Sunday, 25 November 2018

Thieves steal a horse stable (Lincolnshire) and almost kill a horse.



We own horses and in the winter their grass and hay staple diet needs supplementing with extra food which typically will be sugar beet based and often that feed has to be watered down as if not it would swell-up in the horse's stomach and could prove fatal.

The BBC story (link is here) about these thieves stealing a stable (or field shelter may be more accurate) also involves the thieves ignorantly feeding a horse the above type of food without watering it down - so a potentially highly dangerous thing to do and forcing the poor horse and owner into urgently having a vet attend and give remedial intervention.

I do hope that the thieves are caught.

Friday, 16 November 2018

New baby (Hugo)



I am delighted to announce that my wife and I have a new grandson, Hugo, who was born, aged zero, on Wednesday November 14th. about a week later than expected. He is the third child of my daughter Rebecca and first with her new partner, Michael.

Sunday, 11 November 2018

100 years ago today (a poem to remind us).


The Poppy in our time

an impromptu poem

by Tim J Rhohn-Sayers

 



It took a hundred years to reach our conscience – to impress our mind.
We needed a symbol to focus on all the men and women left behind.
In the trenches, in the control towers, in the bunkers, wherever they strived
To make Britain free no matter how hard those Nazis contrived.

We flew, we marched, we protested, we appeased but still the onslaught.

In Flanders they saw, in fields, the bodies, the red, men fallen like petals.
Their blood flowing as rivers as the death trains arrive and Brookwood settles
The beauty we see in a field of red,
But not nowadays counting the dead.

Instead we count the waving, bright, garish stems of the deep red poppy.

The poppy, our symbol, the future, after the war to end all wars.
The poppy, afloat in our minds today as at eleven we all pause.
And reflect, remember and think of better things, our grandchildren (Poppy), our family our friends,
As we, in trivia, play with our phones, we tweet and observe the trends.

Refocus, lest we forget, it is thanks to those lost that we can waste our time
In such sweet inconsequential ways that are so sublime.

Thanks be the Poppy. Our past, our future, our time.



Thursday, 8 November 2018

Chas Sedge



Chas died, sadly, but peacefully, on 31st. October. He was the father of Mandy, in turn a member of a great family that we've been friends with for many years back down in Bedfordshire where we moved from almost fifteen years ago when we came to Lincolnshire.

Chas was a great musician, along with his daughter's partner, Colin and both have entertained us on many occasions. He died aged 93; a good age.

His funeral is next Thursday November 15th. when I will travel to Milton Keynes to pay my respects. Regrettably my wife cannot accompany me but Chas will be in her thoughts.

The Warner/Sedge family have had many challenging life-issues to face and rise to. Chas would be very happy to think that anyone attending his funeral or just caring people generally might honour his memory by donating to a very good cause: The DMD Trust. His grandson, Ollie (Oliver), Mandy & Colin's eldest son is a recipient of DMD (Duchenne Muscular Dystrophe).

Whether you may know the family or me or neither - please consider donating via Chas Sedge's memorial page to The DMD Trust - even a small amount to help achieve their memorial charity raising goal of £500. You can donate as little as a tenner which you won't miss if you let your hair grow longer like me (skip a visit to the hairdressers).

Here is the link to the donation page.

Thank you so much.

Tim J Rhohn-Sayers

PS I will be making an anonymous donation.

Update Friday November 16th.:

Yesterday I went to Chas's funeral in Milton Keynes. It was a non-religious beautifully accounted event when everyone could share in a celebration of his life - his long and musical life. I didn't realise that he had played for Tony Blair at a No 10 garden party. It was sad to see his electric guitar placed near his coffin though. Unfortunately as I was travelling by train and very time restricted I was unable to attend the wake afterwards but it was good to express condolences and show my respects to Chas. I thought that his dear wife, Daphne, who herself had been ill, looked really good under the circumstances, and she herself aged 90 (he died aged 93).




Wednesday, 7 November 2018

Goldfinches & Pheasants

Over the last year I have been conscientiously feeding the birds and ensure that I have Niger seed for the goldfinches. This new enthusiasm has paid great dividends in terms of frequent and interesting visitors. My wife snapped two goldfinches (through the kitchen window so not very clear) a couple of days a go and the snap is below:



Here is a link to the RSPB for more info (plus a video and sound of their calls).

Today we had two male pheasants eating the overflowed bird seed and I reckon that they were related as there was one smaller one and one large one, both males, but no aggression. Father & son maybe?

Monday, 5 November 2018

A story for Bonfire Night (as promised)



The short story below is unusual in that I do not, as a rule, publicise or post (as here) any of my written work - meaning stories, prose, even poems. Why? Well, I suppose that this is going to sound big-headed, but it's because I think my stories are worth stealing ... or at least some of the plots or ideas in them. - But I am also cocky enough to think that, oh well, if I lose one or two here and there - so what? I have a deep cavernous brain - there's more knocking around in there. The only worry is ... how long will my brain function well for? - And, of course, how long will I be around for at all?

OK - 'I takes me chances' ...

So here you are folks - a short story for Bonfire Night written over the last couple of days and vaguely edited, so this is, I guess maybe a second or third draft - so not a masterpiece but worthy of a read, I hope. It's actually L O N G for me as my short stories are normally around 1k to 2k words, but this is quite a bit more.

A footnote before you read and wonder about paragraphing: when copying and pasting from a WORD document into a Blog-post the line breaks disappear - so paragraphs look odd but I am too lazy to go through the (below) 3.5 k words to tidy it up - its the message that matters.

Happy reading:



The Last Bonfire Guest

By Tim J Rhohn-Sayers
(A short story in 3,687 words)



The damp twigs and leaves hissed with their delicate steamy vapour as the flames clung to life.
“We should have got more dry timber Harry. Give us a beer mate.”
Harry and John were both Australians and they met in The Outback when working at a sheep station twenty years ago. Now in their forties. they shared a grubby run-down Victorian terraced house in Fulham, London with three other Aussies. This was the only way they could survive financially in London. Only one of the five had a proper job; that was “Twiggy”, a skinny bloke from Melbourne who worked in I.T. the others got by as best they could in ‘the gig economy’ doing anything that came along.
“I wish the others could’ve come, don’t you?” said John, looking down at the dirt and ash by his feet.”
“Ah, here we go; girls – a load of ‘em by the looks of it.”
Harry always liked the girls – more than John – not that John was gay or anything but they were so different with John being so shy, still, even after years of ribbing in The Outback, still he wouldn’t say boo to a goose. They were good friends and always looked out for each other. This was the first time they’d ever been out in the countryside like this, miles from the metropolis, thanks to someone’s chance remark.
Harry had overheard someone at work saying that she was going to a bonfire party out in the sticks somewhere. He’d listened carefully. Sounded good, he thought. He knew the girl, Rachel, fairly well – even gone on a date with her once but it never went anywhere.
Harry was never lost for it; cheek, that is. He waited until he gleaned all the facts, thought about the date, Saturday November 5th., the location, bloody Lincolnshire – a place he knew nothing of but what he did like was the idea of camping out. He and John both had tents they’d crazily brought all the way from Oz – big buggers – they’d all fit in, and, with a bit of luck, Harry had thought. - So would a few girls too.
It was an old school friend of Rachel’s that was throwing this bonfire party. “Bring a few fireworks, some booze, a bit of tucker and a box of matches and the rest we’ll make up as we go along guys.” – That’s what Rachel’s friend, Mandy had said when agreeing to invite the boys from Oz. “The more the merrier. Just make sure that you can find the place. We’re like the outback, but up near a castle,” she said. Mandy was a good sport. They’d met her a couple of times before, in London, when she had been staying with Rachel but at heart Mandy was a country girl, grown up on a farm, watched all the animals doing it and she wasn’t’ afraid to say she liked the boys – all the boys and she wasn’t afraid to show ‘em either. She lived with a bloke, Tom, but they seemed to be more like roommates. – Lived in the same cottage, slept in the same bed, ate together but didn’t seem bothered if either went off with someone else occasionally.
As the flames grew stronger and higher, more guests appeared, all looking ‘dead cool’ and a real mixed bunch. Some sounded posh, well-spoken, well kitted-out, carrying spotless cool boxes, and those daft fold-up seats, like they were going to a forest concert or something. Others arrived smoking joints and carrying crates of beer, “fucking this and fucking that and fucking the other” – but nobody seemed to mind who was who or how they got there or who they were friends with. In fact, it was a lovely open and free atmosphere.
By now the Aussies were joined by a dozen strangers, but acting like friends and a few people actually bothered to introduce themselves – others sat slightly apart and chatting to their little band of bruvvers as there were certainly more fellas than girls – which might be a problem, Harry thought.
It was made clear to all guests that nobody got into the house, nobody was sleeping there and the only exception was to use the little attached but outside loo around the back of the sweet little thatched cottage. Oh, that was the other thing – no rockets – afraid that the thatch might go up, one supposes.
This place was called Harlaxton and, luckily for all concerned was near a main line station, Grantham, so nobody needed to worry about cars or driving, although a few cars did arrive, spilling out another five or six people, again, mostly blokes Suddenly the noise of a powerful motor bike was heard coming up the winding drive, but it turned out to be a trike and amazingly who was on it? Three bloody girls in leather. Harry was riveted and they weren’t half bad, he thought.
“John, see that – mine’s the blonde, yours can be the bloody ginger one.”
“Harry, that’s what’s called auburn, mate – she ain’t ginger.”
Out of the trike’s boot – yes it had a boot – came two cases of Stella.
The girls, all three of them, immediately sat next to Harry and John, with John edging away as the third girl sat partially on his right leg, he wondered whether intentionally. They were all on a rickety old bench which groaned and creaked and threatened to collapse at every slight movement.
The music started playing. It promised to be an evening of rock but then, after protests from a couple of young girls, some Radio One stuff started. The drinks were shared out unselfconsciously, regardless of who came with them and so John and Harry shared their Fosters around about but most declined, preferring, in most cases, something stronger. Even the few older people were drinking scotch like it was going out of fashion (which it had of course). People started getting up. A few danced garishly – others clinched seductively and nobody knew if they’d only just met but things were moving at a pace.
The headlights of a large car appeared down the nearby lane and then they shone towards the cottage as the car drew into the drive and the gravel gave out sudden noises like the sea rushing over shingle as it arrived just beyond the bonfire in the moon shadows of the overhanging trees.
“Bloody hell Harry, it’s a Rolls Royce – a new one.”
A large driver’s door opened and an immaculately turned-out chauffeuse, in scissor sharp pressed navy blue tightly fitted and pleated trousers and oddly wearing a bright red beret slid her slender, trousered legs out sideways. Her delicate ankles showing above, again, bright red, high-heeled shoes and Harry’s and even John’s eyes popped for a moment at this rather ‘stimulating’ sight.
Then, all eyes swivelled in the direction of the car’s rear door as it was swishly opened by the chauffeuse.
It turned out that this gleaming 16 plate ‘Roller’ was carrying the last guest to arrive at the party but we only knew that later, when we were discussing the events of that evening and overnight, 5th. and 6th. November 2016 and that was over brunch on the Sunday morning.
John returned to the tent after queueing for the small outside toilet. It was 10 a.m. and the smell of frying bacon hung in the air and conflicting sounds of variously tuned radios criss-crossed the misty atmosphere between the scattering of a dozen or so tents and a few campervans dotted about the large garden.
John had not noticed anything odd when he had slid out of the large 6-man tent en route to the loo. Harry was somewhere under a pile of coats and sleeping bags; well at least, so John thought. As he re-entered the tent a noise emitted from under the covers. It was human, certainly. Then very white flesh appeared in contrast against the damp grass in the corner of the tent. Delicate toes, slim, too slim to be Harry’s, emerged as the covers parted a little. Then part of the leg, still white-looking.
“Harry?” came from what was obviously a female human.
“No, it’s John. I don’t know where he is. I thought it was him under the covers.”
Her face, white neck and long brown hair appeared above the sleeping bag. She was beautiful, John thought. His mind was filled with thoughts of what Harry had got up to the previous night. He couldn’t even remember going to bed and certainly couldn’t remember Harry bringing someone ‘home’ – but where was he and who was she?
He made small-talk for a short while, made more awkward not having no clue as to who she was. – This was a ‘first’ for shy John and gradually he became aware that she was kind of saying that Harry had suggested that she use his sleeping bag and his corner of the tent – with me fast asleep – on the other side. – All very confusing. Still John wanted to know where Harry was. John found his mind wandering a little, wondering what, of anything, she was wearing underneath the sleeping bag. He could see enough of her to know that she wasn’t wearing a bra but she seemed relaxed and either had forgotten her lack of clothing or just didn’t care and he began to think of a third possibility which he found somewhat arousing, that she might be teasing him.
John sat, fully clothed on a little fold-up stool near the zipped-up tent entrance whilst she, still nameless, sat diagonally across from him. It was cold both inside and outside and she was now visibly shivering.
“I’m sorry it’s so cold for you – here have my sleeping bag as well.”
“No; I’ll get dressed.”
Those words resonated in John’s mind instantly. He thought that if she needed to get dressed that she must be … and he vaguely hoped for … un-dressed and before he could ponder a second longer she threw back the covers and tucked her long legs under her bottom and catapulted herself to full height which John assessed quickly as being approaching six foot but his gaze was lower down than her full height as she was, shockingly, near-naked, except for a bracelet and a skimpy pair of thong type pants. He was stunned at her uninhibited exhibition but then as she turned, he noticed too, a tattoo on her exposed buttock – a butterfly and some vague thoughts and recollections came fluttering back to him… but not enough.
Suddenly the tent zip opened and Harry’s face appeared in the opening.
“All OK here, guys and gals?”
The nameless girl grabbed a throw and pulled it across her body and bare breasts, in shame and John reflected on the fact that she was happy to be half-naked in front of him but not in front of Harry – further proof, as if he needed it, that it was he, not Harry who had slept with her last night, but he, infuriatingly, had zero recollection of any of it except the butterfly seemed teasingly to be triggering vague memories of something, but what exactly – he knew not.
Harry grinned broadly, not taking his eyes off the mystery girl.
“Well say something, somebody”, Harry added.
John was embarrassed for a host of reasons:
He had no idea who this girl was but he vaguely remembered her buttock butterfly from the night before – or was it the night before? – He wasn’t sure. He had no idea too, how Harry ended up sleeping somewhere else, where he’d been, with whom and what was presenting itself, that he’d slept with a stranger, with his shyness, was almost unthinkable. He did know that they’d all had a vast amount to drink and some had had more than alcohol too, but that wasn’t his style, or maybe he’d got carried away as well.
The whole thing was a serious test for his equilibrium – his well-being.
The silence was broken from an unlikely source.
“You must be Harry. I’m Rosalind Harper. You, Harry, at least, may recognise me.”
She stared at John as she spoke in a rather ticking-off manner. John felt even more stupid. He had slept with her and he didn’t recognise her or her name.
“I’m sorry Rosalind but I don’t. Why should I?” Harry looked awkward and John knew him so very well that he understood exactly why he felt uncomfortable. Harry had had a reputation with women for years and everyone knew what he was like. Harry simply feared that she was one of his forgotten conquests from way back. She wasn’t.
“You’re my brother.”
John knew that Harry had a long-lost sister; he’d spoken of her years ago but they hadn’t spoken or seen each other for almost a decade. He waited for Harry’s reaction to this bombshell.
“Then you’re Rosie, not Rosalind. What are you talking about?”
“I married a man called Harper and he hated the name, Rosie, so he renamed me Rosalind and then we called our brand leader perfume Rosalind. He’s gone but the name had to stay – so I am Rosalind – get used to it.”
Harry looked incredulous. For once in his life he was speechless. He had tears rolling down his cheeks. It was all too much. His sister turns up, after all these years but in ‘the bed’ of his shy best mate, John. - Too much to take in.
At last he summoned enough composure to speak. “Rosie, why now?”
There was not a moment’s hesitation when she burst out …
“Dad’s dead.” She said it in fury as if he had let her down by dying, rather than in grief.
John knew that Harry’s parents separated and then divorced years ago. His dad had returned to England in 2008 and his mother had remarried in Oz. His sister Rosie had gone with the father whereas Harry had stayed with his mum and later, step-dad. Harry hadn’t seen his father for years.
Harry wiped the tears from his face and asked “how did you and John …” He broke off, not knowing the words to use.
“How did we what?”
“End up in bed together – it’s not something John does.”
“Whatever gave you the idea that we slept together?”
“Well, it was obvious, wasn’t it? You were almost naked when I opened the tent zip.”
Rosalind laughed out of joy and ridicule of her brother. She knew what a ridiculous farce this situation had grown into but all she was thinking about right now was how honest she dared be, about herself, and her life as it was now.
“Let’s take this back a few notches, little brother …
… D’you recall a lovely purple Rolls Royce arriving late last night with two lovely women in it, when all the eyes swivelled from first the chauffeuse and then to the leggy woman that emerged from the rear seats?”
“Yes, of course I do - so?”
“Well”, she emphasised … “Little, think you’re so clever, brother – the leggy one was me, only you didn’t recognise me with my clothes off, did you?”
John stayed quiet, looking down at his feet, waiting for more from her.
“The girl driving was my girl. I mean my lover”. She laid heavy emphasis on the word, lover. “– Has been for three years now and we’re very happy, thank you. She looks after me … protects me … from men like you … and from …” She broke off. She had tears rolling down her left cheek and her voice was cracking.
“What’s wrong? What is it? – So why did you sleep with John?”
“I didn’t fucking sleep with him you juvenile idiot pervert – you just thought I did and even he seemed to think that I did”.
“After Dad died last week I’ve had so much to do – finding you – arranging for him – sorting our company out. I was at my wits end by the time we drove into this Godforsaken primitive backwater. I just hit the bottle last night – everyone here did – I was out of my brains – still am probably.”
“I still don’t get it Rosie – what made you sleep with him?”
“How many times do I have to tell you – I did not sleep with him.”
“You ended-up naked in our tent.”
“Half-naked maybe – not with him though – in the other sleeping bag. I slept the other side of the tent and when I ended-up in there it was with supposed to be with Butterfly – my wife-to-be.”
“What?” He elongated every sound of the word in sheer disbelief of her explanation.
“Butterfly is her pet name. She calls me Wasp – she has a wasp on her bum – I have a butterfly on mine. We’re in love, John – we’re getting married – you can come.”
John suppressed a near giggle at that whilst she wiped the tears now flowing from both eyes and she sniffled and clenched her eyelids together for a moment as she drew a deep sigh.
“When I fell asleep, well collapsed really I thought I was with Butterfly – she’s Elaine really but we always use our pet names. John won’t remember but he said as you weren’t there, he would get out and we could have the tent but Butterfly went and got him back and she said she’d sleep in the car – she’s an angel – selfless.”
Harry interrupted …
“What d’you mean we could have the tent. Does he know about you two? How?”
“Yes, he’s knows more than you do. I tried to contact you but he took the call on your phone – I don’t know where you were. He was supposed to tell you everything but then he phoned back and said he couldn’t do it. He didn’t want you to hear about dad from him – so he kept quiet and I knew I had to do it all – but yes – he knew about Elaine and I. He also knows about the money.”
“Money? What money – what are you talking about?”
“Never mind about that – I still can’t think how I didn’t realise that John was there in the tent – God knows what he must think of me – I just thought it was B under the other covers when I stood up – shit – bare tits – hell – poor man.”
“No, bloody lucky man.” – As soon as he said it – he knew it was a dreadful thing to say.
“Yes, that’s what I mean – she protects me against you filthy-minded male chauvinists – thank God.”
“Come on – what’s this about money?”
“Later … let me get dressed properly – oh here’s B.”
“Did you sleep OK sweetie? The car was a bit cramped even with the seat back but the mini-bar was useful for knocking me out, darling. – Morning … John … isn’t it or are you Harry?”
John thought that she looked as though she had just come from a high-class beauty salon – immaculate skin, perfect nails, eyes, make-up, no tired lines, clothes as though she had just bought them at Harrods, smelling sweetly too – no doubt wearing “Rosalind” perfume … John mused on. - Missing red beret though. He wondered why.
“Can we all have breakfast, please?” At least Butterfly was calm, sensible and not a drama-queen, John, thought.
The four of them wandered down to the bottom of the garden where a plume of steamy smoke suggested a breakfast barbecue was in full swing. They sat on two of the many blankets that were strewn around from last night’s activities. Wasp and Butterfly sat together, holding hands and John and Harry looked on slightly awkwardly.
Rosalind spoke first. “You better be nice to me. I have some news for you.” Harry just stared at her in resignation but he had no idea of what was coming, but John did and his slight smile gave a clue.
“Father had a small but very successful scent business that he’d started with our mum way back in Oz even before we came along.” Harry knew about it but he never knew much as his mother always seemed reluctant to discuss the business and that was because her husband had effectively stolen it from her when he moved to London and set-up home with a new woman.
“That small business turned into a leading fashion and perfume house and dad became a millionaire. Mum got nothing. You got nothing but I got invited into the business a few years ago and I promoted the perfume side, hence our leading brand “Rosalind” that you’ll see in all the best places from Harrods to Prada. I am rich, dad was rich and now little brother, so are you.”
“How?”
“There’s a trust set-up. You and even mum, get an allowance, every year.”
“How much?”
“A lot.”
John had stayed quiet all this time, chewing burnt bacon sandwich and he had had enough of all this protracted mystique. He interjected …
“You’re a bloody millionaire Harry – you get £500 k a year for two consecutive years. Your mum gets a lump sum of a million. Guilt money I would guess.”
This would prove to be a very memorable Guy Fawkes night after the last bonfire night guest fluttered by but there was a sting in the tail of this waspish tale …
Rosie got nothing. Her father had changed his will after Rosie had announced that she was marrying Elaine. He didn’t believe in gay marriage – or any marriage, really. He was a clever man though. He stated in his will that if she married a man within six months of his death, she would be entitled to a one-off payment of one million pounds, just like her mother.
Elaine and Rosie had a pact. They knew where they stood. Elaine would wait for Rosie to marry – a man, then divorce and then they could be together as spouses. and the dead father couldn’t do a thing about it.
The first move on this was with John, in the tent.
Three months later shy John and manipulative Rosalind married. Harry, mum, Elaine and another forty-five guests were there to witness the meeting of the conditions of the will.
The final twist?
They never divorced. Poor Butterfly.