-
Horse’s Journey Through Time

Eyes that hold the stars,
Speak of wisdom, trust, and time,
Timeless bond remains.
Spirit of the horse I have roamed the earth since the dawn of humanity, my hooves carving paths into the soil of history. I am the spirit of the horse, a flicker of wild grace and unbroken strength that moves through the ages. From the plains where men first cast their shadows beside mine, to the battlefields where their cries mingled with my breath, I have stood witness to the delicate dance of trust between us.
Man and horse.
Horse and man.
Bound by something older than words,
Deeper than any sea.
I remember the first ones. They were wary, their hands trembling as they reached out, offering me grain, their voices soft with the caution of new beginnings. I was wild then, untamed as the wind that raked the tall grass. They saw in me something they could not name but knew they needed. Strength. Freedom.
And so, they tamed me. But not with chains. No, they tamed me with the whisper of promise: _”Come with me, and together we will run farther than the horizon.”
I ran with them into battlefields drenched in blood, my heart pounding against the war cries of men. I carried warriors clad in iron, their swords raised high, their hopes resting on my shoulders. They whispered prayers into my ears before the charge, and I bore their fears as much as their weight. When they fell, I stood guard, refusing to leave their side. I knew what they meant when they called me “brother.”
But I also knew gentler days.
The quiet fields of farmers.
The laughter of children as they clutched my mane.
The soft hands of women weaving flowers into my bridle.
I pulled plows through soil rich with promise, feeling the rhythm of life in every furrow. I was the strength they leaned on, the constant in their seasons. They sang songs to me, songs of gratitude and kinship, their melodies blending with the rustle of wheat and the murmur of streams.
Through centuries, I watched as the bond between us changed. Machines rose to take my place, their cold precision replacing the warmth of my breath. I was no longer the heart of their progress, but still, they found me in the wild places. They sought me out to feel alive, to remember what it meant to run free.
There is something eternal in our connection, something that even the hum of engines cannot erase. It is in the way a rider leans into my rhythm, their heartbeat syncing with mine. It is in the way they look into my eyes and see something ancient, something untamed but trusting.
Man and horse.
Horse and man.
Together, we have crossed deserts and rivers,
faced storms and sunrises.
You have given me purpose, and I have given you wings.
Even now, as the world spins faster than it ever has, I feel your need for me. You come to me with your burdens, your silent fears, and I take them from you, if only for a while. You whisper to me of things you cannot say aloud, and I listen. I always listen.
I am the spirit of the horse, and I will endure.
For as long as you seek freedom,
for as long as your soul longs to run,
I will be there.
Together, we are more than the sum of our parts.
Together, we are a story,
written in the dust of ancient trails
and carried on the wind of endless tomorrows.
If you find this content inspiring and uplifting, consider supporting what I do. Buy me a coffee on Ko-fi.
Your support makes a difference in my life and helps me create more of what you like. Thank you!
Tap to view my redbubble gallery. - Darkness, Power and Beauty
Horse’s steady gazeStrengthful eyes that dare to meetChallenge accepted Courage is the strength to face… Read more: Darkness, Power and Beauty - The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring
Daffodil so brightGolden petals, sunshine’s kissHope blooms anew As I wander through the garden, the… Read more: The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring - Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
The Graceful Lines of an Acanthus Leaf. Acanthus is a genus of flowering plants native… Read more: Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
-
Remember, I Am Kind by Choice

Kindness waits unseen,
a seed planted in the gaps—
soft rebellion grows.
Ethereal Kindness is a choice. Not a reflex, not an inheritance, but a deliberate act of defiance. I remind myself of this often, especially on days when the world feels jagged and raw, like a half-shattered window that refuses to break or mend.

Buy my print on red bubble There are moments—sharp, vivid moments—when I could so easily let anger, irritation, or indifference take the reins. The barista forgets my order; the driver cuts me off on the motorway; the email arrives, dripping with condescension. But somewhere in the labyrinth of my chest, a voice stirs, calm yet firm. “Choose,” it says. “Remember.”
It is not an instinct. Instinct is survival, and survival is often cruel. But kindness is the quiet art of holding a mirror to the world and refusing to reflect its harshness. It’s not about sainthood or martyrdom—I don’t believe in halos. It’s about balance. About knowing that, even in chaos, you can plant something tender.
There’s a man who sits by the park near my flat, always in the same frayed jacket, his hands like dry riverbeds. Once, I walked past him without a second glance. Another day, I handed him an orange, its skin bright as a distant star. We didn’t speak. He didn’t need to thank me. What mattered was the act itself—the quiet offering to the unseen universe.
Kindness, I think, is a language best spoken without words. It’s in the unspoken patience as a stranger fumbles for coins at the till, or the way you pause to let someone else’s story unfold without rushing to add your own. It’s in forgiving yourself, too, for the days when kindness feels like an impossible weight.
There’s a certain magic in the spaces between things—the gaps in reality where something inexplicable hums. Kindness lives there, too. It’s not flashy. It doesn’t ask for applause. It exists in the quiet, persistent decision to hold the world gently, even when it feels like it’s slipping through your fingers.
Remember, I am kind by choice. Not because the world deserves it, but because I do. Because the act of choosing shapes me. Because I’ve seen what grows in the absence of kindness, and it’s a garden I refuse to tend.
If you find this content inspiring and uplifting, consider supporting what I do. Buy me a coffee on Ko-fi.
Your support makes a difference in my life and helps me create more of what you like. Thank you!
Tap to view my redbubble gallery. - Darkness, Power and Beauty
Horse’s steady gazeStrengthful eyes that dare to meetChallenge accepted Courage is the strength to face… Read more: Darkness, Power and Beauty - The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring
Daffodil so brightGolden petals, sunshine’s kissHope blooms anew As I wander through the garden, the… Read more: The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring - Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
The Graceful Lines of an Acanthus Leaf. Acanthus is a genus of flowering plants native… Read more: Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
-
Arty Rome

Less writing more pictures this time.

Colosseum 
Metro 
Statua di San Francesco d’Assisi 
Julius Caesar 
Airport 
Basilica Papale di Santa Maria Maggiore 



Villa Torlonia 

Shiba inu 
From inside the Colosseum 
Coliseum High fashion 

If you find this content inspiring and uplifting, consider supporting what I do. Buy me a coffee on Ko-fi.
Your support makes a difference in my life and helps me create more of what you like. Thank you!
Tap to view my redbubble gallery. - Darkness, Power and Beauty
Horse’s steady gazeStrengthful eyes that dare to meetChallenge accepted Courage is the strength to face… Read more: Darkness, Power and Beauty - The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring
Daffodil so brightGolden petals, sunshine’s kissHope blooms anew As I wander through the garden, the… Read more: The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring - Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
The Graceful Lines of an Acanthus Leaf. Acanthus is a genus of flowering plants native… Read more: Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
-
The UK miners’ strike of 1984–85


Statue at Cardiff Bay The Miners’ Strike: Thatcher’s War on Britain’s Backbone
The miners’ strike of 1984–85 was more than a labour dispute—it was a defining battle in Britain’s socio-political history, pitting the working class against the iron will of Margaret Thatcher. What started as a fight to save coal jobs turned into a bruising war of attrition that reshaped the nation.

Strong Worker Thatcher’s government framed the strike as a necessary showdown against union power. Her target was the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) and its leader, Arthur Scargill. For her, defeating the miners was about cementing a free-market economy unshackled from militant unionism. But for the miners, the strike was about survival—defending communities built on coal and livelihoods handed down for generations.
The strike was brutal. Police clashed with picketers in scenes reminiscent of civil war. Families faced hunger, hardship, and the fracturing of entire towns. The government stockpiled coal and deployed police forces as though miners were an internal enemy. Meanwhile, the NUM leadership failed to call a national ballot, fracturing the movement and alienating public support.
When the strike collapsed after a year, Thatcher had won—but at what cost? The coal industry was gutted, and with it, the social fabric of mining towns. Entire communities were abandoned to unemployment and decay. Once-thriving villages became ghost towns as young people fled in search of work, leaving behind fractured families and a profound sense of betrayal.
Today, many former mining areas are still grappling with the fallout. Decades later, unemployment, poverty, and poor health are entrenched in places where coal once fueled the economy. Drug abuse, mental health struggles, and a lingering sense of hopelessness plague some of these communities. People who lived through the strike recall it as a time of deep division—not just between miners and the government, but within their own families, as desperation forced people to make impossible choices.
For some, the scars remain visible: empty streets, derelict buildings, and the absence of the industry that once united and sustained entire towns. Thatcher’s victory symbolised the triumph of neoliberalism, but it also left a generation of workers and their families to shoulder the burden of its consequences.
The miners’ strike wasn’t just a defeat for labour; it was a death knell for solidarity in the face of growing economic inequality. The echoes of that struggle still resonate, a stark reminder of the cost of ideological warfare against the working class—and the communities it continues to hollow out.
If you find this content inspiring and uplifting, consider supporting what I do. Buy me a coffee on Ko-fi.
Your support makes a difference in my life and helps me create more of what you like. Thank you!
Tap to view my redbubble gallery. - Darkness, Power and Beauty
Horse’s steady gazeStrengthful eyes that dare to meetChallenge accepted Courage is the strength to face… Read more: Darkness, Power and Beauty - The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring
Daffodil so brightGolden petals, sunshine’s kissHope blooms anew As I wander through the garden, the… Read more: The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring - Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
The Graceful Lines of an Acanthus Leaf. Acanthus is a genus of flowering plants native… Read more: Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
-
Crocodiles?

My journey into the world of crocodilians began with a seemingly ordinary visit to Chester Zoo. A brief encounter with the Sunda gharial, a long-snouted crocodilian native to Southeast Asia, ignited my curiosity. How many different types of crocodiles existed, and what were their unique features?

Sunda Gharial
I took this photo at Chester zoo – amazing.Large family.
A deeper dive into the world of crocodilians revealed a surprising diversity. The order Crocodilia encompasses 24 species across three distinct families:
* Crocodylidae – True Crocodiles (15 species)
* Alligatoridae – Alligators and Caimans (8 species)
* Gavialidae – Gharials (2 species)
I know I’ve missed some – finding them can be your homework Each family possesses unique adaptations, appearances, and habitats, showcasing the incredible ecological diversity of these reptiles.
* Crocodylidae: True crocodiles are widely distributed across Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Australia, varying in size from the massive saltwater crocodile to the smaller Philippine crocodile.
* Alligatoridae: This family includes both alligators and caimans. Alligators, typically found in freshwater habitats in the southeastern United States and China, are distinguished by their broad snouts. Caimans, inhabiting rivers and wetlands in Central and South America, exhibit a wider range of body sizes and habitats.
* Gavialidae: This family consists of two species: the well-known gharial, with its iconic thin, elongated snout, and the lesser-known Sunda gharial.
The Enigmatic Sunda Gharial.
The Sunda gharial (Tomistoma schlegelii) is a particularly fascinating species. With its long, narrow snout and distinct dark patterns, it bears a resemblance to the gharial but possesses a stockier body.Native to the freshwater ecosystems of Southeast Asia, Sunda gharials are shy creatures, making them difficult to study. Their slender snouts are perfectly adapted for catching fish, their primary diet, but they are capable of consuming a wider range of prey, including birds and small mammals.
Unfortunately, Sunda gharials are classified as vulnerable due to habitat loss and human pressures. Conservation efforts are crucial to protect these enigmatic creatures and the unique ecosystems they inhabit.
My journey into the world of crocodilians has deepened my appreciation for these ancient creatures. Each species, with its unique characteristics and ecological significance, is a testament to the incredible diversity and adaptability of life on Earth.

If you find this content inspiring and uplifting, consider supporting what I do. Buy me a coffee on Ko-fi.
Your support makes a difference in my life and helps me create more of what you like. Thank you!
Tap to view my redbubble gallery. - Darkness, Power and Beauty
Horse’s steady gazeStrengthful eyes that dare to meetChallenge accepted Courage is the strength to face… Read more: Darkness, Power and Beauty - The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring
Daffodil so brightGolden petals, sunshine’s kissHope blooms anew As I wander through the garden, the… Read more: The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring - Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
The Graceful Lines of an Acanthus Leaf. Acanthus is a genus of flowering plants native… Read more: Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
-
Stag in Sunlight

Sunlight spills like breath,
ancient trees hold quiet watch,
stag stands, still as stone.
In the quiet hush of morning, a single stag stands alone in a secluded forest clearing, his figure outlined in gentle streams of light that filter down from the canopy above. Each ray seeps through the branches and leaves, softening as it falls, wrapping him in a halo that seems both eternal and fleeting. His antlers, branches of bone and time, reach into the air with a majestic calmness, each point a marker of seasons come and gone, each curve a silent record of survival and adaptation. His coat is rich, a mix of earth-browns and shadows, blending into the woods yet catching the light just enough to stand apart, to be noticed.
This moment—the stag, the sunlight, the stillness—is a scene millions of years in the making, a perfect portrait painted by evolution’s quiet hand. From the simplest of life forms, driven by the need to survive, to the elegance of this creature, whose every feature has been shaped by time itself, life has woven something wondrous. The stag’s heightened senses, his graceful frame, even the natural lines of his form, all serve a purpose, yet they come together to create something beyond mere function. They become beauty. And beauty, too, has its place in evolution, for it draws us near, inspires us to protect, to connect, to pause and simply be present.
We, too, are shaped by evolution’s design, moulded not only to see but to feel, to wonder, and to appreciate. Perhaps, in a way, our perception of beauty is a survival instinct itself—a way to recognize harmony, to find peace in nature’s rhythms, to feel at home in the world that bore us. Standing in the clearing, we understand our role in this continuum. This moment of quiet awe is a part of something larger—a shared heritage with this stag, this forest, this light. In that silent connection, beauty becomes a bridge across time, binding us to all that has come before and all that will follow.
And so we stand, quietly watching, breathing, and being, as the stag lifts his head, his gaze piercing yet soft, both knowing and unknowing. In this clearing, we glimpse the rare gift that evolution has left us: the capacity to see beauty not only in what we need but in all that simply is.
What scene takes your breath away?

If you find this content inspiring and uplifting, consider supporting what I do. Buy me a coffee on Ko-fi.
Your support makes a difference in my life and helps me create more of what you like. Thank you!
Tap to view my redbubble gallery. - Darkness, Power and Beauty
Horse’s steady gazeStrengthful eyes that dare to meetChallenge accepted Courage is the strength to face… Read more: Darkness, Power and Beauty - The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring
Daffodil so brightGolden petals, sunshine’s kissHope blooms anew As I wander through the garden, the… Read more: The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring - Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
The Graceful Lines of an Acanthus Leaf. Acanthus is a genus of flowering plants native… Read more: Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
-
Capturing The Contrast


Who me? You know, sometimes a photo just grabs you and won’t let go. That’s what happened with this shot of my white horse against the dark background. I’ve taken thousands of horse photos – trust me, my phone’s storage is crying about it – but there’s something about this one that feels different. It’s like catching magic in a moment, if magic wore a mane and had a tendency to sneeze on your camera lens.
I decided to go with black and white for this one, and I’ll tell you why. There’s this gorgeous tension between light and shadow that color sometimes masks – like when you’re wearing a really great outfit but your statement necklace is stealing all the attention. In black and white, you can really see how my horse’s coat practically glows against that velvet-dark background. It’s not just white; it’s this luminous, ethereal kind of white that makes you wonder if maybe, just maybe, unicorns aren’t such a far-fetched idea after all.
And can we talk about that little bit of foliage peeking in? It’s doing the heavy lifting of keeping this photo grounded in reality, like that one sensible friend who reminds you that no, you probably shouldn’t get bangs at 2 AM. Without it, the horse might look like it’s floating in space – which, cool concept, but not what I was going for here.
The contrast between black and white creates this almost theatrical backdrop, like nature decided to set up its own spotlight. My horse didn’t get the memo about being dramatic though – they’re just standing there, being their authentic self, probably thinking about their next snack. But that’s what makes it work, right? That completely unposed, natural moment caught in this stark, artistic frame.
I’ve noticed that some of my favorite photos are the ones that make you lean in a little closer, the ones that play with the line between simplicity and drama. This shot does that for me. It’s like the photographic equivalent of a really good whisper – quiet but impossible to ignore. And while I’d love to say I planned every element of this composition, sometimes the best photos are the ones where you’re just lucky enough to be there with your camera when the light, the moment, and yes, even the cooperative positioning of a horse, all decide to play nice together.
And yes, before you ask, I absolutely have this printed and hanging on my wall. Because some photos just deserve to graduate from the endless scroll of our camera rolls, don’t you think?

If you find this content inspiring and uplifting, consider supporting what I do. Buy me a coffee on Ko-fi.
Your support makes a difference in my life and helps me create more of what you like. Thank you!
Tap to view my redbubble gallery. - 🐾 *Begin with Purr* 🐾
A Meditation on Finding Peace Where You Are. Sometimes, peace doesn’t arrive like thunder —… Read more: 🐾 *Begin with Purr* 🐾 - 🏡Charcoal Decay🏡
Echoes in the dark,A city breathes its last sigh,Ruins hold the past. An eerie silence… Read more: 🏡Charcoal Decay🏡 - 🌸Take a Moment🌸
As in William Wordsworth’s timeless verse, I found myself wandering through the vast expanse of… Read more: 🌸Take a Moment🌸
-
The grounding ground.

Basil, mint, and thyme—
scent of soil and sunlight’s warmth,
roots finding their way.
Hands deep in the earth, I feel the quiet pulse of life beat beneath my fingers—a slow, steady rhythm that grounds me in a way few things do. Roots twist below, unseen threads tying me to this moment, reminding me that sometimes the most meaningful connections are the ones you can’t quite see. In the green silence around me, everything slows. I breathe with the soil, the earthy scent filling my lungs as if I’m taking in the very essence of the garden itself.

Sunlight warms my skin, each ray another gentle reminder that life continues, grows, even when no one’s watching. There’s a comfort in the hum of it all: the small, tireless work of nature happening at its own perfect pace. My thoughts start to settle, sinking down into the soil with the roots, each breath drawing me deeper into the present. Here, lost in this quiet rhythm, I feel whole, as if I, too, am planted right where I’m meant to be.

Bare feet touch the grass,
the hum of soil grounding me—
sunlight warms my skin.
What garden have you got and how does it help you.

If you find this content inspiring and uplifting, consider supporting what I do. Buy me a coffee on Ko-fi.
Your support makes a difference in my life and helps me create more of what you like. Thank you!
Tap to view my redbubble gallery.
- You Never Read the Same Book Twice
“No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it’s not the same river… Read more: You Never Read the Same Book Twice - You deserve a Lemon Verbena tea
Lemon verbena tea is a herbal tea made from the leaves of the lemon verbena… Read more: You deserve a Lemon Verbena tea - Year of the Rabbit
It was the start of a new year, and I was so excited for what… Read more: Year of the Rabbit
-
Cats at the zoo

I recently visited Chester Zoo and had the honour of photographing five incredible animals up close: lions, tigers, cheetahs, jaguars, and snow leopards. Inspired by these majestic creatures, I decided to delve into the zoo’s conservation efforts for these species. Accompanied by my photos, here’s the lowdown on Chester Zoo’s work to protect and preserve these amazing big cats!
Asiatic Lion (Panthera leo persica)

Male lion 
Female lion Conservation Status: Critically Endangered (IUCN)
Wild Population: ~670 individuals
Habitat: Gir Forest, India
Threats: Habitat loss, poaching, human-wildlife conflict
Breeding Programs: European Endangered Species Programme (EEP)
Key Partners: Forest Department of Gujarat, Lion Conservation TrustSumatran Tiger (Panthera tigris sumatrae)

Tiger Conservation Status: Critically Endangered (IUCN)
Wild Population: ~400 individuals
Habitat: Rainforests of Sumatra, Indonesia
Threats: Deforestation, poaching, illegal wildlife trade
Breeding Programs: EEP for Sumatran tigers
Key Partners: WWF, Indonesian Ministry of ForestryNorthwest African Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus hecki)

Cheetah Conservation Status: Critically Endangered (IUCN)
Wild Population: ~250 individuals
Habitat: Sahara Desert and Sahel regions
Threats: Habitat fragmentation, hunting, prey depletion
Breeding Programs: EEP for cheetahs
Key Partners: Cheetah Conservation Fund, Sahara Conservation FundJaguar (Panthera onca)

Jaguar Conservation Status: Near Threatened (IUCN)
Wild Population: ~15,000 individuals
Habitat: Rainforests, savannas, and wetlands of Central and South America
Threats: Deforestation, illegal hunting, human-wildlife conflict
Breeding Programs: Involvement in EEP and awareness initiatives
Key Partners: Panthera, WWF, South American conservation NGOsSnow Leopard (Panthera uncia)

Snow leopard Conservation Status: Vulnerable (IUCN)
Wild Population: 4,000-6,500 individuals
Habitat: Mountain ranges of Central Asia (Himalayas, Altai, etc.)
Threats:Poaching, livestock retaliations, habitat degradation
Breeding Programs: EEP participation for snow leopards
Key Partners: Snow Leopard Trust, Global Snow Leopard and Ecosystem Protection Program (GSLEP)
I highly recommend a visit to Chester Zoo: its amazing! Even though these animals are in captivity, it’s clear that they are well cared for, and seeing them up close is truly special. Beyond just the experience, visiting the zoo is a great way to support their important conservation efforts, helping protect endangered species like these big cats. So, if you love animals and want to learn more about how to help save them, Chester Zoo is well worth the trip!

If you find this content inspiring and uplifting, consider supporting what I do. Buy me a coffee on Ko-fi.
Your support makes a difference in my life and helps me create more of what you like. Thank you!
Tap to view my redbubble gallery. - Darkness, Power and Beauty
Horse’s steady gazeStrengthful eyes that dare to meetChallenge accepted Courage is the strength to face… Read more: Darkness, Power and Beauty - The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring
Daffodil so brightGolden petals, sunshine’s kissHope blooms anew As I wander through the garden, the… Read more: The Daffodil’s Song: A Lyrical Tribute to the Wonders of Spring - Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage
The Graceful Lines of an Acanthus Leaf. Acanthus is a genus of flowering plants native… Read more: Acanthus: A Versatile Plant with a Rich Cultural Heritage











You must be logged in to post a comment.