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In 1949, the 10th Duke of Badminton started Badminton Horse Trials
with the idea of better preparing British riders for the Olympic
Games after a disastrous showing on home ground the year before.
His legacy is the world's oldest and most prestigious horse trials
which has captured the imagination of riders from all corners of
the globe and in 2024 celebrates its seventy-fifth anniversary.
Badminton is still an Olympic proving ground - Great Britain are
the defending champions in 2024 - as well as the sport's
'Wimbledon', a captivating place where dreams can be made or
shattered, and the one all riders want to win. Over seven decades,
there have been legendary riders and horses, triumphs and
disasters, in a sport that has managed to evolve for the
twenty-first-century without losing the spirit in which it was
first conceived. The centrepiece remains the cross-country course,
a spectacle that draws thousands of spectators and is an imposing
challenge for riders, no matter how experienced they are, in an
egalitarian sport in which men and women compete on equal terms and
the amateur can take on the Olympic gold medallist. This book
celebrates those riders, from Sheila Willcox's hat-trick in the
1950s to the feats of horsemanship by New Zealander Mark Todd who
came out of retirement to win three decades after his first
victory; from the golden era of Richard Meade, Capt. Mark Phillips,
Lucinda Green and Princess Anne, to twenty-first-century heroes and
heroines, the likes of William Fox-Pitt, Pippa Funnell, Andrew
Nicholson, Michael Jung and Oliver Townend. And, of course, the
great horses who shared their stories.
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Celia Ãlvarez Muñoz: Breaking the Binding
Celia Alvarez Munoz; Interview by Roberto Tejada; Text written by Isabel Casso, Josh Franco, Kate Green
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R1,462
R1,170
Discovery Miles 11 700
Save R292 (20%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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'Filled with wonderment and awe ... Greene's eloquent memoir is
equal parts escape and comfort.' Publishers Weekly A powerful
reflection on life in isolation, in pursuit of the dream of Mars.
In 2013 Kate Greene moved to Mars. On NASA's first HI-SEAS
simulated Mars mission in Hawaii, she lived for four months in an
isolated geodesic dome with her crewmates, gaining incredible
insight into human behaviour in tight quarters, as well as the
nature of boredom, dreams and isolation that arise amidst the
promise of scientific progress and glory. Greene draws on her
experience to contemplate what makes an astronaut, the challenges
of freeze-dried eggs and time-lagged correspondence, the cost of
shooting for a Planet B. The result is a story of space and life,
of the slippage between dreams and reality, of bodies in space, and
of humanity's incredible impulse to explore. From trying out life
on Mars, Greene examines what it is to live on Earth. 'In her
thoughtful, well-written account of the mission, Greene reflects on
what this and other space missions can teach us about ourselves and
life on Earth.' Physics Today
Live the romance of the British countryside through this lavish
tour of the seasons, landscapes, gardens, and great houses that
epitomize British country life, as seen through the eyes of Country
Life magazine. For 125 years Country Life has presented its readers
with the finest insider’s tour of everything quintessentially
British. Now in one volume, this spectacular collection of images
offers the best of life in the British countryside, from charming
Cotswolds villages to panoramic views across the Yorkshire dales
and Glastonbury for readers who will revel in tramping across the
heather filled moors to see King Charles’s favorite view in all
England, the white cliffs of Dover, and the Dark Hedges of Northern
Ireland. Discover on these pages the culture and seasonal
activities of country life, whether it be a gentleman farmer
showing off his prize cattle, fly fishing in the Scottish
highlands, swan upping on the Thames, or cricket on the village
green. Country Life is renowned for its unprecedented access to the
magnificent castles and palaces, as well as private estates and
manor houses that dot the countryside from Dorset to the Scottish
highlands, revealing many to its fans for the first time. In this
volume readers are treated to the loveliest and most important
houses and gardens from the last century, from Holkham Hall,
Chatsworth, and Burghley, to Munstead Wood, Sissinghurst, and
Kelmscott. This book satisfies readers’ seemingly insatiable
desire to capture in their own lives a small slice of the romance
of English countryside living.
Featured in New Scientist's Best Books of 2021 'Filled with
wonderment and awe ... Greene's eloquent memoir is equal parts
escape and comfort.' Publishers Weekly A powerful reflection on
life in isolation, in pursuit of the dream of Mars. In 2013 Kate
Greene moved to Mars. On NASA's first HI-SEAS simulated Mars
mission in Hawaii, she lived for four months in an isolated
geodesic dome with her crewmates, gaining incredible insight into
human behaviour in tight quarters, as well as the nature of
boredom, dreams and isolation that arise amidst the promise of
scientific progress and glory. Greene draws on her experience to
contemplate what makes an astronaut, the challenges of freeze-dried
eggs and time-lagged correspondence, the cost of shooting for a
Planet B. The result is a story of space and life, of the slippage
between dreams and reality, of bodies in space, and of humanity's
incredible impulse to explore. From trying out life on Mars, Greene
examines what it is to live on Earth. 'In her thoughtful,
well-written account of the mission, Greene reflects on what this
and other space missions can teach us about ourselves and life on
Earth.' Physics Today
What if women hold the key to our future?
Meet Morgan Forrester. Spirited and almost wise, she's a
counselor and a mother and her life is good. But it isn't right.
She aches from the pull of a destiny she senses but can't yet see
while ancient fingers, icy and familiar, coil around her spine and
a voice whispers that she'll never find her calling.
The Carolina summer sizzles when she hooks up with a Cherokee
environmentalist who must stop a nuclear dump and a cranky
eccentric searching for her daughter--and their shaky roller
coaster lurches forward.
When the enormity of what each woman has determined to do
strains against explosive secrets, the pull of lovers and children,
their own cross-purposes and the manipulations of a deadly foe,
they are nearly derailed. But mysterious allies, sacred women from
another time, come to their aid. Vistas open as the trio discovers
that their work to reclaim themselves is spiraling outward. If they
can stay the course, they could create the matrix that frees women
to lead the world toward a more humane future.
Uplifting yet sassy, you could call it "The Saving Graces" meets
"The Celestine Prophecy," seasoned with an irreverent dash of
"Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood."
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R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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