Bodacious: The Shepherd Cat. Suzanna Crampton
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Название: Bodacious: The Shepherd Cat

Автор: Suzanna Crampton

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Биографии и Мемуары

Серия:

isbn: 9780008275860

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ and would give me a stern look.

      As we crouched and watched rabbits move about, dining on our sheep’s grass, we hoped no hungry hunting buzzard would coast overhead and spot our rabbit prey before we could try to catch it ourselves. Whenever we chose a rabbit to catch, we separated so that we could come at the creature in a pincer movement. Oscar usually swung out at a trot low to the ground in a big circle away from me and to the other side of our selected rabbit. Once in position, he aimed at the selected rabbit, flicked his tail as a signal to me and started his cautious prowl, ears flat, one calculated light step at a time. The tiny tip of his tail came to life under his concentrated pressure and flicked back and forth. I started my approach towards the rabbit from the other side, with the same concentrated vigilance, cautious with each step I took. Gingerly I placed each paw to advance by increments. At such a slow pace it seemed to me that time stretched out, slower and slower and longer and longer. If the wind wafted just the right way and no bird squawked a warning cry, we could draw closer to the end game.

      In the beginning, before I learned properly, I would be the one to break first. Like the release from an over-wound spring, I would leap out from my low-crouched prowling stance to pounce. I’d bound through the gap that separated me from the rabbit. The rabbit would leap and twist in the air to evade me, most often fleeing directly towards Oscar, who had remained hidden in the long grass. He would leap into the air, claws full out, and bring down the rabbit, just like our lion cousins who dwell on the great plains of Africa. We would feast on scrumptious fresh rabbit and feel fat and lazy for days afterwards.

      I miss Oscar terribly now he is gone as, although I have finally got the hang of it, I can only do my rabbit hunting in spring, when the rabbits are young and foolish. I haven’t yet been able to train Miss Marley or Ovenmitt to hunt with such intelligent skill and cooperation as good old Oscar, although I hunt alone too, which, I have to admit, sometimes has its benefits.

      3

       Horses, Horses and More Horses

      I cannot begin to tell you how much The Shepherd loves horses, from her earliest days as a child on Black Sheep Farm to her cousins’ Maryland pony farm and to her schooldays, when she sought refuge from bullying by working at a local stable. There, she mucked out and cleaned the owners’ stables and gave riding lessons to beginners. In exchange for her work she was allowed to ride horses. Later, while at agricultural college in America, she would work with draught horses – sometimes known as cart horses – in Vermont; she would break and train Morgan horses, a popular American breed, in upstate New York, and later still, she would ride in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, which are so like our own Irish Blackstairs Mountains that we can see from our farm’s upper fields. Caring for and riding horses enabled her to develop and hone her skills at reading the unspoken language of the body that communicates across species, within herds and between prey and predator animals.

      Each species communicates among themselves using its own unique language. But with our body language we can cross-communicate between species. All humans must long ago have had the innate ability to read animal body language in order to survive, but lost that skill as they left the natural world further and further behind. I know that The Shepherd has an instinctive understanding of how to communicate with us, and she can work real magic with horses. In America, as her skills with animals grew, she became accomplished at schooling difficult horses. She would create a rapport calmly with the animal to motivate the horse to obey rather than to force it and she could sense how and when to nudge it gently to bring forth its abilities. She tells me that she would often lose herself in concentration while riding a young horse.

      When I first arrived at Black Sheep Farm, there was a mare who lived on the farm named Major Beth. She was a grey mare, half Connemara pony and half thoroughbred. She was tall enough at fifteen and a half human hands, or sixty-two inches. (For those of you who may not know, a horse’s height is measured from the bottom of the front hooves to the ‘withers’, which are at the base of the neck. Each hand measure is four inches – the average size of a man’s hand.) Major Beth was the first horse The Shepherd had ever owned outright. Previously she had just borrowed horses or owned only part of a horse.

      Last, but far from least, is the black pony, Marco Polo, who I also met when I first arrived at the farm. Like me, he has a fascinating rescue story that profoundly improved his life. Of course, I found many of us on our farm had had phenomenal escapes and rescues thanks to The Shepherd. Even when she was elsewhere, in the bustle of New York City during the 1980s when she was learning the ropes in the theatre, or later in London, she found herself drawn to animals. In London, she regularly exercised a beautiful bay thoroughbred gelding that lived at Kentish Town City Farm. The only drawback to this arrangement was having to ride the horse before 6.30 a.m. to avoid London’s rush-hour traffic, which would make the streets impassable for The Shepherd and her borrowed horse. The Shepherd would get up at 4 a.m. and walk from her flat in South Hill Park and then walk across Hampstead Heath to the City Farm. After unlocking the farm gate she would tack up the horse and ride along quiet London streets back up to Hampstead Heath.

      One of her most memorable rides, she tells me, took place on a chilly, foggy autumnal morning. As she rode from the farm gates, the horse’s hooves clip-clopped in muffled echoes as they moved along mist-shrouded streets. The fog eddied and flowed around and over them as if they waded through streaming liquid. Traffic lights appeared as dimly coloured glows through silver mist that slowly brightened as she drew nearer. The few early cars out and about drove slowly and cautiously.

      When they arrived at Hampstead Heath, horse and rider entered a fairyland, as the heath’s trees, clothed in autumn reds and golden yellows fringed with faded greens and dark browns, were veiled in shrouds of mist. They moved into the park’s obscure stillness at a brisk trot and as they did so, they heard a bagpipe faintly humming in the distance. When they came to the spot where they always began to canter up the centre of the park, The Shepherd squeezed her legs to ask the horse to gallop. They flew up the hill, hoof beats now a muted clatter on the path, mist swirling about both horse and rider. Both invigorated by their speed uphill and across open land, they penetrated a dark stand of forest. The far-off bagpipe grew louder, so they slowed to a collected canter. Suddenly they emerged from the dark wood into a small glade, mist swirling around them. They surprised the man who played his bagpipes. He had obviously chosen this woodland glade in which to practise as it was as far away as he could get from sleeping Londoners. The horse smoothly rocked the rider back and forth, very slowly prancing at the canter. He almost danced to the bagpiper’s marching tune, waited for the music to change to martial and readied himself for a cavalry charge towards enemies hidden among the wooded glade’s mist-shrouded trees. The piper played on and bowed his head to acknowledge a unique shared moment with horse and rider. He probably had not heard the galloping hooves over the musical sounds of his humming pipes. As The Shepherd rode back to the City Farm, she felt exuberant and recharged by her exceptional early morning adventure. She thrived on that day’s thrills for months afterwards.

      Returning to Marco Polo, The Shepherd had put the word out that she was looking for a companion animal for Major Beth. A friend got in touch with her and said he might have the perfect companion, a nice-looking small black Welsh Mountain pony. The only problem was that he was still a stallion. Just a few weeks earlier our pony’s rescuer, a farmer who lived on a less-travelled road – let’s call him the Gentle Man, as he would be embarrassed if we drew more attention to him – had noticed him, small and hungry, wandering the roads wearily and grazing edges and hedges. One day, as he passed the place where the pony usually nibbled, he saw a group of men trying to catch him. They tried to corner him but he always escaped at a fast gallop, head low, so no thrown rope could catch him, with a buck and a swish of his tail. Our Gentle Man was amused and secretly hoped the wee pony would continue to escape, since he knew from their distinctive overalls where those men worked. The meat factory just СКАЧАТЬ