Every now and then, I catch myself going "I wonder what the chickens think about that".
This morning, it was snowing lightly up here in the holler. The ground was wet, but not frozen, so there was not much chance of it sticking. Still, I started wondering what the reaction would be from the chicks that had hatched since the last time snow was on the ground. Everything is probably still a brand new experience to them, so they might not think about it at all.
I can remember snows past, where we woke up to a thick white blanket on the ground. The birds seemed like they were not at all amused about this turn of events. It didn't stop them from wandering out and about, but I'm sure it changed their daily routines. It also makes them way more visible to airborne predator, which is something we found out the hard way.
We have four hens who sleep in a tree, and refuse to go into the nice, secure, weatherproof coop, no matter how nasty it gets outside. Many a morning, they have come down completely covered in frost, to follow the man (me) with the bucket of scratch out to the yard where the rest of the chickens congregate when I let them out of the coop. There are nights when the wind is blowing so hard that I think surely it will knock them out of the tree, only to find them securely fastened in the morning. We never have figured out why they prefer the tree to the coop.
Anyway, this morning when I started pondering once again what chickens think about, I remembered the full solar eclipse of a few years ago. Where we live, we had the full total eclipse visible from our yard. We had a couple of guests. One of our daughter's roommates from grad school and a friend had asked about camping on our property so they could view the eclipse. We told them we could do better than that, and they could stay in the house, shower, use the kitchen, and the pool. When the eclipse started happening, we set chairs out in the front yard and got comfortable. As it progressed, and the world seemed to go still and quiet, our dog came out and stood near us. Then, all of the chickens came out and stood around us, stock still and silent. They remained that way, seemingly transfixed, until the eclipse was over, and then they went back about their business. It was one of the strangest things I've ever witnessed. I still don't know what they were thinking.
Of course, a chicken's brain is as big as an acorn at best, so they might not be thinking at all. They might be merely reacting. Maybe I'm doing all the thinking.
And probably too much of it, at that.
Independent singer/songwriter...itinerant picker...chicken wrangler...dog lover... pretty good cook
At The Coop
Tuesday, December 17, 2019
Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Move Your Art, So It Can Move You
When I played at the Bluebird Cafe a couple of weeks ago, my friend (and fan) Steve
Mcnaron from Nashville Ear tagged along, as he has done in the past, and I hope he continues to do in the future. He videotapes my sets, and those of any other artists who are amenable, to post on his website. He is a great supporter of the songwriting community in Nashville.
Steve is also a visual artist. I had seen several of his works online, but never in person until he presented me one in the parking lot of the Bluebird. He said that based on the photos of my home and surrounding property that he had seen, he thought he had the perfect painting picked out. (I'm trying not to read too much into the fact that it's a shithouse.) I showed it to my wife the next morning, and she agreed that it was very nice, and we should try to find a place to hang it. We have a small house, and a lot of art, so we had to shuffle some things around.
We settled on a spot above the fireplace in our dining room. The Israeli watercolor that had been hanging there moved to the spot above the piano in the living room. That got us started re-thinking where everything was hung. We took a nice painting of a New York fire escape with a park in the background off the wall in the dining room, and replaced it with a fantasy print our daughter had given us, that was not getting enough eye action in a darker corner of the living room. We put the painting on a wall in our bedroom that had previously been mostly bare. It looks great there. A mandala print replaced the fantasy print in the living room.
Suddenly, we were seeing our art again. After years of hanging in the same spots, where we had gotten so used to seeing them that we neglected to "look" at them, the art was once again coming to life in our house. My father-in-law apparently had a six-month schedule of moving art back and forth from his office to his home, in order to keep things fresh. I wish we had thought of this sooner. It's almost like having a new collection. I would recommend this approach to anyone who needs a breath of fresh air.
So, it turns out that Steve gave us more than a painting. He gave us our art back.
Thanks, buddy!
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