I couldn't believe it. In Wales you have to get there early on a windy day to find the best conkers before they're taken by someone else. That obviously wasn't the case here.

We filled pockets, hands and Husband's hat, and I still had to be dragged away. 'Just one more! Oh, look at this one. Just this one!'

Yes, I know those green things aren't conkers. We didn't know what they were and meant to look it up but forgot.

Conkers, as you will know, come from the horse chestnut tree. Sweet chestnuts, the kind you see being roasted on stalls on snowy London streets in scenes from Dickens, come from the Sweet Chestnut tree.

On one of our walks in Italy, while I ran races with the children, Husband disappeared for some time. When he eventually returned he had a hatful - very useful a hat - of sweet chestnuts, which he brought home with the intention of keeping to stuff the Christmas turkey. That plan was foiled when he discovered they didn't keep so he decided to roast them straightaway.

He cracked them, placed them on a baking tray, and left them to roast. Then he went back his room and started playing Fortnite.

A little while later downstairs I noticed a funny smell. Now, funny smells aren't entirely out of the ordinary since my nose went a bit berserk so I ignored it for a while until it became too strong to ignore. I followed the smell into the kitchen, opened the oven door, and closed it again quickly as a plume of smoke burst out.
'Husband!'


Turned to crispy charcoal.

P.S. Just tried to find out what that green intruder is and have failed. Any suggestions?

11 comments:

Kathy G said...

If you look up conkers on Wikipedia it has a photo of a pile of them. A few have a green hull that looks like it might be your mystery thing.

Boud said...

I used to love conkers. And playing them. If you had a survivor conker you'd keep it to play again next year, and it was called a laggy yearer. North Yorkshire.

I can't remember what tree the different one is from, but we have them, and they come apart into little bits.

We don't have horse chestnuts though. Otherwise I'd be a conker player still.

Debra She Who Seeks said...

I've never seen conkers in Canada. I suspect our climate is too cold for those chestnut trees? I don't know. But conkers are not a big thing here. I never saw a conker until I was in Italy in October, 2008. We drove to Carrara and parked under some trees. We heard little thuds and thunks on our roof. What the hell was falling on it? We got out and discovered chestnuts. Who knew?

Marie Smith said...

Too bad about the sweet chestnuts. I had never heard of confers.

Janie Junebug said...

I am not familiar with conkers so it's a good thing you and Google could explain what they are. They look nice in a bowl.

Love,
Janie

Victor S E Moubarak said...

Did you know the game conkers was introduced in Britain by William the Conkeror?

God bless.

pam nash said...

I had to look up conkers. We don't actually have those trees in my small part of the universe. I'd probably want to try to grow a tree from seed if I came across some.

PipeTobacco said...

I love that they are called “conkers” in England! It is such a colorful name!!! We simply call them chestnuts in my region of the US. None of the ones in my area are of the edible variety, but I have always wanted to try the edible ones. As kids, we would drill holes in them and make chestnut necklaces with them.
PipeTobacco

PipeTobacco said...

As you have eaten then…. What are they like in terms of flavor? I always imagined them tasting like hazelnuts….. just bigger and perhaps bolder.

PipeTobacco

Victor S E Moubarak said...

Edible chessnuts taste like chicken. Everything tastes like chicken. Even chicken. Except elephants. I once had elephant steak. It has a taste you'll never forget.

God bless.

Liz Hinds said...

Kathy, no, they're definitely not conkers, the green things.
Boud, apparently YS knows what the little green things are but he hasn't told me yet!
WE both know now, Debra!
It's interesting to find out about other countries and their traditions, Marie, through blogging.
Sadly conkers very quickly lose their wonderful sheen, Janie
I didn't know that, Victor, but I did once do the 'we are more conkerors' thing to a passing student from the local bible college.
I think Husband has grown a tree from a conker, Pam.
Never seen a conker necklace, pipeTobacco. Would be a bit heavy!
As for taste, don't listen to Victor! I would say sort of mushroomy texture. I'm not a big fan but they are popular in stuffing for the Christmas turkey.