your coterie!
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Singapore
seen from Germany

seen from Greece
seen from South Korea
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
your coterie!
I desperately want to reblog this post about monster genitalia but I’m not sure how you guys are gonna feel about it. are we ok with selkie vagina or not
Kelley being soft.
📸: Lizett
Something occurred to me last night as I was relistening to the audiobook: how differently do you think events would have occurred if Puck HAD risen Skata instead of Dove?
OH MY!!! That’s one hell of a WHAT IF!! I love it.
Two things stand out to me right away!
The winnings: If Gorry had agreed to do fifths, would Puck have made enough money to save the house if she won? The book is sort of vague about just how big the purse is, and Puck doesn’t seem all that knowledgable about the size when she’s talking about fifths: “That’s not really anything, unless you come in first. Then you could buy the whole island, if you wanted.” But that don’t seem accurate because even the whole purse wasn’t enough to save both the house and Corr (and it sounds like Puck wasn’t even thinking of the whole 200 initially, but rather the 8% of the purse Sean still needed). Anyway, if it turned out that a fifth wasn’t enough to save the house, then the money would’ve been needed for Puck and Finn start their life over, sans house. T_T
Sean: Would they have gotten close???? They would have never had the infamous KEEP YOUR PONY OFF THIS BEACH meet-cute, and Sean never would have offered her the bay mare without the white. That race on the cliffs with Puck on Dove is what sparked the respect and friendship they had for each other into being! Skata’s speed was a threat to Corr, and her murderous tendencies were a threat to everybody else, so I don’t see him helping Puck unless it was to bail her and the entire beach out because THIS MARE IS GOING TO KILL SOMEONE and I don’t think Puck could have stopped her. But this would give them more fodder for an epic enemies-to-lovers relationship, and I AM ALWAYS DOWN FOR THAT.
There are a hundred of things one could touch on: how this would’ve affected Finn, the different themes, Mutt, etc., and I would love to hear everyone’s thoughts on what would happen, so chime in!
Aussies you want to play in the NWSL?
all of them cause I’m S E L F I S H. Also, the w league fits perfect with NWSL so it only makes sense…..
🤔🤔
I think Maggie made a small mistake, that or I'm reading it wrong. She says in chapter one (while Puck and Finn are on the beach after their race) that the horses caught this year will be raced in the future and that the horses caught the previous year(s) start training for this race. But later contradicts with horses like Skata, pulled from the sea this year, for this race. What do you think? Did I just read that wrong or is it a discrepancy? Something about the timeline is off, too. (1/2)
(2/2) Maggie has the book start in Mid-October (it states that somewhere early on) and then says the race is on November 1st. This would leave about two and a half weeks for training the horses, which already is barely enough time to train much. Especially if we go with horses being caught and trained in the same year. And the book seems to imply that the events take place over longer than two weeks. But maybe that’s just me. Nonetheless, I love this series and I want to see what y'all think.
Yeah, the particulars of some of the mythology and race rules have always come across as a little vague to me, though I don’t mind it because it gives us a lot to talk about! I too was a little confused about the timelines at first, but I don’t think Maggie contradicts herself in these instances. But then again, I could be wrong since it’s been some time since I’ve read the book. (I AM SO DUE FOR A REREAD!!!)
Okay, so I found what the book first says about Skata: “That first day, Gorry has me…try a piebald mare he has dredged from the ocean some indeterminate time before.”
So that doesn’t tell us when exactly Gorry got her, just that Sean doesn’t know when it was. I don’t remember if the book offers more information about her origins later, but this quote would still fit with Gorry catching her in a previous year. Also, the horses have only been out for a day at this point, so it’s not likely that she’s freshly caught. I do think it’s her first year racing, though, and maybe Gorry hasn’t had her for longer than a year and doesn’t want the expense of continuing to train/board her. He’d much rather sell her for an enormous profit because he thinks she might make Malvern (and Sean) nervous. Keeping capaill uisce for multiple years is a large investment, which is why Malvern had Sean release the bay mare without the white, who was untrainable.
I believe the race season takes place over three weeks. The first week after the capaill uisce make land is for beach training and trying out mounts and culminates in the rider’s parade at the Scorpio Festival. While she’s at the Festival, Puck states that it is “two weeks until the races.” Since you can’t change mounts after the rider’s parade, a week is definitely not enough time to catch and train a fresh capall uisce. But it might be enough time to determine if the one you’ve got already is willing to listen to you well enough to race that year. All in all, three weeks doesn’t seem like an unreasonable amount of time if you’ve already been working with your horse for many seasons.
Which bring me to this: Corr is family to Sean (they’ve made each other what they are), but to men with bowler hats or faces that belong on pound notes, the capaill uisce are a commodity. I think there’s a contrast between the old way of racing (it’s about being, i.e. finding a deep connection to Thisby), which is what Sean does in forging a long-term bond with Corr and why Tommy Falk’s black mare was released, and the newer, flashier version of the races (it’s about wanting, i.e. feeling unsatisfied with what you have and where you are), which results in the races standing for commercial gain or entertainment and, ultimately, in horses and riders becoming disposable.
Anyway, I hope this helps clear some things up and doesn’t muddle things further! If anyone has anything else to add, please do! :)