Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts

Saturday, July 11, 2020

Hot New Release! Turn Right at the Sarcophagus



July 7 2020

Hot off the e-press!

Turn Right At The Sarcophagus: An Egyptian Adventure is my latest travel adventure e-book. It's already a #1 New Release in Egypt travel!


This one isn't just a book about horses. But horses are a reason I ended up in Egypt. If you're a horse lover or a travel fanatic, this travelogue taken from my journals of my first trip to Egypt will give you a little entertaining taste of both. 

You'll meet Maryanne (many of you know her!) and her zany, entertaining animals, ride horses in the countryside, visit the Giza Pyramids and the Khan Al-Khalili market, explore the backroads of Giza, tour the Sinai, climb Mount Sinai and wake up uner Mount Sinai in a Bedouin camp, and gallop a horse through the desert around pyramids.

The print book should be out August 10.

Happy armchair travel-reading!




Friday, January 11, 2019

Story Behind the Photo: Borcan in Egypt


January 11 2019

Yes. That view #BetweenTheEars of my mount, the magnificent blustery white stallion Borcan, is in Egypt - the Step Pyramid in Saqqara. He was the puffiest beautifulest blowhardiest windbag, whose biggest worry was to look magnificent for the fillies who weren't looking at him.

Those ride in the desert among Pyramids on my equine companions were simply magical. I've had the pleasure of visiting Maryanne in Egypt twice.

I'll have a book coming out later this year on one of those trips.

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Happy Trails, My Friend

 
Wednesday July 30 2013

He cut a dashing figure, astride a horse beneath the pyramids of Egypt. He loved to ride, he loved to share the trails, and he loved to share his horses.

“It was obvious that Borcan - the blustery, formidable, woman-hating, breast-biting white stallion - loved Paul, and Paul definitely doted on this blusterball - and in fact all of his horses,” I wrote in Chapter 15: My King in my book Soul Deep in Horses.

“Norwegian Paul was one of the happiest middle-aged little boys I had ever had the pleasure to know. His wife was the Norwegian ambassador to Ethiopia, and while she was away, Paul played with his beloved horses. Just ask one little question about his kids - his horses - and his eyes widened and sparkled like sapphires and his face beamed with proud delight. Pull up a chair on his porch, above his stables, and he'll serve you a great cup of Ethiopian coffee (or a good cold beer), and instead of pulling out his wallet and dropping an accordion sheet of photos, he will point to his horses in the paddocks below and tick off their accomplishments as proudly as a father giving you a blow by blow of his kids' soccer games."

I wrote of riding Paul’s blustery stallion Borcan in the Egyptian desert, and of riding his rocketship Raad, one of the most thrilling and the utterly fastest, horse rides of my life.

“She got it right!” he wrote, reviewing Soul Deep in Horses. “Being the happy owner of two of the horses featured in this book, I have to applaud her take on horses who love people who love horses! She gets it terrifically right! Thank you Merri!” I could see his face beaming as he read the stories then wrote these words.

I’m glad Paul got to see his much-loved Borcan and Raad ‘immortalized’ in the pages of my book.  I’m glad he knew how much those rides meant to me.

I’d always figured on seeing him again and having more riding adventures with him next time I visit Maryanne in Egypt. But he left us unexpectedly, far too soon.

I have another tale or two to tell of riding Paul’s horses. I’m sorry he won’t read my stories about his beloved Prince. But somehow, I think he will still know, and I think he’ll be beaming, his eyes twinkling again, delighted with shared appreciation and mutual love for his horses.

And I know he’s already busy up there, riding new horses, finding new trails, telling entertaining horse stories to those who come to join him.

Farewell and Happy Trails, Paul, I’ll ride with you again one day over those new trails.

Friday, May 2, 2014

My Rocket Ship: She Got It Right!

Friday May 2 2014

So says one of the 5-star Amazon reviews for my book, Soul Deep in Horses: Memoir of an Equestrian Vagabond. "She Got It Right!" This review just happens to come from Paul Thoresen in Egypt, whose 2 fabulous horses, Borcan and Raad, are featured in two of the chapters in my book.

I recently posted a snippet of My King: Borcan. (Paul says Borcan "is now the old man of the club, trying to show a little more dignity in public.")

Here is a snippet from My Rocketship - starring Paul's other stallion, Raad (who, Paul reports, is producing offspring just like him!):

Paul turned Raad loose and let him run through the Egyptian desert, heading toward the distant speck. I let Prince do as he wished, which was a hand gallop. He was no longer interested in trying to catch that gray lightning bolt, probably because it was a lost cause. Prince was quick on his feet, but he wasn’t that fast. Where once I’d been afraid to gallop, I felt quite safe on Prince. What Prince was doing with me seemed so . . . tame compared to Raad. Watching Raad shoot away put a whole new perspective on galloping a horse.
Eventually Prince and I caught up with Jeannie and Katir, who had slowed to a walk, and together we watched Raad and Paul continue running, bearing off to the right, still at a dead run, making a huge arc out in the wide open desert, eventually coming back around full circle to join up with us again.
Raad slowed down as he approached us. I thought Paul’s trajectory had been for fun, but in fact, he hadn’t been arcing on a whim.
“This! (pant!) . . .” “Horse! (pant!) . . .” “Is! (pant!) . . .” “SO STRONG!” Paul gasped. “I couldn’t steer him!”
I thought he was kidding. Paul was a good rider, and he rode his horses on a light rein, whomever he was riding or however fast he was going. He’d given me some pointers on how to ride “light” - but it usually didn’t work for me. I still had a lot to learn about riding, although I was delighting in the fact that, finally, I loved, loved to gallop out here in the Egyptian desert because I wasn’t afraid to do it anymore.
Paul shook his head in utter bliss, his eyes gleaming. “That’s the Akhal-teke in him. They are so strong - and strong minded - they don’t bloody listen!” he said with unmistakable pride in his voice. But then, Paul so loved all his horses, anything they did just tickled him.
I was glad I wasn’t riding Raad; if Paul couldn’t control him, I’d have had no chance in holding him back.
Paul turned to me. “You want to try him?”
My eyes widened. Too strong for Paul? Can’t steer him? Can’t pull him up?
“Yeah!”
We hopped off our horses, adjusted the stirrups, and I climbed on the big gray powerful tank of horseflesh.
We gathered our reins, Paul said, “Hah, Prince!” and Prince leaped to a canter. And I was—
GONE. . .










"My Rocketship" is a wild ride in my book Soul Deep in Horses. I'll be featuring tidbits from my book on this blog from time to time. You can get the book as soft cover or ebook on Amazon.com here, or autographed copies are available on my website: www.TheEquestrianVagabond.com.

Friday, April 18, 2014

My King: Borcan


Saturday April 19 2014

I couldn't wait for our ride among the Pyramids in Egypt… until I learned I'd be riding Borcan:

Borcan, the blustery, formidable, woman-hating, breast-biting ("He's bitten three breasts so far," owner Paul declared adoringly) white stallion, who lunged at anybody, mouth wide open and teeth bared, who walked by his paddock. 

The Breast Biter himself was already tacked up and standing at his paddock fence, with his lips peeled back to expose his enormous nine-year-old teeth, which were grabbing one of his reins and clamping down tightly, grinding the rubber till it squeaked in protest, exhibiting what he'd do to me if he managed to get a hold of my breast.
  

Was it too late to back out of riding? Surely, I reasoned, Paul would not put me on a horse that would hurt me. And I really wanted to ride in the desert... 

Once I had mounted, how silly it was of me to think that Borcan would stand still and wait for the others - that was far beneath his Great White Dignity. Oh, no, it was time for the Great White Peacock Parade down the long drive. Neck bowed, white mane billowing, Borcan consented to a walk, but only so everybody could get a very long look at his magnificence. He strutted, he waltzed, he erupted with absolute equine masculinity. 

And there you have it - against my better judgement, I had already fallen for him. He was such a blustery show off, but he was simply magnificently breathtaking...

"My King" is one of my favorite chapters in my book Soul Deep in Horses. I'll be featuring tidbits from my book on this blog from time to time.

You can get the book as soft cover or ebook on Amazon.com here, or autographed copies will be available starting Monday on my website: www.TheEquestrianVagabond.com.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Egypt: The Carriage Horse



I. Carriage Horse - Egypt

Morad called and said he had a surprise for us. "Come to my house!"

Maryanne and I walked on the trails between the fields of berseem to Morad's house. Four of Maryanne's dogs came along and ignored us, running amuck, chasing chickens, and barking at gamoosas. One dog fell in one of those black water canals, and scrambled out dripping and slimy. She proudly presented herself to us, and we ran away from her screeching as she shook the canal goobers all over us.

Morad had talked about buying a horse carriage, and now, here was one parked in front of his house, with the owner-driver, and an attached horse. The dogs barked at the suspicious contraption.

"Get in!" Morad said. "He'll take you for a drive."

Maryanne and I and 3 of the dogs (sans the slimed one) climbed in the charming yellow two-seater covered carriage; and the gorgeous little black stallion in harness took us on a twenty minute ride around the village of Abu Sir. He knew his job and he did it with purpose and power, stepping along smartly, throwing his weight into the harness when he had to pull us over bumps in the road, or when he had to pull the carriage from a stop. The carriage driver did not use a whip, but only his voice and light hands on the reins, to communicate with the horse. People who knew Maryanne waved and called to her from the doorways of their huts. She answered them in Arabic. I felt rather special, riding beside Maryanne, in a lovely carriage pulled by a beautiful horse, a sight not often seen in this village.

Though he was a 'baladi' stallion - an unpapered country-bred lowly beast from a poor neighborhood - there was no mistaking he was a proud horse, carrying himself gracefully, graciously: generations of indisputable desert royalty flowed beneath his roughened hide. We could have been Queens in Egypt the way he nobly pulled us and his carriage along.

Returning to Morad’s house, we climbed out of the carriage. I walked up to the little black stallion to thank him for the ride. He had a hideous raw spot on his face where a previous nose strap had rubbed a big open sore; at least this bridle didn’t have a noseband. I ached for him, but his proud eyes acknowledged no wound, nor my pity.

I looked back over my shoulder at him as we walked away.

He stood quietly, patiently, awaiting his next job with dignity.


II. Cart Horse - Egypt

Driving in the backstreets of Cairo, we turned off the main road, onto a path lined with trash and rock rubble.

Blocking the road was an emaciated gray horse hitched to an appallingly heavy and overloaded cart full of boulders. His front knees were so crippled they hadn't approached straightened in years. My heart felt ripped in two. I couldn’t look, but I could not peel my eyes away.

The cart driver took his sweet time, throwing one rock at a time off the cart, while the old horse stood bent, unmoving, as if a part of his load, petrified to stone.

Four men came to help dump the rest of the cart-load over. It was so heavy they almost couldn't do it. The horse felt the pull of the cart on his harness, and as he was taught, he braced against it, but as the cart tipped over, the heavy load jerked him cruelly backwards, almost dropping him in his traces. I flinched in the car. I could almost hear his moans of pain.

Then the horse was asked to pull the cart back upright. He threw his crippled legs and withered body forward into the harness like he was told, straining, struggling, finally pulling it upright, where it settled shuddering onto its four wheels and yanked him backwards again. He barely kept his feet, and stood there trembling.

His eyes were dull, his head drooped, and those legs - those crippled legs bent over at the knee as if he were about to kneel before his Savior - cried in agony.

The man stepped in the cart and snapped the reins.

The horse limped onward, back to work.