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Monday, October 10, 2016

Thelma and Louise



When Thelma first laid eyes on Louise, she was filled with curiosity and relief: Curiosity about her missing eye, crooked beak and bald spots and relief that because of the missing eye, bald spots and crooked beak, Louise would surely take over Thelma's last place position in the pecking order.

"Ma ma maybe those barnyard bitches will stop taunting me now," thought Thelma.

Louise saw Thelma staring at her from across the yard and sauntered over.

Thelma stammered with as much bad ass as she could muster, "Wha wha what happened to you? You look like you just fell off the back  of a truck."


"That's because I did," replied Louise with a raspy confidence that sadly assured Thelma that she would indeed maintain her last place position for the foreseeable future.  "I was on the back of the Purdue truck headed to the slaughterhouse with 250 of my closest friend when a van full of PETA activists drove us off the road. The back door opened and my cage fell out and slid half way across the highway.  Took a pebble to the eye.  It was more like a bullet at that speed.  Road rash so bad it took most of my feathers off. Next thing I know some pink haired woman who swore her hair dye had never been tested on animals,  is driving me thirty miles in the opposite direction to my new home."

Thelma nodded her head in amazement as she caught a look of disgust in Louise's one good eye.

"What's going on over there?" Louise asked nodding her head in the direction of Big Red who was standing on the neck of one of the hen's as he dismounted and headed toward them.

"Tha tha that's just Big Red.  He protects us in exchange for sexual favors.

"That's no favor I'll be paying," snarled Louise.

Big Red came over with chest so puffed out he almost passed out from lack of oxygen.  "Well well, what has the cat drug in?"

"Nothing you need to worry yourself about," retorted Louise.

"Mmm, not much to look at, but I like feisty.  Why don't you girls come on into the chicken house now.  It's getting dark."

"No thanks. I'll be spending the night with them," said Louise motioning to the cows.  "800 pounds of cow is a whole lot more protection than 5 pounds of feathers."

Thelma was enchanted.  Not only would Louise not be last in the pecking order, she might be the alpha of the whole barnyard.

"Suit yourself," hissed Big Red.  The blow to his ego hit hard and he took it out on Thelma with a spur to the neck.  Thelma followed him back to the chicken house as Louise looked on in horror.

The next morning Thelma immediately went in search of Louise.

"Ha ha how was your night?  Did the cows cause you any trouble?"

"Not as much as that flashy asshole caused you!  What the hell was that?"

"He, he he's not that bad once you get to know him and he does a good job protecting us."

"Are you shitting me?  He's a prick!  I'd rather be back on The Purdue truck trapped in a cage with four other hens sitting on my head than get to know him."

"Wa wa what else can I do?"

Louise turned her head slightly so she was looking right at Thelma with her one good eye, "You can stick with me."

The next few days were exhilarating for Thelma.  She and Louise avoided the chicken coop and more importantly, the chicken feed as a way to establish their independence from the tyranny of Big Red.  The other hens did not speak to them for fear of retribution from him, though most were envious of the duo's gutsy self-imposed exile.

They managed to elude the wrath of Red for a few days by sticking to the front yard, eating cat food and sneaking to the cow pasture to sleep at night, but their days of freedom came to an end at sundown Friday when Thelma and Louise were ambushed on their trek from cat dish to cow patty.

"Well, well, well.  Funny meeting you girls here," snarled the Rooster as he jumped out of the bushes and onto Thelma.  "Better be careful out here.  Wouldn't want anything bad to happen to you two purdy ladies."

Thelma squeaked in pain.  Without missing a beat, Louise dug her twisted beak between his meaty breasts.  The vexed rooster flew up in the air and ran toward the hen house to nurse his wounds.

"Holy shit Louise! What did you do?  He is going to kill us!"

"Don't panic."

"He's going to kill us!"  screamed Thelma again running in circles like a chicken with its head cut off.

For the first time since she arrived at the farm, Louise seemed scared and unsure. "I'll figure it out," she mumbled, but there was no time.  Big Red was out of the shed and headed back toward them with a look that sent chills down Louise's back.  She looked around to see where they could hide but the only direction they could go was toward the street.  Red would never follow them because chickens never cross roads.

"Follow me!"  yelled Louise.  Thelma waddled after her as fast as her short legs would carry her.  They reached the road and stopped as Red came closer.

"Let's not get caught," Thelma whispered to Louise.

"What are you talking about?" asked Louise

"Let's keep going."

"What do you mean?"

"Go!" Screamed Thelma.

"You sure?"

"Yeah!"

And with that, the two friends linked wings and headed across the road.





Wednesday, August 17, 2016

It Takes a Village



Or in this case, one crazy surrogate who has decided to raise everyone's offspring.


Sunday, July 17, 2016

When You Play With the Bull, You Get the Soccer Net



The Farmette has moved!  Think of it as the movie version of The Popcorn Bowl.  The producers have decided to cast the role of the Farmette with a much more attractive actor, and my character will be played by Christina Hendricks.

The Farmette 2.0 is 46 acres of, "Pinch me! I live here?" beauty.  There is a fenced in yard for the dogs and a ramshackle of a chicken house that leads to many acres of grassy pasture for a cow and her much too old to be nursing, kid.  It's a perfect set up that should bathe the critters in vibrant contentment... NOT!

Athena the Lab started things off.  We came home from school about a week after moving in and the dogs were nowhere to be found.

"That's impossible! I said to the kids.  "How the heck did they get out?"  I probably didn't say heck but this is a family movie.

I saw that one of the gates was open.  We began calling to them.   Soon James Dean heard whimpering in the distance.  He went into the barn and found them locked in one of the stalls.  We had met a neighbor on the other side of the hill a few days earlier and I assumed he must have found the runaways and locked them in the barn.  Crisis averted.  I would pay my kindly neighbors a visit over the weekend and apologize for any damage caused by the puppy outing.

The next day we returned home and there was Pepper the Pyrenees safely inside the fence wiggling with excitement to see us, but no Athena.  The gate was closed this time.  James Dean decided to go check the barn again and there she was.  I was a little nervous because nothing says, "Hillbilly neighbors" quite like an annoying garbage eating, cat chasing dog showing up in your yard two days in a row.

It seemed a little strange that the neighbors hadn't left a note saying, "Keep your stupid dog in your yard" or something to that effect.  I decided to put my Nancy Drew skills to use and we left her unattended in the yard and went upstairs to watch from the window.  She immediately squished herself throw a space in the fence that attaches to the chicken house and headed directly to the barn where there must have been some remnants of food.  I was relieved that she wasn't pestering the neighbors and got to work with my staple gun, which I  am a pro at ever since the chicken tractor carnage of 2011.

The next day I had to pick her up from the dog catcher.


Two days later I am talking on the phone with the husband and notice, what I am sure must be an optical illusion that gave the appearance of the cows being on the wrong side of the fence.  No wait. Now they are in the middle of the road.  That is some optical illusion!

I jump in the car and race down the wrong side of the road honking my horn at the cows and the oncoming traffic.  The cows run into the front yard.  I jump out and wave my arms and scream like a lunatic.  Billy Beef gives me the stare down.  I am still unsure how they ended up back behind the fence, but I know there was hay involved.


The Beef scares the piss out of me.  Noelle is my baby.  Granted an 800lb baby, but she is fairly obedient and good natured.  Her delinquent kid is another story.  When we first moved in the husband put a soccer net in the pasture.  Still not sure why, but I am assuming he thought the boys could play in there while practicing for the Running of the Bulls. Run they did.  The soccer net soon became Billy Beef's favorite toy. He rubbed his head on it, tossed it in the air, and slept inside it.  I was sure he was going to break it into pieces.  I decided to go rescue the goal one afternoon when Beef and Noelle were all the way on the other side of the pasture.  I had managed to drag it almost to the edge of the fence when Beef comes charging at me full gallop. He is obviously not pleased that I am messing with his property.  Again, I wave my arms and scream like a lunatic while hiding behind the flimsy aluminum poles that hold up the net, sure that the boys are going to find me squished under their goal. I found a few rocks to throw at him which really pisses him off. Somehow I managed to leap over the barbed wire with only a minor tear in my pants and a major adrenaline rush.



I shouted a few terms of endearment in his general direction as he wandered back to his mother. I then pulled the goal to safety and moved it out of his sight.  The good thing about having an asshole steer is that I am no longer sad about him becoming Billy Filet Mignon. Being a cattle rancher is definitely not in my future.  I am thinking pygmy goats or maybe pandas?

Monday, January 11, 2016

I Know What You Did Last Weekend.


What did you do this weekend?  Did you go out to brunch, see a movie, go shopping? Want to know what I did this weekend?  I eviscerated 18 chickens.  I know. I know.  You are very jealous.

There is nothing enjoyable about processing chickens,  and while the YouTube video of the woman with the baby on her back digging intestines out of a chicken carcass looks easy enough; it is not.  The husband and I have done this deed before but unlike bike riding and ice skating there is no muscle memory to bring it all back.  I am pretty sure your brain locks the memory in a special dark place so you don't have to relive the farting sound that vibrates through you as you shove your hand into the chicken's warm gut and pull out all of its organs, or the sight of a headless chicken running around the yard. Yes, you will remember it as you try to go to sleep that night, but the memory fades with time and tequila.

The husband was in charge of the killing and plucking with our brand new handy dandy electric chicken plucker.  There is some humorous Deliverancesque video footage of our hillbilly operation, but I opted to not post it here.  You're welcome.  This picture should tell you everything you need to know:


You may ask yourself, as I did over and over again as I stood at the counter for 7 hours with my arm thrust inside 18 chickens "Why not just be a vegetarian?"  I reminded myself on Sunday morning after a night racked with dreams of broken gizzards, that we moved up here to try to grow our own food, and when you decide to locate in a place that offers a rocky clay soil and a four month growing season, you would probably starve to death if left to a plant only diet. So we eat animals. We eat every last bit of those animals because we know what it takes to keep them and nurture them until they are ready to put in the freezer. We know how much work it is to ward off predators and how difficult it is to butcher them when the time comes.

When I go to a grocery store  now, I see the faces of the people who grow that food and I am in awe.  It ain't easy folks, but when you put a roast or a salad on your table that you grew in your backyard, nothing tastes better or is more gratifying.