It started as a simple comment, but for Linford, a comment is a prelude to action.
“We need some more animals around here,” he said in the middle of an ordinary conversation.
And I said, “The dogs and the fish aren’t enough?”
He gave me his squelching look. “We have all this land. It would be a shame for our children to grow up without animals.”
“Well, we have deer and raccoons and skunks and bears and mice. We definitely have mice. They don’t count?”
Apparently, they didn’t.
A day or a few later, he brought it up again as we swapped places at the bathroom sink, the give-and-take bedtime ritual instinctive after nearly a decade together. “We need some more animals around here. You have any thoughts on it?”
And I said, “No?”
That thought didn’t count.
Another time, out of context, he said, “I thought you like animals.”
“I do,” I said. “But animals mean work. The children will be excited about them for a few weeks, and then it’s just another chore to enforce.”
“It will teach them responsibility.”
And I thought, Hope springs eternal.
Yes, I really am that sarcastic. And that much of a squelcher. I am a bad woman and a worse wife.
Then there was that time I caught him looking at chicks online.
“Are you sure about this?” I asked.
“Yes, I’m sure.”
“Well, don’t let the girls see you, or you’ll never hear the end of it.” I propped an arm on his shoulder.
“I found a kind that are supposed to be so friendly they’re more like family pets. Speckled Sussex.”
He made a few inquires over the next weeks, but none of the hatcheries had Speckled Sussex chicks available at the time. I thought that might be the end of it.
But he is as relentless as a glacier. He started collecting information on chicken coops.
“You are serious, aren’t you?” I asked, looking at the flyers he picked up at a home and garden show.
“I am,” he said. “The children need more animals, and we have all this space. It’s a shame to have only two dogs and a fish. I don’t know why you’re dragging your feet so much.”
It wasn’t chickens I objected to. It was the elephant that the chickens represented.
When I was a child, I loved a book called But No Elephants. It told the story of Grandma Tildy, who lived alone until a traveling pet salesman appeared at her door with a menagerie. Grandma Tildy allowed herself to be talked into a canary companion. As she took the bird, she eyed the largest pet in his collection and said, “But no elephants.”
(Of course there’s an elephant for sale. This is a children’s book. Every child wants a pet elephant.)
It was inevitable. Grandma Tildy, after acquiring numerous other pets, eventually owned that elephant, the salesman recognizing a softy when he sees one. But when all seems lost and Grandma Tildy and her pets are doomed to destruction because of the elephant, the elephant saves the day in a spectacular fashion. They all lived happily ever after.
But that is a storybook. In real life, the chickens lead to sheep, the sheep lead to goats, the goats lead to a donkey, the donkey leads to llamas, and the llamas lead to a cow that I have to get up and milk at 4:30 every morning. And the cow does not save the day. It kicks and balks and slaps a mucky tail at anyone brave enough to squat beside it.
So it wasn’t the chickens I had a problem with. It was the elephants I saw marching in the distance.
Linford found a hatchery out of state that would ship ten chicks to our door. He ordered them and then made a Family Announcement. The cheers deafened the neighbors, I’m sure.
And I said, “Where are you going to keep them? We don’t have a chicken coop.”
“In the garage,” he said. “We’ll put some sawdust in a box and set up a heat lamp.”
I could just see it. Our main entrance is through our garage. (We have a strange house. Someday, I might tell you about it, if I can get over my worry of repeating King Hezekiah’s mistake.) I had no trouble imagining the sawdust tracked into the house, the spilled water and feed, the trouble with keeping Micah from hugging the chicks to death, the—
“They’re going to make the garage stink,” I said. “All hens?”
“No, I got straight run.”
And I said, “We’ll probably have eight roosters. I hate roosters.”
Jenica asked, “Why do you hate roosters?”
“I hate what they do at 4:30 in the morning.”
Her eyes got big. “What do they do at 4:30 in the morning?”
“They crow. Loudly.” I looked at Linford. “What are we going to do with all the roosters?”
“If we have roosters, we’ll butcher them. You’d like some young chicken, wouldn’t you?”
My eyes got big. “You’d butcher their pets? Oh, that will go over well. And what’s this about “we” butchering?”
Excitement pulsated in the air. The box, the feeder, the waterer, the light—all was made ready for the babies’ arrival. My builder brother was appointed to build a chicken coop.
The chicks came when I was at the writers’ conference. The girls told me all about them on Friday evening while I drove to my lodgings.
“Oh, Mom.” Even through the phone, Jenica’s voice held the softness and wonder of new love. “They are so adorable. They are brown and black and yellow. They look so funny when they take a drink.”
“They are so tiny,” Tarica said, her voice high and sweet. “They say peep, peep, peep when we hold them.” She stopped and giggled. “One of them pooped on Jenica’s school dress, but she washed it off.”
I had forgotten to complain about that detail in advance.
On Saturday morning, I talked to Linford. He said, his voice a little weary, “The girls were up at quarter after seven to see the chicks. One of them died during the night. Jenica didn’t take it well.”
This is what comes of loving animals. Unless it’s a Aldabra Giant Tortoise, it dies before you do. My softhearted daughter would be shedding more tears before this was over.
I arrived home late Saturday afternoon. I walked into the garage, arms laden, and stopped beside the box of chicks. They darted about the box, startled by my arrival. I lowered my bags to the floor and crouched down.
The fuzzy fluffball nearest me cocked its head and studied me with a bright eye.
And it said, “Peep?”
And I said—oh, this is embarrassing—I said, “Hey, there, little peep. Aren’t you the cutest little thing?” I scooped it up, felt its sharp feet pushing against my fingers, its heartbeat against my thumb. “Don’t be scared. I won’t hurt you.”
“Peep, peep?”
Just call me Grandma Tildy.
Ahhh… they are so cute! So did he get Speckled Sussex? That was one of the first breeds that we got. And the children could carry the full-grown hens around in their arms.
Or maybe that is from all the loving they got.
We haven’t had any animals for a couple years. Not even chickens. And we have all this land…
And thanks for the reminder about But No Elephants. My dentist had that bok and I read it every year while I awaited my turn on the dentist chair. I need to check to see if it still available. (The book, not the chair.)
Gina
Oops, I guess I never said. Yes, he found some Speckled Sussex chicks.
If I can’t find the girls, they’re in the garage, playing with the chicks. They do seem to be friendly little beasties. (The chicks, not the girls.)
Yes, the book is available online. I should get my own copy, too.
Love your story! Next week we will be butchering our 100 broilers… don’t you want to come help?!?! And bottle feeding a calf is such a child-friendly chore too. 😉 My hubby and milker take care of the 4:30 bit and the rest of us pig out on the milk… and butter… and ice cream! Pigs are really no trouble at all. Well, except when they get out. They do great on pasture running with the layer chickens… See, take courage, you’ve just begun! 🙂
This is exactly what I’m worried about. Fortunately, most of our land is wooded, and my husband is a hunter. We won’t be clear-cutting anytime soon, so we’re limited to the space around our house (she said with relief).
LOL! I hear ya!
I hear woods are the best place to raise a few pigs. They help clean up your undergrowth. This is the first time I’ve commented, but I enjoy checking your blog.
We have very little undergrowth in our woods (she said gleefully). Besides, I’m fairly sure the coyotes would be thrilled to find a tender piglet on the loose.
Uh…maybe it’s rude to shoot down the suggestion of a first-time commenter. Welcome here, Martha Ann. I’m opposed to pigs, not you.
I knew you wouldn’t like my suggestion, so don’t feel bad. I’m trying to talk our son into putting a few pigs in his woods, but he thinks they would not stay in the fence. I would love to have whole hog sausage. He could always hunt them with a gun if they get out. Your husband may enjoy that too.
Oh, how exciting Stephanie! As I’ve told you, I love animals. They bring me such joy. I’m sure these little chicks will do the same for your children and your husband. Maybe, just maybe you too! I know you’ll enjoy seeing your children interacting with them. As for the rooster crowing at 4:30am, eventually you’ll get used to it and will even sleep through it. At least we do!
Right now, the chicks’ cuteness won me over. Despite all my resistance, I knew they would. I’m as soft as my daughter, especially when it comes to small animals.
Now, roosters, they’re a different story. If they value their lives, they’ll crow quietly. (But the truth is, I don’t want to be involved their slaughter.)
They are too cute! And say yes to some more animals 🙂 I bet you won’t regret it 😉
I don’t even have to say yes. They just sort of show up. 🙂 I like animals, but their care and feeding can create a lot of work. Besides, I get to liking them, and then I cry when they die.
Nope, I’m not a farmer’s wife. 🙂
This was so good for me to read! For us, it’s the other way around. “Honey, we have ALL this space…..! We even have the shelter we’d need and it’d be so good for the children to learn responsability!”
The sound of elephants in the distance must be the reason my husband doesn’t jump to my tune as soon as I bring up the subject of more animals! And I must say, I am very thankful for his wise foresight, because I don’t know what I’d do the day the ‘elephant’ showed up at our door!
Chuckled my way through this post. Thanks!!