11-13-08

Fred opened the door to the chicken coop yesterday before he left for work, but it was still pretty dark out, so the chickens peered at him and said “Um, no thanks. We’re okay in here. Buh-bye!”. Fred went to work and I got up shortly thereafter, did my morning chores, and sat down at … Continue reading “11-13-08”

Fred opened the door to the chicken coop yesterday before he left for work, but it was still pretty dark out, so the chickens peered at him and said “Um, no thanks. We’re okay in here. Buh-bye!”.

Fred went to work and I got up shortly thereafter, did my morning chores, and sat down at my computer. I looked out at the chicken yard to see a large number of chickens milling about, so I knew they’d figured out how to come out the door (with chickens, you can never overestimate their stupidity, TRUST ME).

A while later, Fred called to check on the chickens, and as I was talking to him, I looked out the window and realized that there was a chicken wandering through the old chicken yard. I hung up the phone and went out to see what the hell was going on, and I was displeased to realize that the chicken was one of the three fairly youngish chickens we’d been calling the Three Musketeers (because we are so original), a chicken who is very scared of Fred and I, because she was hatched by one of our chickens and thus was never really handled by either of us and thus believes we’re about to harm her in some very painful and inventive way if we even think about glancing in her direction.

Then I realized that there were about fifteen other chickens wandering around in the space between the new chicken yard and the old chicken yard, which meant they’d gotten under the fence somewhere and needed to be herded back into the new chicken yard.

With the help of cracked corn, I was able to lure all of them but the Musketeer back into the new chicken yard, and when I looked around to see how they’d gotten out, I quickly spotted a huge-ass gap under part of the fence, where the fence didn’t even come close to touching the ground. T-posts still need to be pounded in all around the back forty to hold the fence in place, but we (FRED) had been so eager to get the chickens moved that we (FRED) decided to move them to the new coop before the new yard was really secure.

Since the rest of the chickens were occupied with the chicken scratch I’d tossed in the chicken yard, away from the fence, I propped the gate open and ran to get on the other side of the Musketeer to shoo her into the yard.

Oh, yes. What a fool-proof plan THAT was. I ran to get on the other side of her, and she saw me running at her and she ran away from me. Away from the gate. She ran so that she was between the fence on the side of the old chicken yard and the trees and greenery next to the fence. I ran into the chicken yard and tried to get even with her so I could encourage her to move toward the new chicken yard, but never could get near her.

(You should imagine that I was swearing at the top of my lungs, this entire time.)

Finally, I gave up, opened the old chicken coop in case the stupid goddamn Musketeer wanted to go inside to lay an egg or something, and then I stomped inside. Then I stomped back outside to the new chicken yard, where I dragged a post over to the gap in the fence to block other chickens from getting out that way again. Then I stomped back inside and growled to myself that I hoped something would EAT that goddamn Musketeer and that it would be SLOW and PAINFUL for her.

An hour later I looked out to see the Musketeer strolling alongside the fence again, the fence on the side of the old chicken yard. So I grabbed more cracked corn and I went out and tried to lure her near the new chicken yard. She would not be lured. So I grabbed my SCOOP HANDS and went out to try to shoo her toward the new chicken yard. The shooing went okay at first, but then she remembered that she is a goddamn idiot and so she lost her shit for no apparent reason and went squawking hysterically into the woods.

(You cannot make a stupid bird a smart one with SCOOP HANDS.)

And I gave up. I could occasionally see her wandering along beside the fence, but I figured she’d either make her way into the old coop whereupon Fred could grab her at dark and transfer her to the new coop, or she’d figure out how to get back into the chicken yard, or something would eat her and ASK ME IF I CARE.

Goddamn chicken.

(When Fred got home, her day of being without food and water had apparently gotten to her, and it took very little coaxing on his part to get her in the chicken yard. Stupid chicken.)

& & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & &

 

In between the bouts of chicken wrangling, I was sitting in front of my computer trying to reason with Mister Boogers, who is having PMS or something these last few days and picking on any other cat who happens to wander across his angry, hetful path. I was just about at the “They’re not bothering you, why are you being such an asshole to them?” part of the discussion when I heard a horn in the driveway.

“Oh! I must have a package!” I said to Mister Boogers, who clearly could not have cared any less about anything I had to say. I put him on the floor, slid my feet into my shoes and went out into the driveway.

It wasn’t the mail lady, it wasn’t the UPS, FedEx, or DHL guy. It was a guy I’d never seen before getting out of a white minivan, and so I met him in the side yard, smiled and said “Hi” and silently cursed myself for not looking out the window before blithely skipping out the door. If I’d known it wasn’t a mail call, I’d have hidden and pretended not to be home, because the Robyn don’t take kindly to strangers, especially of the unexpected sort.

The man pointed out toward the chicken yard and asked if we sold chickens. We’ve only sold chickens once before, and both Fred and I felt so bad about doing so, despite the fact that the family who bought the chickens did so to have them as laying hens and therefore they probably are going to lead a longer life than they would have here at Crooked Acres. Or so we believed at the time, before we got to the point where we only have chicken every other month or so.

“No, we sure don’t,” I said. His friend/ brother/ coworker/ how the fuck do I know their relationship? got out of the van and walked over to us.

The first guy mumbled something that I didn’t quite understand, though I heard “just roosters?” in there somewhere, so I said “Well, we have a couple of roosters, and the rest are hens.”

The second guy said “You have any fresh eggs?”

“No, we sure don’t,” I said. “We sold the last extra dozen yesterday.”

“So, when the sign is out is when you have eggs?” Guy #2 said.

“Right, if the sign is out we have eggs, and if it’s not we don’t.” I wisely didn’t add “DUH!”

There was silence as the two men looked out toward the chicken yard. And it wasn’t anything they did, I didn’t have any flashes of intuition, I’ve read The Gift of Fear and I believe fully in following your intuition, I never truly felt unsafe, but that’s the point when I thought to myself, You’re a goddamn idiot for standing here talking to two strange men. This is how news stories that begin ‘A Smallville woman was brutally raped and murdered in her own home earlier today while ten cats hid under a nearby bed’ happen.

“How many chickens do you have?” Guy #2 asked.

I lied. “About forty,” I said.

Another pause as they looked out toward the chicken yard, and then they smiled and thanked me and left.

When I came inside and called Fred, he made me go over the conversation a couple of times, and then he said “Have you learned anything?” and I said “To look out the window before I go running out the door when someone honks their horn!” and he said “Anything ELSE?” and I said “No, not really”, even though I knew what he wanted me to say was that I’d stick a gun in my pocket before I went out to talk to strange men, but the conundrum there is that if I’d realized they were strangers I never would have gone out there.

(I’ve told Fred we need a doormat that says “The wife don’t take too kindly to strangers.”)

So then he said “What would you have done if you’d seen them headed for the chicken yard to STEAL OUR CHICKENS?”

And I obediently said I’d have grabbed a gun and gone after them, but please. As if. I know me, and I’m as likely to go after a couple of trespassing strangers who are out to steal some chickens from us as I am to get the lead role in The Nutcracker on Broadway.

So, yeah. Strangers came by, I talked to them, they left without incident, and I live to bitch another day.

& & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & &

 

The other day I went upstairs to hang out with the kittens, and Kara wanted to come with me, so I let her in. She went into my bedroom to hang out, and I put the baby gate back up.

After getting his fill of love from me, Lem was all “It’s time to EXPLORE!”

2008-11-13 (2)
So he sat in the hallway looking at Kara for a long time.

2008-11-13 (3)
Kara said ::hiss!::

2008-11-13 (4)
Lem said ::HISS!::

2008-11-13 (5)
Kara said “That’s what I thought you’d say. I’ll just be in here hiding under the bed.”
Lem said “Good to know. I’ll watch here from the doorway.”

I don’t expect Kara to adopt the kittens as her own or anything, but would it be too much to ask her mothering instincts to kick in just a little and have her be NICE to the little ones?

Apparently so.

& & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & &

 

2008-11-13 (1)
Crooked Acres President-Elect Tommy “Big Time Pimpin’ Daddy” Cullen with his bodyguard.

& & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & &

 

Previously
2007: Well, of course. Of course he was in the house. Where else would a squirrel be, after all?
2006: In lieu of an entry today, you get a plea.
2005: No entry.
2004: No entry.
2003: I’m not holding much love for Tubby at the moment, believe you me.
2002: And also, I have short and stubby legs.
2001: I think that our dog thinks she’s a Mexican jumping bean.
2000: In fact, my new motto is going to be “Bitch, whine, moan. Lather, rinse, repeat.”
1999: I would name her Molly.

23 thoughts on “11-13-08”

  1. Tommy the Pimp doesn’t take kindly to his ho’s acting up!!

    I think what you would have done if you’d seen the men go to steal your chickens is run to get the camera! That way you’d have photographic evidence against them AND you could blog about it. Duh – Fred is so silly sometimes.

  2. I must get one of those cat hats!

    Check out my Christmas cat photo shoot.What happened to the good old days when cats LOVED to be dressed up?

    Strangers scare me……

  3. Little Lem is SUCH a gorgeous kitty. I would imagine you’ll be able to time how long it takes for him to get adopted with a stopwatch.

  4. “Big Time Pimpin’ Daddy” BWAH HAHA HAHA HA!

    Also, that picture of Lem with his wee butt and his wee feetkins is too too cute!

  5. What’s with people honking to get you to come outside? This happened to me yesterday. We don’t many solicitors on our dead end road so when I heard a horn late in the afternoon I figured it was hubby getting home from work. Without looking I went and opened the garage door then went to finish laundry. Then I thought, that didn’t sound like hubby’s motorcycle, so I checked. It wasn’t. It was some dude who paves driveways looking for business. And I live to bitch another day as well:)

  6. Looks like Crooked Acres President-Elect Tommy “Big Time Pimpin’ Daddy” Cullen is goin’ chicken huntin’. LOL

    Seriously though, so far the hat looks best on Toms.

    As for your near misadventure with visitors – that story made the hairs on the nape of my neck stand up. Especially when the 2nd guy felt he needed to get out of the truck. But would I have done the same thing? Yeah. Probably.

    They might be chicken thieves – never know. Or rapists. Or casing the place. Maybe carrying a gun isn’t such a bad idea after all.

  7. Be careful! I think you should put up a new sign, saying, “we bear arms” or somesuch. Maybe they were friends of walkin’ dude….. I know, perhaps try to become dog lovers – well dog likers enough to keep one outside in a dog run so that the dog can bite anyone who tries to steal your chickens or harm you!

    And you made me spit out my coffee at “chicken wrangler” heh.

  8. You got your money’s worth out of that hat! I like how Tommy’s wearing on the side like a beret. Too funny!

  9. Hee — this sentence STILL makes me laugh: You cannot make a stupid bird a smart one with SCOOP HANDS!

  10. You know, it was one thing when you made them wear the hat inside. But OUTSIDE? In front of god and everyone?? I don’t know about that.

  11. I am ded from the Tom Cullen picture. I am reading your entry whilst listening to a very important work teleconference. Guess which is more interesting??? Seriously, the Tom picture made me pee a little I laughed so hard. Thank God for mute on my phone.
    I know you got the lecture from Fred but still, kinda scary potential situation. I know we all have become so paranoid nowadays because of the whack jobs out there and these guys were probably just what they appeared to be, dudes looking for chickens. Perhaps you could have thrown them off by asking for a name and number and your husband could call them back when he got out of the shower. Course it is easy to think of things from 500 miles away.
    I read the Gift of Fear, thanks to your reccomend, and I was getting nervous just reading your story although I knew they at least allowed you to live long enough to blog about them before they killed you and ate your hands. I would keep a close eye on the chicken yard for a week or so to see if the guys were up to no good.
    Maybe you guys could foster dogs as well and that way you would have a dog in an outside run but not have a lifetime commitment to being dog owners.

  12. Oooo. scary. I hope they don’t come back. It’s all seemed very suspicious.

    I love it when cats hiss, it just makes me laugh for some reason.

  13. I think it’s sad that we’ve all had to be wary of strangers, but be careful Robyn. I don’t even like to answer the door in the daytime anymore.

    On a lighter note, I love the Tommy picture! 😀

  14. OMG!!! You put the hat on that poor kitty outside. The humilitation! I wonder when they made those little red hats did they think of cats? That’s the first thing I thought of when I saw one.

  15. Maybe those men were from CPS- Chicken Protective Services. Be careful out there when your alone. Also, I would love to see the hat on a chicken.

  16. .. But but… You had a fully armed wantin to kick ass Mr. Boogers right at hand…Fling his ass and het across your arm and let him intimidate the boogeymen away…Don’t care for nosey guys checking stuff out either. Cell phone in pocket maybe ?
    AND Tommy was born to wear hats.. hims such a good boy.

  17. Scully is my only momma cat and she is usually the least accepting of any of my fosters. Sounds like she and Kara have something in common!

Comments are closed.