Hey there good peoples who aren't in a field. (Riff-raff they are, not like *you*.) I'm still re-working the fecking submission pitch fer, The Red Knight. But yeah, anyway
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Horse Tradersmr_h_r_hughesSeptember 9 2011, 12:30:27 UTC
There is a horse-botherer (you now are also a horse-botherer, don't worry, it's not a term of abuse *grin*) at work and from the tales I hear of her buying and selling horses large number of horse-owners are lying gits - it sounds far more stressful than buying a second-hand car : )
Oh and my negelect has led to a new method of tomato growing (I'm pretty sure I can explain this though it was enireley accidental). Underwater the tomato, let it get pot-bound, treat it like cr*p...you get very few tomatoes but the ones you do get are staggering examples of tomatoness, proud, flavoursome beasts, a tomato to last for a thousand years (or until Amy finds them) if you like.
Once upon a time I found this house in rightmove when we were looking in Huddersfield many moons ago and it came with a bit of land down a little path nearby. I kind of regret not getting that one... think of the possibilities. I think I'd already put a pony on it in my head. Now I would be content with a small veg plot or somewhere to stick a rabbit hutch but we seem to have got a bit stuck for the moment.
Aye, that sounds nice. Pony and chickens, possibly a goat:) I know what you mean about stuck. I feel we're kinda blocked atm, backed up. Need to kick on, somehow.
2nd hoss. Oh lucky you. Sellers are fibbers at times.
The horse which gave Si a cubit width black bruise from shoulder to thigh was 'a dope on a rope'. The seller said he must have an electric seat - never moved too fast. We travelled to Kent.
Fred (who gifted me my bionic arm) was 'a gentle novice ride, easy to handle and a complete gent on the ground'. My instructor said she would no more put a novice on him than fly to the moon. He was impossible on the ground; couldn't be led in a headcollar and barged people out of his stall to gallop alone down the main road to the field. We bought him in Durham.
Oh just being a mare. Other than not being well schooled, if at all. She has been a proper cow. She's been golden since another mare was taken out of her field. I think she feels more secure as top horse now. And she's doing reaslly well in the school. I just want the next one to be 'finished' rather than a project.
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The horse which gave Si a cubit width black bruise from shoulder to thigh was 'a dope on a rope'. The seller said he must have an electric seat - never moved too fast. We travelled to Kent.
Fred (who gifted me my bionic arm) was 'a gentle novice ride, easy to handle and a complete gent on the ground'. My instructor said she would no more put a novice on him than fly to the moon. He was impossible on the ground; couldn't be led in a headcollar and barged people out of his stall to gallop alone down the main road to the field. We bought him in Durham.
What I drew from this was go see local only.
What's up with Lizzy?
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