Slow week

The weather has been bitterly cold so the arena is frozen, work is hell and we don’t have saddle until next Wednesday. All this means really we haven’t done much this week. Dino has decided he’s terrified of the horse walker all of a sudden which is odd. He wouldn’t go in last Sunday. I did manage to get him in on Monday but he was clearly distraught. Eyes rolling, jogging, desperate to get out…. It’s weird as nothing bad happened to him the last time he was in there! I’m trying to get him to walk on and off calmly for the moment but it’s a bit confusing.

Other than that though quiet week. Lunged a couple of time and did some ST work but I’m not really in the right headspace and the dark and cold are pretty oppressive right now. Emma is back out Wednesday with a saddle for us to try and Liz is coming to visit next week! So hopefully things will pick up again soon.

Long list: February 2017

Plenty of time to read Snow Crash in time for the meeting on 12 February still! We hope you join us. But it’s time to vote on the long list for the month. You can vote here: https://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/7B3RVYQ

If you want a bit of an idea what the book is about there are the Amazon links and summaries here: http://www.silkyraven.co.uk/bibliogoth/long-list/

Anyone can vote on the long list which is used to whittle down a selection to a short list which is voted on by the people who attend the meeting to select the next book.

Might as well just burn all my money…

Horses are so expensive! This week’s new purchase needed? A saddle. I finally got the saddle fitter out on Sunday and she’s not happy to mess with the FlexEE as it looks a bit twisted. Could be that it wasn’t put back together very well when it was last reflocked, could be the pony and I are so wonky we’ve skewed the leather tree or it may not have been straight when it was made. Who knows! The short term option is for her to find us a second hand Saddle Company dressage saddle and then we’ll see what happens. Annoying though, been an expensive couple of months…

I did get out for a hack with Alex and Junipur this weekend but it was a bit more exciting than hoped. I’m trying to rebuild Dino’s road confidence but some fuckwit came past us on Mott Street (which is a quiet country lane), accelerated when he saw us and then kept his horn sounding the whole time he was coming past us. Dino was a bit freaked – fortunately Junipur is a solid hacking pony and didn’t freak at all so that was helpful! But on the way back on the main road all I could get Dino to do was passage sideways down the road *cry* Not sure what to do from here really. I guess I need to get him out with some people on quieter times and hope we can make him happier about it. Having a saddle that’s actually straight might help as well!

Obligatory hacking photo

So with no riding for a week or so whilst we’re waiting for a new saddle we’ll be lunging and trying to get off this ST plateau. Wish us luck!

The straw bed thing seems to be going ok. He’s leaving more of it now, but has stopped chewing wood in the field for the most part and it doesn’t seem to have upset his digestion. He’s looking slightly round but he’s not actually put on weight I don’t think. Need to work on building his topline and getting him fitter.

Straightness Training 2017

Ok, I’ll admit it….we are on a plateau. And I think the problem is my brain more than the pony or anything really to do with straightness training. Things are massively stressful for me at work at the moment and that stress is running over into all kinds of other things. This is not helpful for horse training.

My plan for the next month is to revise the early modules or the Mastery course and see the new material that has been added and revisit the other stuff. Hopefully this will help us have a BINGO moment. I would like to get him to a clinic next month in Benfleet but, as ever, transport is our nemesis!

I would like to get that longeing touchstone re-filmed. Perhaps Liz can do it in February when she visits. Would be nice to get that off my mind. Then I think I might start work on liberty stuff at least once per week and try and rebuild some trust. I did have a fairly good session of LFS on a circle last week so hopefully we can start building from there again but I think both our confidence has taken a knock for various things.

Straw bed week one!

Well, it’s going ok I think. He has been eating a lot but I don’t think it’s too big a problem. He’s a bit, um, rounder but he’s not putting on any actual weight I don’t think. He’s not touchy about his belly or anything so I don’t think it’s aggravating any digestive issues.

So each day we’re going from this:
My first attempt at a straw bed

to this:
After a week on straw

I think it’s probably ok.

We did get out for a little hack on Sunday morning. Was nice to get out but would have been better without Dino deciding on the way home that the give way lines outside The Plough were terrifying because they were wet. I ended up walking him, in hand, along the last stretch of road. Not great but safer than sitting on him throwing himself about. Next hacking needs to be in company I think and if we can’t get that we’re stuck in the waterlogged schools. I hate winter.

Little hack on our own

Long List

The books on the long list at present are:

Ernest Cline, “Ready Player One”
Amazon link
It’s the year 2044, and the real world has become an ugly place. We’re out of oil. We’ve wrecked the climate. Famine, poverty, and disease are widespread.

Like most of humanity, Wade Watts escapes this depressing reality by spending his waking hours jacked into the OASIS, a sprawling virtual utopia where you can be anything you want to be, where you can live and play and fall in love on any of ten thousand planets. And like most of humanity, Wade is obsessed by the ultimate lottery ticket that lies concealed within this alternate reality: OASIS founder James Halliday, who dies with no heir, has promised that control of the OASIS – and his massive fortune – will go to the person who can solve the riddles he has left scattered throughout his creation.

For years, millions have struggled fruitlessly to attain this prize, knowing only that the riddles are based in the culture of the late twentieth century. And then Wade stumbles onto the key to the first puzzle.

Suddenly, he finds himself pitted against thousands of competitors in a desperate race to claim the ultimate prize, a chase that soon takes on terrifying real-world dimensions – and that will leave both Wade and his world profoundly changed.

George Mann, “The Affinity Bridge”
Amazon link
Welcome to the bizarre and dangerous world of Victorian London. Airships soar in the skies, whilst ground trains rumble through the streets. But beneath this shiny veneer of progress lurks a sinister side. Queen Victoria is kept alive by a primitive life-support system while her agents Sir Maurice Newbury and his assistant, Miss Veronica Hobbes, do battle with enemies of the crown, both physical and supernatural…

Alistair MacLean, “The Satan Bug”
Amazon link
Gripping and tense story of secret agents, even more secret government facilities, and a deadly virus, from the acclaimed master of action and suspense.

HELL IS ABOUT TO BE UNLEASHED…

Five strands of high-voltage wire, 200 yards of bare ground and double barbed wire fences patrolled by armed guards with dogs separated Mordon Research Centre from the outside world.

Yet behind the locked doors of E block, a scientist lies dead, and a new toxin of terrifying power has vanished…


Rob Thurman, “Nightlife”

Amazon link
Cal Leandros is 19. He eats junk food, he doesn’t clean up after himself and fights with his half brother Niko. It’s a fairly normal life, but for the fact that Cal and Niko are constantly on the run. Cal’s father has been after him for the last four years. And given that he’s a monster whose dark lineage is the stuff of nightmares they really don’t want him and his entire otherworldly race catching up with them. But Cal is about to learn why they want him, why they’ve always wanted him – he is the key to unleashing their hell on earth.

Meanwhile the bright lights of the Big Apple shine on, oblivious to the fact that the fate of the human world will be decided in the fight of Cal and Niko’s lives . . .

Emily St. John Mandel, “Station Eleven”
Amazon link
What was lost in the collapse: almost everything, almost everyone, but there is still such beauty.

One snowy night in Toronto famous actor Arthur Leander dies on stage whilst performing the role of a lifetime. That same evening a deadly virus touches down in North America.
The world will never be the same again.

Twenty years later Kirsten, an actress in the Travelling Symphony, performs Shakespeare in the settlements that have grown up since the collapse.
But then her newly hopeful world is threatened.

If civilization was lost, what would you preserve? And how far would you go to protect it?

Emma Healey, “Elizabeth is Missing”
Amazon link
Maud is forgetful. She makes a cup of tea and doesn’t remember to drink it. She goes to the shops and forgets why she went. Sometimes her home is unrecognizable – or her daughter Helen seems a total stranger.

But there’s one thing Maud is sure of: her friend Elizabeth is missing. The note in her pocket tells her so. And no matter who tells her to stop going on about it, to leave it alone, to shut up, Maud will get to the bottom of it.

Because somewhere in Maud’s damaged mind lies the answer to an unsolved seventy-year-old mystery. One everyone has forgotten about.

Everyone, except Maud . . .

Karl Schroeder, “Lockstep”
Amazon link
When seventeen-year-old Toby McGonigal finds himself lost in space, separated from his family, he expects his next drift into cold sleep to be his last. After all, the planet he’s orbiting is frozen and sunless, and the cities are dead. But when Toby wakes again, he’s surprised to discover a thriving planet, a strange and prosperous galaxy, and something stranger still–that he’s been asleep for 14,000 years. Welcome to the Lockstep Empire, where civilization is kept alive by careful hibernation. Here cold sleeps can last decades and waking moments mere weeks. Its citizens survive for millennia, traveling asleep on long voyages between worlds. Not only is Lockstep the new center of the galaxy, but Toby is shocked to learn that the Empire is still ruled by its founding family: his own. Toby’s brother Peter has become a terrible tyrant. Suspicious of the return of his long-lost brother, whose rightful inheritance also controls the lockstep hibernation cycles, Peter sees Toby as a threat to his regime. Now, with the help of a lockstep girl named Corva, Toby must survive the forces of this new Empire, outwit his siblings, and save human civilization. Karl Schroeder’s Lockstep is a grand innovation in hard SF space opera.

Robin McKinley, “Sunshine”
Amazon link
There are places in the world where darkness rules, where it’s unwise to walk.But the lake had been quiet for years. . . .She never heard them coming. Of course you don’t, when they’re vampires.

They took her clothes and sneakers. They dressed her in a long red gown. And they shackled her to the wall of an abandoned mansion – within easy reach of her fellow prisoner.

She knows he is a vampire. She knows that she’s to be his dinner, and that when he is finished with her, she will be dead. Yet when dawn breaks, she is still alive. And now he needs her to help him survive the day…

C.S. Quinn, “The Thief Taker”
Amazon link
When a girl is gruesomely murdered, thief taker Charlie Tuesday reluctantly agrees to take on the case. But the horrific remains tell him this is no isolated death. The killer’s mad appetites are part of a master plan that could destroy London – and reveal the dark secrets of Charlie’s own past.

Now the thief taker must find this murderous mastermind before the plague obliterates the evidence street by street. This terrifying pursuit will take Charlie deep into the black underbelly of old London, where alchemy, witchcraft and blood-spells collide.

In a city drowned in darkness, death could be the most powerful magic of all.

Paul Kearney, “The Wolf in the Attic”
Amazon link
1920s Oxford: home to C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien… and Anna Francis, a young Greek refugee looking to escape the grim reality of her new life. The night they cross paths, none suspect the fantastic world at work around them.
Anna Francis lives in a tall old house with her father and her doll Penelope. She is a refugee, a piece of flotsam washed up in England by the tides of the Great War and the chaos that trailed in its wake. Once upon a time, she had a mother and a brother, and they all lived together in the most beautiful city in the world, by the shores of Homer’s wine-dark sea.
But that is all gone now, and only to her doll does she ever speak of it, because her father cannot bear to hear. She sits in the shadows of the tall house and watches the rain on the windows, creating worlds for herself to fill out the loneliness. The house becomes her own little kingdom, an island full of dreams and half-forgotten memories. And then one winter day, she finds an interloper in the topmost, dustiest attic of the house. A boy named Luca with yellow eyes, who is as alone in the world as she is.
That day, she’ll lose everything in her life, and find the only real friend she may ever know.

Philip Reeve, “Railhead”
Amazon link
Step Aboard – the Universe is Waiting.
The Great Network is a place of drones and androids, Hive Monks and Station Angels. The place of the thousand gates, where sentient trains criss-cross the galaxy in a heartbeat.
It is also a place of great dangers – especially for someone who rides the rails and rides his luck the way Zen Starling does.
Once Zen was just a petty thief, stealing to support his family and living by his wits. Now everything has changed. Zen is still a thief – but it could be that the key to the whole universe rests on finding out what else he is . . .
This is an epic story with huge scope and film rights have already been bought by Warner Brothers.

Matthew Rossi, “Nameless”
Amazon link
Thea Mendel is living in her car because there’s a ghost in her house. At a Halloween party, she meets someone who believes her, a boy with green eyes and ghosts of his own named Thomas. Someone wants to do worse to Thea than kill her, and in order to find out who they are and what they want the two of them will have to deal with a clan of unusually helpful vampires, unexpected Shoggoths, and all the weird that Rhode Island can throw at them. And that’s a lot of weird.

Kate Morton, “The Secret Keeper”
Amazon link
1961: On a sweltering summer’s day, while her family picnics by the stream on their Suffolk farm, sixteen-year-old Laurel hides out in her childhood tree house dreaming of a boy called Billy, a move to London, and the bright future she can’t wait to seize. But before the idyllic afternoon is over, Laurel will have witnessed a shocking crime that changes everything.

2011: Now a much-loved actress, Laurel finds herself overwhelmed by shades of the past. Haunted by memories, and the mystery of what she saw that day, she returns to her family home and begins to piece together a secret history. A tale of three strangers from vastly different worlds – Dorothy, Vivien and Jimmy – who are brought together by chance in wartime London and whose lives become fiercely and fatefully entwined.

Cixin Liu, “The Three-Body Problem”
Amazon link
1967: Ye Wenjie witnesses Red Guards beat her father to death during China’s Cultural Revolution. This singular event will shape not only the rest of her life but also the future of mankind.

Four decades later, Beijing police ask nanotech engineer Wang Miao to infiltrate a secretive cabal of scientists after a spate of inexplicable suicides. Wang’s investigation will lead him to a mysterious online game and immerse him in a virtual world ruled by the intractable and unpredicatable interaction of its three suns.

This is the Three-Body Problem and it is the key to everything: the key to the scientists’ deaths, the key to a conspiracy that spans light-years and the key to the extinction-level threat humanity now faces.

Jane Austen, “Northanger Abbey”
Amazon link

Alastair Reynolds, “Blue Remembered Earth”
Amazon link
One hundred and fifty years from now, in a world where Africa is the dominant technological and economic power, and where crime, war, disease and poverty have been banished to history, Geoffrey Akinya wants only one thing: to be left in peace, so that he can continue his studies into the elephants of the Amboseli basin.

But Geoffrey’s family, the vast Akinya business empire, has other plans. After the death of Eunice, Geoffrey’s grandmother, erstwhile space explorer and entrepreneur, something awkward has come to light on the Moon, and Geoffrey is tasked – well, blackmailed, really – to go up there and make sure the family’s name stays suitably unblemished. But little does Geoffrey realise – or anyone else in the family, for that matter – what he’s about to unravel.

Eunice’s ashes have already have been scattered in sight of Kilimanjaro. But the secrets she died with are about to come back out into the open, and they could change everything.

Or shatter this near-utopia into shards …

Daphne Du Marier, “Rebecca”
Amazon link
Working as a lady’s companion, the orphaned heroine of Rebecca learns her place. Life begins to look very bleak until, on a trip to the South of France, she meets Maxim de Winter, a handsome widower whose sudden proposal of marriage takes her by surprise. Whisked from glamorous Monte Carlo to his brooding estate, Manderley, on the Cornish Coast, the new Mrs de Winter finds Max a changed man. And the memory of his dead wife Rebecca is forever kept alive by the forbidding Mrs Danvers . . .

Not since Jane Eyre has a heroine faced such difficulty with the Other Woman. An international bestseller that has never gone out of print, Rebecca is the haunting story of a young girl consumed by love and the struggle to find her identity.

Hilary Mantel, “Wolf Hall”
Amazon link
England, the 1520s. Henry VIII is on the throne, but has no heir. Cardinal Wolsey is his chief advisor, charged with securing the divorce the pope refuses to grant. Into this atmosphere of distrust and need comes Thomas Cromwell, first as Wolsey’s clerk, and later his successor.

Cromwell is a wholly original man: the son of a brutal blacksmith, a political genius, a briber, a charmer, a bully, a man with a delicate and deadly expertise in manipulating people and events. Ruthless in pursuit of his own interests, he is as ambitious in his wider politics as he is for himself. His reforming agenda is carried out in the grip of a self-interested parliament and a king who fluctuates between romantic passions and murderous rages.

From one of our finest living writers, ‘Wolf Hall’ is that very rare thing: a truly great English novel, one that explores the intersection of individual psychology and wider politics. With a vast array of characters, and richly overflowing with incident, it peels back history to show us Tudor England as a half-made society, moulding itself with great passion, suffering and courage.

Gillian Flynn, “Gone Girl”
Amazon link
Who are you?
What have we done to each other?

These are the questions Nick Dunne finds himself asking on the morning of his fifth wedding anniversary, when his wife Amy suddenly disappears. The police suspect Nick. Amy’s friends reveal that she was afraid of him, that she kept secrets from him. He swears it isn’t true. A police examination of his computer shows strange searches. He says they weren’t made by him. And then there are the persistent calls on his mobile phone. So what really did happen to Nick’s beautiful wife?

Straw bed: day the first

Well. I think he only ate about 2/3 of the bed…

After the first night...

He was very….solid. And nasty lady that I am we went out for a hack! Our friend Brooke really wanted to go out so we just nipped up the lane for a quick once round the block. Was nice to get out although I think Dino was a bit full of straw and would have preferred to stay at home!!

Quick hack

He was much less interested in his bed today after I mucked him out so I’m hopeful that in a few days the novelty will have worn off. We shall see!!

The experiment is go…

Well for better or for worse Dino is now on straw:

My first attempt at a straw bed

Initial reaction from the pony was OMG FOOD so I’m hoping that calms down after a few days. He even ate the straw in preference to a perfectly good haynet so we shall see what the week brings…

YOU MADE A BED OUT OF FOOD