As I write, it’s midday on Sunday, the sky is a clear blue as far as the eye can see and the sun is bringing out the crocuses and daffodils in the front garden. A perfect time to go for a walk. Except it’s 2 degrees C out there with an icy wind. My crazy husband is out on a bike ride with the club, but I’m waiting a couple of hours for those predicted extra couple of degrees! So, I’ve put on the Prime Chill album, made a cup of 3 Mint tea and thought I would show you some pictures of last week’s walk on a similar day, when I went up to what used to be the horses’ field.
Not that long ago, I used to go regularly to see the permanent residents of this field, Dolly and Annie, two working carriage horses. Dolly was a black heavy, plodding mare who was so quiet and friendly. Annie was a tall chestnut and very temperamental. She was a bully and any other temporary residents were given short shrift, including the foals, often receiving a nip or a kick to let them know their place in the scheme of things. She was quite haughty, looking and behaving more like a thoroughbred. She would always push herself forward for any treats and I often had to distract her so that I could sneak some apple or carrot to Dolly or the foals. But they both allowed me to befriend them and would make their way over from the far corner of the field as soon as I approached, Dolly plodding over in her slow, lumbering fashion, Annie skittish and tossing her tail.


I was privileged to witness one of Dolly’s foals being born, a really ugly little thing with a huge head, but he was so friendly and funny. Annie had a much more elegant-looking long-legged foal not long after and some months later, on a beautiful summer evening, I stood and watched as first Dolly’s foal started racing around the perimeter of the field, then Annie’s foal joined in. Annie was not impressed and tried to put a stop to it, but then Dolly got the itch and began charging around after the excited foals, pounding the ground with her heavy feet, and before long, Annie had to join in the fun. I’ve never witnessed anything like it. Four horses careering around the field at full gallop, round and round, uninhibited, kicking up their legs every so often with the sheer freedom and fun of it all. Oh, to move with such joyful abandon in the fresh summer air under an endlessly clear sky!
Now, sadly, the field lies abandoned. The local authority wants to build a supermarket, petrol station and housing, by a busy roundabout in a residential area at the entrance to the town. Of course there has been a huge outcry and everything has been up in the air for a few years.

This gnarly old tree used to be the only shade for up to 6 horses, next to a pond that gradually shrank over the years. Now the tree has apparently been struck by lightning, cleaved in two. It wasn’t an ideal situation for the horses: in summer it was completely overgrown with tall thistles and nettles, in Spring and Autumn, it was a boggy quagmire around the perimeter with all the rain. But it was a large space, with a right of way for walkers, who would bring treats as they passed through. I loved taking my young grandchildren there: they, too, saw the baby foal within minutes of its birth. It was a special time. We were on a nature walk at the time, I had given them a list of things to look out for. We had spotted guard-dog geese, a pair of swans with their cygnets, collected feathers, but this was truly a gem.

On my most recent walk, I spotted these gates further up the road on the opposite side to the field:

I don’t know how many hundreds of times we have driven past, or the dozens of times I’ve walked past, but I have never noticed them before. I was always looking over the road for the horses. They are beautiful iron gates with metal flower ornamentation.
When I arrived home, a little sad and angry at what I had found by the field (see next Monday), I came through our gate and smiled. I saw the first real signs of Spring:
The daffodil had been proudly standing in bud since early January, the only one to be in such a hurry, and I thought it would be sure to get caught by the frosts, but has withstood everything the elements have thrown at it: frost, hail, rain, snow and icy winds, and now it was fully open. And there, too, was the first forsythia flower, a sign I always look for tell me that Spring is really very close.
And now the outdoors calls again, the sun couldn’t be brighter: it’s bouncing off windows and cars. Incredibly, we are forecast snow on Tuesday! Have a wonderful week, we are confined to barracks having the parquet flooring in the hallway refurbished, pictures soon.

Copyright: Chris McGowan
Great post. And that is the most stunning iron gate I’ve ever seen. There’s something magical about it.
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Thank you, and yes, I was drawn to it and stood admiring it and touching it until I felt sure the owners would come out wondering if I was stalking them or something 😄
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I’ve had that happen to me, too. I admired a purple house in my neighborhood so many times, finally the owners came out and asked what I was doing there.
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😄💜
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How special that you could see the horses on your walk. My dad always had horses on the ranch. They are such special animals. Sorry they are no longer there for you to see. I hope they do something special with the property.
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I can’t understand how I missed this post this morning. Never mind, I’m here now and what an interesting story! What a precious moment to watch horses galloping around like that – never mind getting to watch the foals being born! Its utterly sad that it will all change to make way for the ugliness (sorry, but its just so wrong) of modern society. Little pockets of nature are like goldust these days. Thanks for sharing 🙂
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I was talking to a former neighbour who has lived here all her life and knows everyone, about the fact that every green space bar one has been built on, if you want to go for a walk on grass or among trees now you have to get in the car first. The only reason they haven’t built on the one left is that it was left in trust for the specific purpose of sporting activity for the people of the town and it is marked out as football pitches and a small play area for young children, but of course everyone walks their dog there!
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What a great walking course with so many wonderful things to see. Isn’t it amazing how you can still spot new things along the way that you never noticed before? I usually wait for those few extra degrees of warmth in the afternoon to take my walks, too. Enjoyed the thrill of the horses kicking up their heels and running freely. 🙂
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I didn’t realise I was going to write so much about the horses! 😊
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