Alan said of the grey fox tooling around the lawn in broad day light. "It's after your guinea hens."
"No", said I, "it won't bother them."
"You'll be sorry," said he, in disgust, as the fox bounced away into the bushes. "It's going to get them."
That was yesterday afternoon.
And this morning you can easily see what soft-heartedness gets you out here in the real world. The whole barnyard is paved with speckled and spangled grey and purple feathers and the only guinea left is the big purple male.
Of course they had to start sleeping in the heifer barn instead of the coop where the door can be shut at night. They are the dumbest things....
There is no tenderness in nature...lesson...learn it if you want to live close to it.....Okay, I guess I've got it now.
Meanwhile the remaining male has been alarm calling since o-dark-thirty . At least I discovered that Nick will work birds when needed. (Gael used to be my go-to bird herding dog, soft enough to never alarm them (too soft for much real work) yet steady and good at getting it done.)
Nick has never been worked on birds because he has eaten a chicken or two in the past (they committed suicide by dog, by flying into his kennel), but this morning I simply couldn't stand all the screaming. I didn't want the guinea rooster to wake the boss up as he is plumb tired out, so I took Nick out to drive the darned bird to the barn and shut him up. He took commands he has never been taught slick as a cat burglar..."walk up, lie down, walk up" (he does know "lie down") and "that'll do" when the job was done. It was sweet to work a good dog again, really sweet.
I shut the cat up so he could come in and have a big bowl of kibble with a tablespoon of bacon grease....good boy! Guess I will put the purple male back in the coop and maybe give him away unless the female that seemed to be hiding a nest in the shrubbery actually is.
On the Rocks!
1 hour ago
13 comments:
:( sorry to hear about the birds... I know the feeling of being softhearted all to well... :-/ I can't kill or have something killed that's wild anyway... so we do the live trap thing and have someone take it off...
I say get some more hens though... and trap the fox...:-)
I think I would eat kibble with a spoonful of bacon grease on it.
Neat dog.
Poor dumb guineas.
My 8 banty chicks are now free ranging and seem to be either very lucky or learning survival from the older birds.
I agree with floridacracker!
My hubby just directed me over here.
Geeze. Sorry about the feathers.
" . . you can easily see what soft-heartedness gets you out here in the real world."
That's a huge sentiment and I'm glad you followed it up with the wonderful Nick round-up.
Have I mentioned that I love the way you spin a traumatic experience with humor, poignance, wisdom and rescue us from too much reflection with a good dog story.
Funny. Your blog and Flight Level 390 are my favorites.
Life from the perspective of a pilot soaring in rare air above the earth and life on the ground from the perspective of a woman dealing with the beauty and nitty-gritty of living and working on a dairy farm.
What your blogs share is fine writing and the ability to observe with heart and mind.
Nice combination.
Sara, I like the wild ones too, but we do eat deer and turkey and are pretty relentless on coyotes near the house...but I love to see the little foxes. This one was tiny and you wouldn't have thought it could kill a guinea hen...although actually from the way the feathers are scattered I am thinking there were several culprits involved. They went right INSIDE the barn to catch her....
FC, he sure does love it and the bacon grease keeps him fat and sassy...when I remember to give it to him. These are the dumbest guinea fowl I have ever seen and that is saying something. Not even smart enough to fly up in a tree to roost or come back in the coop at night. Glad your chicks are doing well
Cathy, thank you for the kind things you say. For me this is just me getting my turn to talk. In a house and barn full of opinionated people with a lot of interesting things going on in all their lives, a lot of times I don't get to finish a sentence or a thought for days on end. Except here where I can take all the time I have to spare to get thing said. The downside is whenever I see my extended family they already know everything I have to tell them so I just have to sit at family gatherings and shut up. lol.
Anyhow, it means a huge lot to me that you keep coming back to read!
" . .just me getting my turn to talk."
:-D
Love you daughter. Sorry we don't give you a chance to talk. That is your fate from being a quiet Montgomery descended from a passel of McGiverns. Love Mom
Mom, not you...the folks who live here with me...you let me talk, you just already know what is going on around here because you read the blog. lol And I love you too and am glad of the mix of interesting and cool people who donated genes. From the McGivern chin to Grandma Montgomery's eyes I am grateful for all of it...love you too!!
Sorry to hear of your guinea losses. I know what it's like. I lost about 30 of my assorted breed chickens and bantams last winter to a weasel or something. I have lots of guinea eggs, and you might hatch some if you have a broody hen. I'm trying to interest a couple of bantam hens in getting broody, but I've got more eggs than they can sit on.
Lee, we do have a couple of broody hens. So sorry to hear about your loss of birds too. So much wild life around these days.
Around here there is no wild life other than coyotes and raccoons... and possums. The neighbors #1. have killed all the deer around (in season and out) same for the turkeys (I might see one a year). #2. would love for the coyote population to go down but no one will get rid of them and with the turkey houses of the neighbors they live like kings...
#3. Raccoons can live in peace here until the sweet corn is ready... then we do have no mercy. :) one year it was so bad people couldn't even keep them out with electric fences...
Sorry to hear about the guineas. They really aren't the smartest birds. The farm I used to work at lost most of them to the road. They would chase the shiny car bumpers.
Sara, here they come right up to the door, although where there are people of the persuasion who fixed our roof the deer and turkeys are soon gone.
CTG, they are such idiots. Under the same circumstances the chickens do just fine. They are smart enough to go inside nights.
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