Monday, May 28, 2012
Blow Beryl Blow
The pullets are still sleeping in the coop, all piled into two nesting boxes underneath David Bowie, the spangled Silkie roo. The pullets make such a mess of the boxes that the hens won't go in there to lay eggs so I've set up two "emergency" nests for them. This has also solved the problem of them squeezing into the doghouse with Buffy. As a hoarder, Buffy kept the eggs for herself, either burying them or carrying them around in her mouth until they were coated with dirt and slobber. She proudly presented me with an egg each evening, but it was so filthy I simply cracked it into the dog bowls over their supper kibble. I hate giving up my eggs.
Getting rid of the extra cockerels has made life in the yard easier on everyone. David Bowie doesn't have to compete with his brothers anymore, so he stays away from Hef and spends most of his time babysitting the pullets, who have two speeds: stop and run. He also likes to follow me around, dancing and begging for cuddles. He's quite friendly, and is easy to handle and pet. My Olde English Game bantam, Hugh Hefner, is happier as well. Without so much fighting to do he's been very attentive to his ladies, leading them on foraging adventures and picking out all the best nibbles for them. Ginny can be quite greedy, so he has his hands (beak?) full trying to make sure Denise and Hermione get enough to eat as well. The pullets aren't on his radar yet, as they're sexually immature, but he does give them a good tug on the head if they don't respect their elders at the feed trays.
The sun is out again. I'm not sure we're ever going to get this storm going, it's 18 hours late already! I suppose I might as well run the garbage down the road. The dogs are already milling in the kitchen, ready to ride with their heads out the window and their paws on the trash bags.
Thursday, May 24, 2012
Zeke
9:00 am
10:25 am
11:04 am
12:15pm
1:30 pm
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
Ridiculous
I'm from Royal Oak Michigan, which is just outside Detroit. If you started on the north end of Detroit, somewhere near the somewhat famous 8 Mile Road, you'd need to walk two miles to get to the appropriate suburb. I grew up at the intersection between an eight-lane intrastate freeway and a six-lane interstate beast that runs from Sault Sainte Marie (MI) to Hialeah (FL). There was no FFA or 4-H, although we did attend the Sate Fair every year to eat fried food and play carnival games. There were livestock at the fair, and I have memories of petting goats and sticking my fingers into rabbit cages, but I lived in the city. It never occurred to me to ask for a pony for my birthday. I asked for a bike or roller skates. We all asked for bikes and roller skates. We were city kids.
My mother grew up on a small family farm, although you wouldn't know it if she didn't tell you. She's not a huge fan of "roughing it" unless you count the slow food movement. You can't blame her, really. Her first pet was a chicken. Her house didn't have indoor plumbing until she was 13 years old. I doubt she ever had her own bed. My grandfather raised all manner of livestock, and when I was a child he farmed a small bit of land beyond the pig pen where we were offered twenty-five cents for every jar we could fill with pest caterpillars plucked from the plants. I say offered instead of paid because I'm not sure we ever finished the job. I kept the caterpillars as pets, of course. They always died. Surely it's the thought that counts. While pursuing my PhD in ecology I often thought he would be tickled to death to find his eldest granddaughter driving tractors through cotton fields rather than riding buses through city traffic.
So here I am, a 35 year old woman in a community so small that the postal system incorporates it into the neighboring town, which has a whopping 6000 people in it. I live in a creaky 100 year old farmhouse on property formerly farmed but now converted to slash pine. People often ask if I feel scared out here all by myself, but truthfully I don't. The stars are amazing on a clear night. The woods are full of wildlife and it's not unusual to have to stop the car to let a river cooter cross the road, or urge a king snake to end it's nap early. If there's ever any trouble, I've got a twelve-hen early warning system and a sheriff's deputy right across the street. Let's face it, nobody ever thought I was going to grow up and be normal.