My legs get cold sitting at my keyboard. Blankets fall off and tangle my chair wheels.
Should I get a dog? A cat? Oh, I’ve had those kinds of animals. Boring!
What I need is a nice, big chicken to sit on my lap while I’m writing. A chicken with a warm chicken body. She’ll cluck over me like a nursemaid. She’ll peck the fuzz off my sweater. Might even lay an egg.
A 5-7 pound broiler, fryer or even an old stewer, I don’t care. She’ll weigh less than as a barky little dachshund or a sheddy cat and she won’t scare away my birds.
She could be speckled, she could be barred, why, her feathers could be as flamboyant as a peacock. There are hundreds of beautiful breeds to choose from. So, no matter what, she’ll be easy to look at. Chicken feathers are smooth to touch. I know she’ll hop right into my lap up at the snap of my fingers. Her eyes will be bright, always open unless she falls asleep. If I ever get fleas, she’ll take care ‘em.
I’d probably call her “Henny” except that was the name of a very dear old lady who just shucked off her mortal coils. Perhaps Beatrice, something Shakespearean, would be more elegant. I would take her for walks down the street, let her scratch for bugs and worms. Let her drive all the dogs crazy.
I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking I’m crazy. You could be right. Wouldn’t be the first time you thought that.
I can tell you’re also having doubts. You’re thinking, what about when.. you know.. the chicken has to poop?
You people have brilliant minds. Now, follow me here. I once had those very same thoughts. I thought, eeuw, do I want a chicken to poop on my valuable Kelim rugs? Do I want to even hear that horrible, splattering sound?
So I laughed when Sam Blackford over at Sam’s Downtown Feed on San Carlos told me some of his customers have indoor chickens.
“But Sam, how..?”
“Chicken diapers.”
I stopped laughing. I googled up ‘chicken diapers’.
Folks, they are for real. And they’re like just darling little baby bibs! They go around the chicken’s neck, fasten over the back with a little Velcro tab and hang discreetly under the tail feathers. You hardly know they’re there!
These diapers comes in many different colors and patterns. Pink polka dots, blue ones, a very nice greens dot pattern I wouldn’t mind having in an apron. The diaper-y part is lined with vinyl and the you-know-what is really good for the garden!
I’m sure I could do this. There’s a YouTube (www.youtube.com/watch?v=mm_-glNJlns)showing how install this diaper and gently ease the chicken’s wings through the openings. In the video, the rooster—his name is Ben—also wore a little cape over his wings because he likes to peck out his feathers. Some guys! Sadly, Campbell does not allow roosters. Handsome but too noisy.
Although hens talk, too. I like the sound. Cluck cluck cluck. Like someone in the kitchen making cookies. Although I probably don’t want those kind of cookies, now that I think of it.
You may not run right out to get YOUR chickens today. And I might not, either. On the other hand, I just might.
All righty then, at least I’ve opened a new door in your petalorium.
Let’s go even further: imagine your family as chickens. Think how easy it would be to fix dinner! You’d just pick up fifty pounds of scratch at Sam’s Downtown Feed. Shake a little into a bowl on the floor and let ‘em at it.
Rinse out the diapers now and then and wow, easy living.
Fentanyl Rises Again, This Time as Trump’s Diplomatic Weapon Against China
-
The president-elect’s pledge to use tariffs to stem the flow of opioids
from China could backfire if Beijing responds by ending counternarcotics
cooperation.
4 hours ago
2 comments:
Pam McReynolds writes:
> Very good! Just a comment on chicken poop and my chicken experiences.
> I had chickens for a while back in my late teens; they had their own
> house. I was showing them to a potential boyfriend and walked inside
> the coop to check for eggs. It was bedtime for them so they were
> roosting. One of them pooped on my head but it was so encapsulated it
> bounced right off. Didn't even leave any residue! I was embarrassed
> but happy. My cousin had a pet chicken who loved to ride horses.
> Peppy would stand next to me when I was on horseback and bob up and
> down, asking to come up. I'd invite him and he would ride around the
> barnyard with me, balancing on the horse's butt. One other thing, I
> was in Jr. college and taking a microbiology survey course.
> We had to take three petrie plates home and place them in various
> places to collect organisms. I put one in the coop for a day or two
> and a beautiful bloom of who-knows-what grew, the best in the class.
> My teacher was super impressed.
>
> Those are my chicken stories.
>
> Pam
Post a Comment