7 Reasons

Tag: horses

  • 7 Reasons to Replace the Horse With the Cow

    7 Reasons to Replace the Horse With the Cow

    Great news from Germany!  The horse is obsolete.  A fifteen year old girl has trained a cow to show-jump because her parents refused to buy her a horse.  At 7 Reasons, we love this sort of defiant ingenuity so, in honour of the quite brilliant Regina Meyer, here are seven reasons to replace the horse with the cow.

    A no horse riding road (traffic) sign

    1.  The Grand National.  Or, The Festival of Horse-Death – as it’s called in my house – with its high fences and terrifying leaps is dangerous for both riders and horses.  If we replaced the horses with cows though, imagine how much better it would be.  Would cows even attempt to hurdle over Canal Turn or Becher’s Brook?  No, of course they wouldn’t, they’d just amble round them, perhaps pausing to nibble at the racecourse (or grass, as it’s known to laymen).  There’d be no injuries to jockeys, no innocent animals would be shot and there’d be fresh milk for everyone at the finish.  Or – if the race had been ridden at a quick pace – milkshakes.  Even if cows did get injured and required shooting it would still be better.  If you shoot a horse, you get a dead horse.  If you shoot a cow, you get a nice sofa or a handbag.  Or a steak.

     

    2.  Food.  Strange as it may seem, there are people out there that eat horses.  They’re called The French.  But French cuisine is awful.  After all, if it was any good, French chefs would stay there and cook it, wouldn’t they?  But they don’t, they’re all over here in Britain, cooking food that doesn’t contain horses; making hors d’oeuvres rather than horse d’oeuvres.  Is France teeming with British chefs?  No.  That’s because horseless cuisine is better and they want to stay.  If France replaced the horse with the cow, their chefs wouldn’t leave in their droves.

     

    3.  Milk.  The phrase, “get off your horse and drink your milk”, is often attributed to John Wayne.  But if we were to follow Wayne’s suggestion, and get off our horse and drink our milk, we’d still have to find a cow because drinking horse-milk would just be weird.  And would you fancy trying to milk a horse?  I certainly wouldn’t.  So if you had a horse, you’d still need a cow.  If you rode a cow though, you’d only need one animal – your cow – and rather than getting off it to drink your milk, you could probably construct some sort of straw/hose milking-device to deliver your beverage to you in situ.  Call yourself a cowboy, John Wayne?  Too bloody right you were.

     

    4.  Society.  Cows aren’t horses.  They aren’t evil, terrifying, flighty and they don’t chase me round the dining room in my dreams.  The world would just be a nicer place with fewer horses.  What happens in a society where there are lots of horses?  I’ll tell you.  The streets of Edwardian Britain were riddled with the infernal beasts running amok, terrorising women in corsets and babies in perambulators just because they’d heard a backfiring omnibus or been startled by an oncoming charabang.  Would cows have reacted in such a dangerous fashion?  Nay.

     

    5.  The Future.  You can predict future events just by looking at animals.  If you look at a horse, you can tell that something bad will happen, and if you see a cow, you can apparently tell what the weather will be, just by whether it’s sitting-down or standing-up.  And there’s an old piece of country wisdom which goes, “pink cow at night, Angel Delight”.  Cows tell you stuff about the future and horses just give you the heebie-geebies.

     

    6.  India.  In India, cows are sacred and roam free and many drivers will swerve into almost anything to avoid a collision with them.  It stands to reason, therefore, that the safest place to be in India, is on a cow.  Cars and trucks would actually go out of their way to avoid you.  Brilliant.  It would be safer than riding a horse and safer even than riding an elephant.  And cows aren’t governed by speed limits, traffic lights or contraflow systems.  They can go anywhere.  Usually to moo at things.

     

    7.  My Family History.  My late father was a horse. Not all the time, you should understand, but occasionally.  I believe he was a horse twice during his lifetime.  Or rather, half a horse.  As a part of Manchester University’s rag week in the late 1950s, he and two friends competed in the 2:10 at Lingfield one Saturday.  He (front half of horse) and his friends (back half and jockey) hid behind one of the fences during a rare – in those days – televised meeting and waited.  When the other horses approached and jumped the fence, my father and his friends sprung from their hiding place and galloped down the course in pursuit of them.  Despite a great deal of exertion over the following couple of furlongs, they were unable to make up much ground and soon began to tire.  Their race concluded early when they were chased away by an angry policeman.  That was the highlight of my father’s sporting career.  In fact, it’s the biggest sporting accomplishment in our entire family history.  But if those horses had been cows, my dad could have won that race.  And then we could have put him out to stud.  He’d have liked that.

     

  • 7 Reasons That Looking Like A Horse Shouldn’t Be A Barrier To Success

    7 Reasons That Looking Like A Horse Shouldn’t Be A Barrier To Success

    Do you look like a horse?  Some people do (most horses do too, but we’re not anticipating that many of them will be reading this).  There’s no reason that it should be a barrier to a successful or fulfilled life though, as these horse-faced people demonstrate.

    Comedian Jerry Seinfeld looks like a horse.  Horse face.  Horse-face.  Horse expression.

    1.  Jerry Seinfeld looks like a horse.  This hasn’t held his career back though.  His eponymous sit-com is the most successful comedy show of all time.  Jerry Seinfeld made a fortune from it, and he was the least funny thing in it, being upstaged by all of the other cast members.  Perhaps his success – relative to that of the other cast members – is because people’s expectations are lower when it comes to performing horses.  After all, if a horse multiplies 6 x 7 using its foot, we marvel at it.  If a person does it, we cross the road and hope they haven’t spotted us.  Forty-two, by the way, in case you were wondering.

    A montage of Sarah Jessica Parker looking like horses.  Horse face.  Horse-face.

    2.  Sarah Jessica Parker looks like a horse.  All horses, in fact.  Yet she’s been phenomenally successful as Carrie from Sex and the City.  This is despite: 1) Looking like a horse: 2) Being completely divisive in her appeal.  The Sarah Jessica Parker Paradox is this:  Most women find Sarah Jessica Parker attractive, yet no man finds Sarah Jessica Parker attractive.  She’s not desirable to men in the least.   Women, however, can’t understand her lack of appeal to men and never believe that men don’t find her attractive.  If you’re a woman, you probably don’t believe it right now, so we should test this notion.  Women, you have my permission to leave your computer for a moment and go and ask the nearest man if he finds SJP attractive (don’t get distracted by something and forget to come back).  Back now?  Good.  See, I told you.  There may be an explanation for this phenomenon.

    When they’re growing up, what do most girls want?  A pony.  What do most boys want?  Not a pony.  This is why women find SJP so attractive.  Somewhere, in a subconscious throwback to their girlhood, women still want a pony, and find themselves inexorably drawn to Sarah Jessica Parker.  Men, who spent their boyhood not wanting a pony, do not.  What men want is one of the other lead characters from Sex and the City, or a combination of all three of them.  Perhaps in a haystack, or a corner-bath.

    John Kerry pictured wearing a red tie in front of the Stars and Stripes (US / USA flag) with pink lips / pink lipstick ?

    3.  John Kerry looks like a horse.  Despite this, he was a highly-decorated military officer and a high-profile member of the anti-Vietnam-war movement.  Okay, so George W. Bush retained the presidency when Kerry fought him in the 2004 election, but being defeated by Bush is no measure of failure.  After all, George W. Bush attained the presidency in the 2000 election – an election which Al Gore won.

    The Princess Royal (Princess Anne) on the front cover of Horse and (&) Hound magazine with a horse
    The Princess Royal & Hound

    4.  The Princess Royal looks like a horse.  Despite this, she’s been the greatest Princess Royal of all time.  We’re not entirely sure what Princess Royals do, other than looking equine and telling the hoi-polloi to “naff off”, but she’s very successful at it.

    Nicolas Cage (Nicholas Cage) looks like a horse

    5.  Nicholas Cage looks like a horse.  He looks more like a horse with every passing year.  From his early days, acting terrifically in a series of brilliant and often quirky films, to his later career, acting badly in a series of vacuous and often inane films, he has grown steadily more equine.  To be fair to him, in his latest film, Kick-Ass, he was brilliant; he plays a horse with a false moustache.  He was also in the film Honeymoon In Vegas with Sarah Jessica Parker.  They may have been in Sea Biscuit together too.

    Alan Shearer, pictured holding a white horse at St. James' Park, the home of Newcastle United Football Club (FC)

    6.  Ruud Van Nistelrooy looks like a horse.  Like all Dutch people, he’s quite tall (he’s 18.3 hands high) and he’s used that height to great effect, his aerial prowess has helped him earn a fortune from football and become the second highest scorer in Champions League history.  Here he is pictured with his great rival Alan Shearer.

    Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, formerly Camilla Parker Bowles and a smiling white horse with prominent teeth
    Camilla Parker Bowles (right) and horse.

    7. Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, looks like a horse.  This didn’t stop her displacing one of the world’s most celebrated beauties in the affections of the heir to the throne though.  Perhaps Prince Charles is the exception that proves the Sarah Jessica Parker Paradox?

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    *Thanks to sarahjessicaparkerlookslikeahorse.com for the SJP pictures.