Three of us and two small
dogs went to Biggin Hill today. As we drove we saw a stall selling
asparagus. Apparently it is in season now. Personally I wouldn't know
the first thing about asparagus. I'm told that it is well regarded in
posh circles. I shall consult "the Man with No Alias (patent
pending)" and get his august advice on the matter.
Once in Biggin Hill we
set off on a five mile guided walk. I say " five mile guided
walk" - regular readers of this drivel will know that it was
a series of geocaches. "Doris's Right Old Mixture"
was (and is) a series of twenty three caches through some
rather scenic countryside. Quite scenic views; some clever
geocaching. We found all the caches, and at the end of the walk was a
pub. Ideal for a pint to wash down our sandwiches. Because I'm polite
I asked if they minded us having our picnic in their garden with the
beer I was about to buy. The spotty young oik looked down his nose at
me as though I was something Fudge had just plopped onto his carpet
and patronisingly conceded that he couldn't stop us.
And they wonder why the
pub trade is dying on its arse.
It was only a short walk
back to the car. From there it was two minutes to Charles Darwin's
house. There is an Earthcache in the grounds of that place. An
Earthcache is a special type of geocache. In over two thousand finds
I've only found one of those. We thought we'd go for the Earthcache.
We arrived to find it was in an English Heritage site and that it
would cost us ten quid (each) to get near the Earthcache.
We didn't bother, Instead
we went for another series of geocaches; "Doris's Break Out".
Based in the general vicinity of Jail Lane, "Doris's Break
Out" is a series of seventeen caches along five more miles.
We failed on a few of these I'm sorry to say. Whilst out and about
we found ourselves at the back door of the gardens of Charles
Darwin's house. The gates were open and unsupervised. It would have
been really easy to have sneaked in, done the secret geocaching
ritual, and sneaked out again. I seriously considered it (for
about five seconds) but thought better of it. I shall go back at
some point and do the Earthcache properly and honestly.
And then - would you
believe it - I got kicked. By a horse. It &@*! hurt and still
does.
We were minding our
geocachical business, walking along a footpath. The footpath was
clearly marked, and our GPS-enabled ordnance survey maps confirmed we
were on a public right of way when a horse came up to me and kicked
me on the thigh. Hard. Fudge wasn't bothering the horse in any way,
nor was I. It was an unprovoked attack. The horse then seemed
determined to push on at me. I hollered obscenities at it; in
retrospect I wonder if I should have punched it. By now Fudge was
upset, and as Hurksy distracted the horse I bundled up Furry Face and
got him (and me) to safety.
When I got home I phoned
Kent Police to report the incident. I had taken accurate GPS
readings of the field where the incident happened and photographs of
the animal in question. The police made it clear that (like with
pretty much everything else) they weren't interested. I was under
the impression that the landowner had a duty of care to people using
the footpaths across his fields. For example one would not expect to
find tigers loose in a field traversed by a public right of way. And
by the same token if my small dog should playfully nip a child then
he would be put down. The police explained that dogs are (apparently)
unique in the animal kingdom in that the law expects them to be
controlled. All other animals are by definition wild and can do
whatever they like.
My piss boiled. And it
still boils. Let's be quite frank here. That horse is dangerous. If I
had I taken my grand-daughter caching today and if the horse had
struck her at the same level it struck me, the blow to the head
would probably have killed her. There is a horse loose in a field
near Biggin Hill that should be put down. The police have made it
clear that they don't want to know anything about it.
I might just go back
there with my cooking hammer. That should do the trick...
Regarding the Asparagus, yes it is in season. I recommend it served with Parma Ham and baked Camembert cheese.
ReplyDeleteI'm afraid I'm rather bereft of advice on the matter of the horse.