The kids and I, and even Kenny, loved these adorable little fluff balls and watched them grow - FAST. It wasn't long before they were ugly and no one wanted to hold them anymore. I figured that if no one wanted to hold them we wouldn't have to stand in the pole barn, for what I considered way too long, to stare at some ugly, loud stupid birds. I was wrong. They might have been ugly but they were starting to get personalities. Now, before you think I've really lost it, you have to listen. I would go outside to find Kenny (the hubs) watching these partially feathered little guys with a smirk on his face. Seriously, this is where he had been. I laughed until he called me over to watch, and guess what, he was right!! They were fun to watch. They were doing that whole "pecking order". I thought that was just some kind of old fashioned figure of speech, but its not! They really do it. They fight and finally the head bird takes his place and the others fall in line. Best thing yet, I knew which ones I was going to like and which ones would get the ax first - the only problem, I wanted eggs and I still to this day can't tell a rooster from a hen.
Go ahead and laugh but I'm serious. Boy chickens don't have.... parts. Well, they do but you can't see them. Trust me, I've tried. I've Googled and YouTubed myself crazy trying to see a chicken penis and they aren't visible! I did, however, experience chicken sex the other day. Cross that one off the bucket list. It doesn't look pleasant but compared to cats, it seemed relatively painless for the female. So, now I have 2 distinguishable birds. One boy and one girl. The happy little couple. They might even be the two in the picture but since I can't tell a boy from a girl, its highly unlikely that I can tell you which two chickens are in that picture.
CHICKEN: *Nervous look. Stands up. Looks under her squatty little body.*
ME: Hey chickey wickey. Don't be afraid. *Giggles*
CHICKEN: *Nervous look. Checks again.* What the hell is that?
ME: *Squeaks and runs for the camera.*
CHICKEN: *Peck, peck, peck* What. Is. That?!
ME: You did it!! Good job Chickey Wickey!! *Cue strange Chickie Mama emotions. Start snapping photos.*
CHICKEN: *Peck, peck, peck. Shrugs. Steps out of the coop.* Well, that was strange.
ME: *Snatch the egg and go inside to post on FB, Twitter and to text the hubs and call my mom.*
Call me crazy, you wouldn't be the first, but it was awesome. I'm a chicken grandma! My little fuzzy babies are laying eggs of their own! I'm probably taking this a bit far, but as I said, I'm not much of an outdoors kind of girl and I'm certainly not the farmer type. Picking vegetables in my garden freaks me out. Tall grass gives me anxiety but this, THIS was amazing. I've got a baby chick, or at least an egg. In my fridge. I feel guilty and sad for the chicken now. And I digress....
3 comments:
That is such a cute blog. When I was little, my grandfather had chickens and I remember my sisters and I would always go out and see if the hens had eggs. It is a good childhood memory...CONGRATS on being a chicken grandmother...lol
Thanks Misty! I never EVER thought I would be this into the whole chicken farmer thing but I really am. The kids are already begging to hatch the eggs. We're going to need a bigger chicken house.
Okay, I laughed out loud at the script...at work...in front of a large office window that looks out into the rest of the office....
Just thought I'd share my current embarrassment with you. :-)
Yay, chicken grandma!
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