Showing posts with label Pigeon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pigeon. Show all posts

Friday, 9 August 2013

No blog today.

It’s been a long week, and I have hit the wall.

But I did want to say that the Dear Readers have been particularly dear in the last few days. You have left wise and kind comments, sent dancing tweets which made me laugh, written antic Facebook remarks. I don’t want to descend into Hallmark card territory, but this generous virtual back and forth damn well does warm the cockles of my absurd old heart.

So, thank you.

And here is Stanley the Dog, because I know everyone loves Stanley the Dog:

9 Aug 1 3024x4032

And speaking of dogs, and love, for a convoluted and labyrinthine set of reasons, I really, really missed these old ladies today. The universe, in its funny old wisdom, sent me reminders of them, and I’m not ashamed to say that I shed a bit of a tear. They are in the past, but they live with me still, stitched into my heart:

9 Aug 3 603x768.ORF%255B3%255D

Duch 8th Aug

The Duchess and the Pigeon; really, two of the most beautiful canines that ever graced the good Scottish earth.

Thursday, 1 November 2012

The last walk

The clever old lady is, of course, of course, making it very easy for me. She is sinking gently, and she is telling me it is time to go.

She has stopped eating, and her stick is of no more interest to her. It was my last throw of the dice, and she very politely trotted three steps towards it, picked it up gently in her mouth, and then laid it back down. She looked at me, as if to say: I’m sorry, but it’s no good to me any more.

‘That’s quite all right,’ I said, out loud. ‘I understand.’

We had an appointment with the vet tomorrow anyway, and that shall be the moment. There is no more doubt in my mind, no wild, flinging hope. We are in the last hours.

It is the most ravishing day. I have not seen Scotland look this beautiful for months. It is bathed in that clear, ancient, amber light, the one that always makes me think of old Italy. The colours are singing their vivid song. Everything is filled with clarity.

It’s so funny. It was another perfect day, in the spring last year, when my father died. I remember walking round and round the block, in the impossible sunshine, carrying my violent grief with me. It was so physical that I had to keep moving, or I felt I too would die. After the fifth lap, the Duchess and the Pigeon actually staged a sit-in, lying down on the path and refusing to move another step. They had never seen me walk like that in their lives, and their canine faces registered clearly their astonishment and mild disapproval.

In the early morning, I took the Pidge up to the Mother and Stepfather, so they could have their last farewell. The Sister and I went up to the horses. The mountain was as grand and gracious as I have ever seen her, dark violet with a pristine white cap of snow. Myfanwy and Red were at their dearest and sweetest and happiest, basking in the winter sun.

We worked with them for a bit, happy to be in the open air, in the mud, in the earth. There were all the good smells: the lovely scent of the horses’ coats, the clean sharp metal tang of the cold, the solid aroma of grass and earth.

The great-nephew was blithely zooming about on his small tractor, smiling all over his little face. Children are very good at this time, a vivid reminder of life going on. The World Traveller came over and we talked and talked, in the sun. Surrounded by the family love and the horse love, I felt, for an hour, purely happy.

Then I took the Pigeon down to see the Younger Niece, for their goodbye. It was very sweet and honest and true. We took a lot of photographs. The sunshine dazzled over the blue hill, and the old lady painted one last smile on her face.

We took our final walk, up the long avenue with the beeches and Wellingtonias and ancient oaks. It is one of my favourite walks. In the old days, the Pigeon used to bound out in front, racing to left and right, finding glorious smells, putting up rabbits, snuffling for moles. She used to jump over the cattle grid like a stag. Now she trotted slowly at my heel, sticking to me like a faithful shadow.

I could see our actual shadows on the path in front of me: dog and human, etched in black by the glittering sun. I thought: it will be awfully strange not having that shadow. It will be very odd being just one, instead of two. I shall have to concentrate hard, to get used to that.

Then I brought her inside, and settled her on her bed. She is lying there now as I write, just next to me. She has all the best blankets over her, the really posh one I bought in a fit of folly from the Highgrove shop, the precious vintage Welsh blanket that came all the way from Hay on Wye. There is a chicken simmering in the pot on the stove, just in case I can persuade her to take one more delicious morsel to eat.

I am, madly, making her a playlist. She’s going to listen to the good classical stuff for the rest of the afternoon. I am embracing cliché and obviousness and going for all the blatant old favourites, so there is Albinoni, and Bach, and Offenbach, and ten different kinds of Mozart. There is Barber and Mahler and Pachelbel’s canon, the first piece of classical music I ever loved, played to me by The Older Brother when I was eight years old. There is a Chopin nocturne, and Rachmaninov’s second piano concerto, and For Unto Us a Child is Born from Handel’s Messiah.

I was going to count the ways, for you, all the reasons I love this creature so much; I was going to make a list of her great qualities. But I’ve written enough, and my fingers are tired. I don’t need lists; I don’t need to spell it out.

She is just a really, really good dog. She gave me joy and I loved her well. I shall be bereft without her.

 

Today’s pictures:

1 Nov 1

1 Nov 2

1 Nov 3

1 Nov 15

1 Nov 18

1 Nov 18-001

1 Nov 18-002

1 Nov 19-001

My two dear consolations:

1 Nov 21

1 Nov 23

And their view:

1 Nov 20-001

Saying goodbye to The Younger Niece:

1 Nov 19

With me:

1 Nov 20

1 Nov 22

One final sniff of the good old Scottish earth:

1 Nov 22-001

Sunshine and shadows of the last walk:

1 Nov 25

No more use for the stick:

1 Nov 34

It is this noble face that tells me, more than anything, that it is time to go:

1 Nov 35

She is not in any distress or pain. She is doing that wonderful, honest thing that dogs do: she is shutting down.

When I was young, I never understood that Dylan Thomas poem, the one that goes: rage, rage against the dying of the light. I thought that accepting the inevitability of death was a good thing. Then I grew older, and I knew more what he meant, and I thought one should rage, that we should all fight with every last breath in us.

Now, I watch this dear creature slowly shut herself down, with a fatalistic dignity. It is very simple for her. All her animal instincts are telling her plain, good things. She is going gentle into that good night, and I am glad for it. Gentleness was always one of her defining characteristics, and it is exactly what we need now.

The hill, absurdly lovely on this strange day:

1 Nov 33

Saturday, 21 July 2012

In which I am half-baked

Posted by Tania Kindersley.

I’m a bit half-baked at the moment. This is fatal for any kind of writing. I sit down to the blog and think: what shall I tell them today? And because of the half-baked thing, my brain flops around in a desultory manner and goes: weeeellll....

I think: I could talk about the great race that the mighty Nathaniel ran today, when he was so admirable in the narrowest of defeats, and how I love him almost more for not winning than for coming out victorious. But it is after six and I am tired and it was such a great race that I need at least twenty-seven paragraphs to do it justice, by which time my head shall have fallen off and most of you will have left the building in despair.

I think: I could write a lyrical cantering thing about the great ride the mare and I took up over the hills and far away, but you really don’t need another bloody riding story. Trot on, trot on, I think; don’t make them suffer through yet more damn horse stuff.

I think: I could attempt to say something about world affairs, or political dynamics, or even the Tour de France, a race of which I know nothing, but which is being won by a great Briton, for the first time in its history. Apparently he is a Briton with tremendous sideburns and an anarchic sense of humour, and that pleases me.

Then I think: but dammit, it’s Saturday, and no one even reads the blog on a Saturday. (I rarely look at my numbers, because that is not what this thing is about, but when I do, I notice that everyone reads during the working week. Saturday and Sunday are obviously days when you snap off your computers and put your smartphones to sleep, and sit down with War and Peace. And hurrah for that.)

And in the end, I think, ah well. Let’s just have a nice flower picture and a dopey mare picture and a Pigeon stick-face picture, because sometimes all that anyone needs is something diverting on which to rest their eyes, when the world is a bit mad and sad. And perhaps it doesn't’ matter that I’m a bit half-baked. One can’t be fully baked every day, it would be preposterous.

Normally, when I fail to write anything of any interest, I suffer crippling angst. Often, I have to drink to forget. Tonight, for some reason, I feel quite sanguine.

My throat is still hoarse from cheering that marvellous Nathaniel on. The Younger Brother arrived just in time for the race, and we both roared and jumped up and down and the Pigeon fell into a frenzy of barking, and despite it all, the magnificent fella lost by a nose.

Normally, I would feel very sad about that, but the Brother and the Pidge and I went for walk after, up the beech avenue, and talked of love and trees. And then I went up to settle Red for the night, and she was at her dearest and most funny and affectionate, mooching about and resting her head on my chest and doing her enchanting little whicker. And I thought: it’s just a lost race. And now I think: it’s just a slightly pointless blog. Everything does not have to be a shining win for it to be all right.

And now I really am going to stop, before I start writing complete hokum. Who knows? Tomorrow, I might have something utterly fascinating to say. Or, not.

 

Today’s pictures:

Garden:

21 July 1

21 July 2

21 July 3

21 July 4

21 July 5

21 July 7

Red and the pony, mooching up the field to see me, in single file:

21 July 9

Dopey face:

21 July 10

I love this, because you can really see how velvety her coat is. Because it’s been so cold, she has not the sleek, smooth summer coat, but an adorable teddy bear velvet version, which I never tire of rubbing:

21 July 10-001

Red’s View:

21 July 12

STICK FACE:

21 July 14

And hoping also for biscuits face:

21 July 15

Hill:

21 July 19

Tuesday, 3 July 2012

Anatomy of a day

Posted by Tania Kindersley.

So chilly this morning that I actually put on a scarf to go up and see the horse.

Mare completely and utterly adorable, possibly the most adorable yet in terms of sheer, sustained sweetness.

Breakfast with The Mother and the Lovely Stepfather; excellent coffee; Pigeon flirts and vamps and also breaks records for adorableness.

See the Horse Talker, which is very necessary because it means I can speak of equine matters for at least half an hour without someone wanting to call the police. This is because she is as interested as I am, and can discuss herd behaviour for hours.

She brings her small daughter, who I think is a horse whisperer in the making, and who enchants the Welsh pony.

See the great-nieces and nephew, who also appear to be breaking records for sheer sweetness. ‘CUDDLE’ shouts the great-nephew, hurling himself into my arms and beaming all over his tiny face.

The Horse Talker says: ‘You are very lucky to have such family.’

I think: I am very, very lucky to have such family.

Say goodbye to The Landlord and The World Traveller, who are driving south in search of sun. I shall miss them very much indeed.

Do work.

Eat smoked mackerel for lunch.

Tell an exceptionally nice cold-caller that I do not own my own property. He kindly says he is going to get me off that list if it is the last thing he does. We wish each other a good day, with cheerful sincerity.

Am profoundly shocked by the Barclays affair. What is wrong with the corporations? Why can they not behave like responsible citizens? I genuinely find it hard to understand.

Discover, as I do every year around this time, that I have very little interest in tennis.

Gaze at the low skies and wonder if the jet stream will ever get moving again.

Have two unsuccessful bets at Brighton and then a lovely win at Hamilton on the game and bonny King of Paradise.

Go up to do the mare. There is a fleeting moment of sun and a small expanse of blue sky. I stare at it in awe and wonder. I even take photographs so the moment may be recorded for posterity. If the jetstream does not move, it may be the only piece of blue sky I see for the rest of July.

Make braised pork with rice for supper.

Contemplate having a quick peek at the 8.20 at Kempton. The lovely William Buick is riding...

 

Today’s pictures:

3 July 1

3 July 2

3 July 4

3 July 5

3 July 5-001

3 July 5-002

3 July 6

3 July 6-001

Red’s view:

2 July 9

Red the Mare:

3 July 10

3 July 12

I love this face. This is her every good girl deserves an apple face:

9 July 11

And talking of lovely faces:

3 July 14

3 July 15-001

The hill. Please note the BLUE SKY:

3 July 15

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