Paragraph of the week
Aidan Hartley, a farmer in Tanzania, explains in
the 30 June issue of the Spectator why he bought a pedigree Boran bull despite knowing that he was paying too much:
he wanted “some pizzazz” in his herd:
After all, few are the joys left to a man
of 47. I haven’t got a mistress. I do not feel the need to ride Harley-Davidson
motorcycles. I like wine too much and while dodging bombs and rockets in Sudan
the other day I thought it might be a good idea to retire from covering African
wars. But what comes after the adrenalin of being shot at? I rise early, I work
hard, I love my family, but I just seem to spend my life paying utility bills
or talking about petty-cash vouchers.
The bull, we learn, is named Ollie and has
a “lustful look in his eye. He’s heavy but not coarse-boned, not too loose,
with length and a great top line.” Sounds like a bull, and sounds like a couple
of Ollies I know. Later in the column Hartley says:
To launch the herd, my wife Claire bought
me three heifers for my birthday.
I have a birthday coming up. I wonder…
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