What happens when a horsemad Ould Wagon moves from Cork to Provence with 2 horses, 2 dogs and a Long Suffering Husband? Why, she gets a third dog, discovers Natural Horsemanship à la Française, starts writing short stories and then discovers a long-buried talent for art, of course…
The dust has settled after the Mugnificent Giveaway and three mugs will be winging their way around the world just as soon as I find suitable boxes for them. But the goodies keep coming… which is fantastic because it gives me an excuse to keep promoting the Ballyloch Stories! The second one is here if you haven’t read it yet, and the third one will be out on Thursday 16th April, the day before this giveaway ends.
Thanks to the extreme generosity of the lovely folks at Zazzle I also have these super-cute little tote bags to give away, modelled for us today by Cinnamon and Rosie.
Small enough to fit neatly in your handbag (or your purse, if you hail from the other side of the Atlantic), not quite big enough to contain a whole small brown dog; they’re still big enough to hold those essentials you pick up at your local corner store – you know, the ones you forgot when you were doing your weekly shop at the big supermarket. Or maybe a body brush, mane comb and hoof pick, for going on a trip with your horse… or a packed lunch… a couple of books… the possibilities are endless, really.
The Totes Awesome Giveaway is being run the same way as the Mugnificent Giveaway. Essentially, it’s three different giveaways – one on Facebook, one on Twitter and one on WordPress. You can enter all three to maximise your chances of winning!
How to enter :
Facebook :
This picture is posted on the Tails From Provence Facebook page. Leave a comment on the picture and make sure you follow the page if you’re not already a follower.
Bonus Facebook entry – Visit the Ballyloch Facebook page, where you’ll find the same picture. Leave a comment and make sure you follow the page!
Twitter :
I’ll be tweeting the picture regularly for the next ten days or so. Just Retweet it and follow me! Simple as that!
WordPress :
Leave a comment below this post.
Bonus WordPress entry – visit Ballyloch.com and fill in the contact form that you’ll find on the ‘About’ page. I promise I will not spam you!
The Giveaway will run until 7pm CET Friday 17th April. I will hold the draw either on Friday evening or on Saturday morning, depending in internet access (I’ll be in Ireland).
Good luck 😀
We have a wide range of acquaintances here, so we get to hear bits and pieces of local gossip from all over the place. Like this, for example. (By the way, I’m not going to go all Peter Mayle and start using people’s real names. That’s a good way to suddenly find our acquaintances no longer acknowledge us.)
Our hero is a local businessman in a village in the Luberon valley. We’ll just call him H (for hero). He was in his place of work one day, when someone came running in to tell him that his uncle’s house was on fire. Well, he ran as fast as he could to his uncle’s house, to be met with smoke billowing from the doors and windows. He knew that his uncle was inside – I’m not sure why he was so certain, but he was. He grabbed a piece of carpet that was on the ground near the front of the house and draped it over himself, to try to provide some sort of protection. Then he made his way into the inferno to look for his uncle. And inferno it was, so I am told.
He eventually found his uncle in the bathroom, trying to keep the flames at bay by spraying water from the shower head. He dragged his uncle back out through the flames to safety. The uncle had some minor burns on his face – his eyebrows were singed off, some of his hair too – and H had a burn on his arm as well as some similar hair loss, but both were fine.
What a brave man – he said afterwards that he didn’t even think about what he was doing. I guess, in a situation like that, the heroes are the ones who react without too much analysis.
The pompiers arrived soon after the uncle had been rescued, and they put the fire out. Then they searched the house for the uncle’s cat, presumed by all to have been burned or suffocated. They finally found it, huddled up in a corner – alive. They carried it out and proceeded to give it oxygen. The mental image that this provokes is beyond description – the burly pompiers, huddled over a cat, holding an oxygen mask over its little head, the burned house in the background… What wonderful people!
In sharp contrast to the firemen in a story from my teenage years :
A Shannon family was woken up by their dog barking in the middle of the night. The house was on fire, but all of the family got out, thanks to the dog. The dog, unfortunately, did not make it.
The firemen came and extinguished the fire. They came across the dog’s lifeless body and chucked it out through a broken window, like so much rubbish. Right in front of the distressed children whose lives it had saved.
Bravery is all very well, but compassion is just as important.
Kudos to our local heroes – all of them.
And the winners are :
Facebook winner : Katherine Tuttle Walcott
Blog Winner : Joanna Kenny
Twitter Winner : Gate Riding Club
Happy Easter to all my readers. If you’re looking for something to read over the weekend, don’t forget the second Ballyloch Story is available here FREE!
For those of you who didn’t win a mug, don’t be too sad. Thanks to generosity of the lovely people at Zazzle, there’s a Totes Awesome Giveaway coming up next week. Watch this space…
The draw was done using the sequence generator provided by random.org and the entrant lists from each form of social media, with each list in chronological order. As unbiased as I could possibly make it.

