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Equine Elegance

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As Sir Despard Wragg knows Barb is easier to handle with blinders on...
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She wasn't too pleased when the nipple rings with bells dangling from her nipples but local ordinances require all livestock pulling carts have bells. She wondered why they could not have been attached to her harness. Where is the fun in that???
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And the tail she hoped to get if she had to have one...
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...compared to the one she got...
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Tree

This thread isn't 'weird' at all! :)

It is a perfectly logical exploration of the ways to keep troublesome fillies under control! :D

NOW you got me hooked! :cool:

:popcorn:
 
If you don't have dreams you have nothing to strive for...

Tree


Had I the heavens’ embroidered cloths,
Enwrought with golden and silver light,
The blue and the dim and the dark cloths
Of night and light and the half light,
I would spread the cloths under your feet:
But I, being poor, have only my dreams;
I have spread my dreams under your feet;
Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.

W.B Yeats (Aedh Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven)
 
Ceratinly a cut above doing the mucking out Barb. As a strapper you would be seen and Pp is sure those nicely tapered legs and that tight little would soon see you selected for the potential you show.
The challenge would be that rebellious streak. No doubt prestige ponygirls are highly strung but rebelliousness is not tolerated even in them.
Then, she would just need to be 'broken in'.
 
I think it's time to initiate the men here into an interesting part of my Scottish heritage :devil:

The Society of the Horseman's Word was a fraternal secret society that operated in Scotland from the eighteenth through to the twentieth century. Its members were drawn from those who worked with horses, including horse trainers, blacksmiths and ploughmen, and involved the teaching of magical rituals designed to provide the practitioner with the ability to control both horses and women. :devil: It also acted as a form of trade union, aiming to gain better rights for its members.

The initiation rituals into the society incorporated a number of elements such as reading passages from the Biblebackwards, and the secrets included Masonic-style oaths, gestures, passwords and handshakes. Like the similar societies of the Miller's Word and the Toadsmen, they were believed to have practiced witchcraft. In East Anglia, horsemen with these powers were sometimes called Horse Witches.

The Word
After the candidate completed the initiation ceremony he was then given a word that was supposed to give him power over horses. So aside from being a secret society "The Horseman’s Word" was actually a spoken word. This secret word, which varied by location, was said to have magical and mystical qualities which would allow the keeper of the word to possess the ability by merely whispering it to bring horses under their complete control. Apart from gaining knowledge of the secret word more practical information and techniques about controlling and training horses was also passed on to members of the society. These methods were kept secret and done in such a way that the horseman maintained their reputation as having unique and even magical power over horses.

(and women? :devil:)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society_of_the_Horseman's_Word
 
The Society of the Horseman's Word ........... the teaching of magical rituals designed to provide the practitioner with the ability to control both horses and women.
Pp's early experiences with working horses and more recent experiences here would confirm that managing both has so much in common.
A good horseman controls a well-trained horse with the gentlest of touches of voice, hand, knee and heel together with the slightest shifts of weight.
 
I think it's time to initiate the men here into an interesting part of my Scottish heritage :devil:

The Society of the Horseman's Word was a fraternal secret society that operated in Scotland from the eighteenth through to the twentieth century. Its members were drawn from those who worked with horses, including horse trainers, blacksmiths and ploughmen, and involved the teaching of magical rituals designed to provide the practitioner with the ability to control both horses and women. :devil: It also acted as a form of trade union, aiming to gain better rights for its members.

The initiation rituals into the society incorporated a number of elements such as reading passages from the Biblebackwards, and the secrets included Masonic-style oaths, gestures, passwords and handshakes. Like the similar societies of the Miller's Word and the Toadsmen, they were believed to have practiced witchcraft. In East Anglia, horsemen with these powers were sometimes called Horse Witches.

The Word
After the candidate completed the initiation ceremony he was then given a word that was supposed to give him power over horses. So aside from being a secret society "The Horseman’s Word" was actually a spoken word. This secret word, which varied by location, was said to have magical and mystical qualities which would allow the keeper of the word to possess the ability by merely whispering it to bring horses under their complete control. Apart from gaining knowledge of the secret word more practical information and techniques about controlling and training horses was also passed on to members of the society. These methods were kept secret and done in such a way that the horseman maintained their reputation as having unique and even magical power over horses.

(and women? :devil:)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society_of_the_Horseman's_Word
Very interesting Eulalia - no, I am serious. Your profound erudition makes me even more curious about your role in the Northern Forest. You are too young to be Kitty and she is the only real person I have met from the NF, apart from Mrs C who was born in Annan which is a bit too far east.
 
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