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Posts archive for: 24 May, 2007
  • Of Birds And Fings

    Good Evening.
    It has been a lovely day today. The sun's been out and the birds doing what birds do best. Squawking, cooing down my chimney, pooping on my car and generally really getting 'up my nose.' Only joking you bird lovers. I rather like birds actually but then you will already have gathered that.

    The only bird I have a grievance against though are pigeons! they have been the farmers bane since crop husbandry was in it's infancy. Hey! that was posh? Were you impressed? Anyway I detract. Attacking crops in their thousands throughout the winter and leaving fields of 'Oilseed Rape' almost bare. It seems now though that some farmers are making a fortune, capturing the little varmints alive and exporting them.

    Sales of pigeons to Sweden have reached an all-time high, due to environmental concerns and the fact that they are now bred to imitate an increasing number of ringtones. A survey last month revealed that pigeon sales have now outstripped sales of mobile phones for the first time in 150 years.

    A spokesbird for the International Pigeon Federation was reported in last Monday's Times as saying, "Coo, coo, coo, coo, coo-coo, coo." However, he later claimed he was misquoted.

  • Well It's Worth Thinking About

    The major difference between a thing that might go wrong and a thing that cannot possibly go wrong,
    is that when a thing that cannot possibly go wrong goes wrong it usually turns out to be impossible to get at or repair.

    There is a theory which states that if ever anybody discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable.
    There is another theory which states that this has already happened.

    In the beginning the Universe was created. This has made a lot of the PC brigade very angry and they widely regard it as a bad move.

  • John Wayne, Eat Ya Heart Out

    Tonight, I have been running, coughing wheezing and cursing, around the countryside, trying to catch one of my next door neighbour's Exmoor ponies. The little fat creature was feasting on our wheat. After puffing and panting my way around and around a twenty acre field, going arse over tit several times in the dark we eventually corner and recapture the beast. My initial thoughts were that the only fit place for all equines was in a tin, to serve up to Baxter for his tea but then I got to thinking. Why are there so many more horses about now than there were even five years ago? This needs investigating. So where to start? The pub of course.

    The general consensus seems to be that spiralling fuel costs and environmental concerns have led to a resurgence of the horse-drawn horse . Formerly the playthings of the aspiring middle-classes, who dress them up in bows at weekends and ponce around at gymkhanas, the horse is once again becoming a common sight on our roads.

    They are cheaper to run than cars, being fed mostly on a diet of leftovers, the occasional sugar lump and their own dung. Four legs - one at each corner for stability - means they have a considerable speed advantage over ducks. And since science has consistently failed to deliver the flying cars and personal jetpacks they've been promising since the fifties, it looks like the horse will set the standard for transport in the future.

    But gone is the traditional image of the mangy, fly-blown creature of yesteryear. Today's horses are sleeker, faster and more aerodynamic than their ancestors. There are already a number of colours and models available, from the compact and nippy pony, to the more spacious stallion, which is ideal for larger families. And most of them come with driver's airbag and CD player fitted as standard.

    However, the increasing desirability of the horse has presented a new target for teenage joyriders, and horse theft is now a serious problem in many inner city areas. Sometimes the animals are stolen to order, in which case it is the larger, deluxe animals that are at risk. But opportunists will target the cheaper models - horses that are easily broken into, left unlocked or gullible enough to be led away on the promise of a carrot.

    One young offender explained why he does it.

    "It's the crack, innit mate. Horses is dark. You wanna look cool, you and the rude boys gotta jack a pony, and tear up the hood before the Babylon come knocking on your gates."

    I didn't have a f***ing clue what he was talking about, so I asked Inspector Willie of Bedfordshire Police why young kids found horses so attractive.

    "I think it's their sleek, muscular shoulders, their musky smell and their large yet surprisingly pert bottoms. Well, that's why I like them."

    Fearing that Inspector Willie had misunderstood, I tried to clarify my question by asking him why young kids found stealing horses so attractive.

    "Well, for the same reasons really," he explained. "And also I think it's their way of rebelling against the establishment. Most of these kids come from deprived homes. Some of them, for instance, don't even have a surround sound TV, or a Playstation 2. So when they see a nice new horsey sitting in someone's drive, they feel angry and confused."

    And so they steal it?

    "And so they steal it," Inspector Willie confirms. "As any normal, decent human being would in those circumstances. I feel really sorry for these kids, although I do recognise that they are causing a problem. They will take a horse and tear round the streets doing handbrake turns and wheelies, causing considerable concern to the residents. A lot of the time we are able to recover the animal, although more often than not we find it in a sorry state. Sometimes it's just the saddle that has been slashed. On other occasions we may find it up on bricks with its feet missing, or in extreme cases it may be just a burnt out skeleton at the side of the road. The trouble is, we simply don't have the resources or the manpower to stop it." " I don't mind if I do. A pint will do nicely. Thanks.

    The police may be unable to do anything about the problem, but the good news is that there is something you can do. Odell-based company Secure-O-Horse is offering a number of security options to prevent your precious nag from falling victim to horse thieves. Currently on offer are a range of alarms, rein-locks and tracking devices - and the company hopes to have a set of fetlock clamps on the market in time for Christmas. There you go Normal! An idea for the wifes stocking.

    Cheers me dears

    Funky

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