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#757202 - 04/15/12 06:22 PM
Do You Have Any Remarkable Bird Stories To Tell?
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Chipmunk
Registered: 10/16/10
Posts: 1228
Loc: Michoacan, Mexico
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Hi,
One of the previous Birds site's editors had a subject category titled "Remarkable Birds" in which she or contributing editors wrote articles about their special birds. I think that is a super idea as there are so many birds out there worthy of praise and acknowledegement.
Hence, I would like to continue and expand that subject. So, if you have or know of any REMARKABLE birds, present or past, that you would like to write about in terms of their unique personalities, amazing behaviors, their overcoming adversity, special aptitudes, interesting interactions with other pets or humans..., please contact me either through the forum mail of the Birds sites contact form.
Or you could relate your special bird stories here in the forum. Looking forward to hearing about your birds!
WHAT BIRDS DO YOU KNOW THAT DESERVE TO BE FAMOUS?
Edited by Les-Mexico/Birds (05/17/12 09:27 AM)
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Les Shulman Ex-Mex/AthAg/Birds Ed.
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#762377 - 05/12/12 10:27 PM
Re: Do You Have Any Remarkable Bird Stories To Tell?
[Re: Les Ex-BellaOnline Ed.]
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BellaOnline Editor
Parakeet
Registered: 03/25/11
Posts: 1028
Loc: Johannesburg South Africa
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Hello everyone,
Well Les I am not sure if my story belongs here but at the same time I think it does. You will have to make up some of the details as it is a childhood story for me and I have forgotten bits of it and certainly some of the facts, like when, and what kind of chicken, and how old etc. so I will make up some stuff but essentially it is a true story.
I grew up on a small plot in the midst of a predominantly maize tobacco and cattle farming community so we got to live a lot of life that belonged to farmers and all and small 'village' mentality and events. I was very lucky and had a charmed childhood for the most part (except for the bit when I had to go away to boarding school) and as was wont, whenever we came home on holidays we had the Sunday roast along with roast potatoes and peas and carrots and those gravies and trifles - are they easily forgotten? No, I do not think so!
My Mom was a courageous and hardworking person along with my Dad and she turned her hand to so much, including growing coffee, pineapples, fruit orchids, house building or raising pigs and sheep or running commercial general stores for the farming community and a lot more. Well, inevitably, we also farmed chickens.
Her pigs all had names and I know she talked to them - I swear when she went to feed them, she would call ahead and they would respond by grunting and snorting (if that is what enormous sows do) and she would commune with all her animals this way.
And yes this is actually a bird story. Just want you to imagine the setting.
Of course the meat for Sunday was mainly home grown including the chickens and turkeys and ducks and lamb for Christmas and other celebrations etc etc and so on.
It was just that this one chicken could speak human I think, or had a remarkable ability to use esp or something. Whenever it came for chicken time and to choose a bird for the pot, Fanny-by-Gaslight (yep that was her name) would squawk a lot, run around in 'square circles' flapping wings then disappear. Where she diappeared to no one could say, she just disappeared. Well this frustrated many a chance the chicken guy had trying to follow my Mom's instructions.
Mom would often tell Gaston, go get Fanny today and he would return saying she was nowhere to be found. Of course my Mom would tell him to stop talking nonsense and go and get the bird and again and again he would return to say that no, the Fanny bird was not to be found. Then she would go see for herself, see the bird lurking and flapping wings, call out to Gaston to go and GET THAT BIRD, I have just been down to the coop and seen it, so move it and go get it. And again he would come back, shake his head and say no, the bird was not there.
Well as kids we loved this game (we thought it was a game!) and joined in. Sometimes I would go down to the coop with Gaston and sometimes with my Mom, so I saw both sides of the story as it were. Well in the end my Mom would choose another bird and that would be that until the next time. This went on for about 2 years as I remember, and thinking now as I write, I must have been 9 or so, so this would have been early 50s.
Well Fanny would appear again in the evening and poor old Gaston had to account for why that darn hen was still around not producing eggs and just making a noise and eating and taking up space etc. My Mom once told us that she waited in the area to see where Fanny went to, but couldn't or didn't and swore that after chicken time, when she did appear, there was a cockerel-type swagger to her walk which seemed more pronounced and that there was a glint in her eye that said 'You won't catch me!' along with a measured cluck clucking.
Indeed, my Mom never did, and she never made the pot did Fanny. She had my Mom beat and in the end Mom just didn't choose her.
Gaston came one day to call us and to say that Fanny had died of old age and asked permission to bury 'this clever bird' who had beaten him too and made him 'stupid' with frustration. He wanted to bury her with respect as he said the meat would be tough and a mean meal. I remember that day, my Mom just shook her head and said something like 'whatever'.
Who knows what he did do with that dead bird, but I am sure she was buried and certainly, did avoid the pot. I remember too that he never worked out where the bird went to or hid either. Funny that. My Mom used to say Gaston's bird in the end so maybe he was an enabler, but if so, then he would have had to have been smart as sometimes he and Mom would go together to look for the chicken. Anyway, up to today, I swear that Fanny was the smart one and just refused to be one for the pot!
Well, that is my simple but very long 'remarkable bird story.'
Thanks for the memory Les and for the opportunity of being able to tell it! I would be interested in hearing from a free-range-chicken-farmer out there if these birds are smarter than we think.
Cheers now,
Edited by Lestie - ContainerGardens (05/12/12 10:41 PM)
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Lestie Mulholland - Container Gardening Editor Container Gardening Site Container Gardening Forum"Things GARDENING are great ... they are my daily smiles on toast!" - Jennifer St John-Rose, formerly black thumb recently turned green.
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#762604 - 05/14/12 03:12 PM
Re: Do You Have Any Remarkable Bird Stories To Tell?
[Re: Les Ex-BellaOnline Ed.]
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BellaOnline Editor
Parakeet
Registered: 03/25/11
Posts: 1028
Loc: Johannesburg South Africa
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Ha! I inherited a love of ordinary and not so ordinary chickens from my Mom and it seems that I have found others who appreciate this! I have a rather nice oil on canvas original painting of chickens pecking around, I have two wire chicken-shaped topiaries with miniature ivy, I have a chicken shaped blackboard for kitchen notes, I have a chicken biscuit basket, I have chicken salt and pepper cruet set, and I have other chicken things hanging around - OH NO, I am turning into a chicken! What now. Ag man, I shall just sit back and enjoy being a touch kitch and carry on finding and growing and living chikeny things. Shh. Please don't tell anyone. Thanks. Talk about Les and his sentient beings, between my Mom's pigs and the Vervet monkeys she saved and her chickens (and my my Dad' lambs), I don't doubt animals have individual characters and can be all seven ... you know Grumpy, Happy, Sleepy, Dopey, Bashful, Sneezy and Doc and all and all. And why not just add Rudolph's eight too - Dasher, Dancer, Prancer Vixen, Donner, Blitzen, Cupid and Comet! We will just make up our own uses of the names and turn them into adjectives to describe 'my' chickens.
Her Royal Grinningness signing out
_________________________
Lestie Mulholland - Container Gardening Editor Container Gardening Site Container Gardening Forum"Things GARDENING are great ... they are my daily smiles on toast!" - Jennifer St John-Rose, formerly black thumb recently turned green.
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