Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Chasing chickens

I don't like running at the best of times. And 6.15 in the morning is certainly not the best of times.

To be honest, I don't think any time is a good time for chasing chickens. It puts me in quite a fowl mood. But as there are only three left, I wouldn't like to be responsible for losing any more. Once, there were four brown chickens, six Black Rocks and a cute white one that looked like a snowball. But over the course of the winter, Mr Fox has been picking them off one by one.

The chickens, which roam freely during the daylight hours, have a perfectly fine hen house to sleep in. But they rarely do: why should they when there is the luxury of the stables to enjoy? The American barn with its sliding doors, electric lights, bales of hay, convenient stalls to roost on and horse feed to plunder must be a chicken's idea of a luxury hotel. And that would be all well and good if they didn't decide to sneak outside when you arrive to muck out in the morning.

The fox massacred one on the lawn the other week; today I thought her sisters would be going the same way after I stupidly forgot to close the main door when I took the Grey Mare the few yards to her field. Suddenly, they were clucking around my feet and I was able to quickly shoo two inside. Chicken number three, however, was made of sterner stuff. She was outside and she was not going back in.

I sprinted round and round after this feathered blur, shocked at her turn of speed. If her legs were longer, I would have sworn she was a decendant of the Road Runner. Finally, I managed to corner her near the hen house and fortunately the door was open. I bolted it smartly behind her, and leaving her in solitary confinement, I almost collapsed in a heap with the exertion.

"Are you all right?" asked my friend, arriving to feed her horse. I explained what had happened. "Oh, you should've just put some grain in a bucket and shaken it for them," she said when she stopped laughing at me.

"No, what I should have done," I gasped between pants, "is left the f***kers for the fox!"

11 comments:

Yorkshire Pudding said...

SING - "Who's that lady? Foxy lady.." - Why it's none other than Eminem who is nominated for a lifetime achievement award by the Feral Fox Feeding Society. Speech! Speech!

Expat mum said...

Oh, too many chickens altogether for this claustrophobic lady! No wonder they want to run free as the wind!

Gill said...

There are lovely hens running round in the field behind our house and occasionally they pop into the garden for a bite of leftover pizza put out for the birds. Strange comical creatures aren't they? Unless you have to round them up!

Beth said...

It looks like it is more fun that going to the gym!

Brom said...

You should have called me for help. I'd have stood in front and they would have followed.

I've never had any problems pulling birds!

Whispering Walls said...

Have you seen "Chicken Run"?

Zig said...

I am tempted to get some chickens but am afraid for them, there were no less than 5 foxes in my top paddock yesterday! Sill I've also had the same pheasant pair (I'm assuming they're the same ones actually) living here for 3 years without becoming lunch so maybe they would be OK.

Karen said...

Shame the hens don't leave you eggs though mum!

I would quite like to keep hens but I am afraid that it would put me off eating them and then I would almost be vegetarian as I don't eat lamb at all and only eat minced beef.

rilly super said...

never mind luxury hotel to chickens M&M, compared to some places I've stayed in meant for people your stable seems pretty five star, and I bet the room service is better too

Sparx said...

I loved our chickens when I was a child, ridiculous creatures. We never managed to successfully round them all up, we had one or two who routinely slept out. We had a chicken-killing weasel of all things, a slippery customer...

Pig in the Kitchen said...

ha ha, I like the road runner imagery! At least you know the grain-in-bucket trick for next time.
Pigx