Operation Feather Ruffle

It was bittersweet, but it had to be done. My six chickens and five guineas needed to be rehomed.

I travel a good deal for my day job, plus book stuff, so I was constantly having to network friends to open the chicken pen after sunrise and close it at sunset. This takes some doing because all my women friends are as busy as I am.

If our handyman had not blown out, or if Jack were living here, keeping them would have been no issue. But flying solo in bird care was not to be, and so Operation Feather Ruffle was born. A friend messaged some family members that the birds were available, along with all their supplies, in return for “free eggs for life.”

At first Tristi (matriarch of aforementioned family) only wanted my docile and pretty Barred Rocks (black and white speckles) and Midnight Majestics (black all the way down to their feathered feet). But her husband’s dad had raised guineas as a child and when he discovered there were five for the taking, he made his case. So the whole flying family would move together.

But, how? They had a trailer to haul the coop and barrel of food, but what about the pickup bed as the place the chickens traveled in? Cat carriers, cardboard boxes? In the end we decided the bed itself, with a locking cover and tailgate, would be best.

So Tristi, her father-in-law, and her brother-in-law, arrived with the truck and trailer. I borrowed a small dog crate from a friend, and we began, ehm, moving the birds.

Have you ever heard a frightened guinea? They sound like malfunctioning typewriters and look like lethal feather dusters: all movement and noise, and there is no reasoning with them. After a couple of futile attempts at soft talk, we cornered three in the coop and left them no egress but the cage door. That was the first three.

And they had a lot to say about it, which agitated their colleagues back in the coop.

Next round, we cornered some inside the actual henhouse inside the wire enclosure. Which meant moving the ladder by which they entered. Which meant my hand collided with very fresh poop from a frightened chicken. I swear one of them snickered as we closed the hen house door. Revenge is sweet, even for poultry.

We extracted three more via the egg box lid, Tristi sticking her hand through the door until the chickens backed far enough away from it that I could grasp them.

They did not like this. But it was done safely.

And then, as we tried using the poop-covered ladder to corner two more guineas, one of the hens got loose. She streaked across the yard and efforts to catch her suggested she might actually try flying over our fence, so we went back to extracting the others in the pen. At one point I got a mouthful of guinea feathers as she decided her best bet was to attack full frontal, but her rather sharp guinea toes did no damage to my sweatshirt and soon she too was in the pickup.

As we trudged back from loading all but the escapee, we pondered strategy. A net? A human cordon? Then the brother-in-law, a lad of about 15, said, “What’s that noise?”

The escaped chicken had secreted herself inside the wee hen house in our absence, her place of safety.

Tristi reached in, hauled her out, and cuddled her as she squawked for help. “Hey there, missy. No, it’s okay, you’re safe, calm down,” she crooned, stroking the bird nestled against her chest.

And the bird did. Turned her head and looked Tristi and the eye and you could see her little bird brain working. “Might not be so bad, better than staying here by myself. Ok, lady, let’s go.”

Tristi carried her to the truck in her arms, where her sisters looked annoyed as she joined them. “How do YOU rate?” they seemed to say.

Thus were my sweet babies rehomed. And I know it is the best thing for them, but I admit to a good cry after they left. Tristi promises to share their school report cards, and let me know if any of them get merit badges in their Scouts program, handicrafts, physical sports, that sort of thing. I am assured of a Christmas card.

So there we are. The chickens and guineas are living in a Fowl Paradise. Tristi already had a dozen birds, plus some baby ducks. She sent pictures of my former girls’ accommodations. And reported that evening that they were tucking into the grain supply and the mealworm treats without a care in the world.

Sigh. It’s not exactly that I wanted them to miss me, you understand, but the yard seems empty this morning.

When it becomes Personal

Appalachia is known as the epicenter of the substance use/opioid/painkiller/stopfightingaboutwhattocallitandjustfuckingfightitokay crisis. It has recently come home in a personal way.

Most of you know that Jack got very sick over the summer. And that we had someone working our property (mowing, cutting firewood, some garden assistance) in return for housing on some land we own out in the county. The land has a cute little home on it, and after a month of hiring this guy for money, and being pleased by his work ethic and his investment in his own sobriety, we invited him to live there in a rent-for-work deal.

Don’t think us naive; this guy was the protegee of a beloved friend who also believed in his personal investment in his own future. And we all know what happened, right?

Right. And included in what happened is what’s happening to the house. It is bad. So here we are, six months after the great start, with our house wrecked and a terrible need to evict him. We tried HARD not to evict him, because for someone with a felony, adding a court ordered eviction could result in losing freedom at worst, or means landlords won’t even consider him at best. All this we tried to say to his case manager, who turned out to be a 20-something drunk on the power of his own misinformation. That meeting resulted in this poor guy formally getting the court notification of eviction we had tried to avoid–and a formal complaint against the bumptious case worker.

Stuck doing something we don’t want to do to a nice guy when he’s in charge of himself, I am trying to sort some complicated feelings.

1) Was I naive to enter this agreement? The guy was so self-invested, so sensible. But he went back to work in a hotbed of drug activity, partly because entry jobs tend to be those kind of places, and partly because coming out of prison limits options. So the slow slide might have been inevitable unless I was willing to act not only as his landlord, but his dorm mom. I did not want to do that, and here we are.

2) What wrecks a promising, intelligent, kind-hearted human? This kid could not catch a break. Born from a forced sexual encounter, raised in what he described as a dealing family, unable to sit still in school long enough to complete an education, and never accountable other than punishment. Never rehab, only punishment. And so it goes. But I saw this guy, when Jack came home from the hospital with a bewildering, frightening collection of machines, tubes, and valves, take them from my shaking hands, and give Jack his first (and subsequent) nebulizer treatments. My friend who told me it would be safe to have him stay as our tenant had seen similar care of her elderly husband. This guy would have made the world’s greatest nurse.

3) Why do people who know what it did to them get out of substance use, then go back? I asked him once, did he miss anything from his former lifestyle. (Naive question: he was already back into it.) He said doing certain drugs made him feel like Einstein, his brain could work so fast and so well. And that the world was made for the strong to survive, which is why disagreements were settled with fists rather than talking things out.

4) What happens now? We all lose. He’s being evicted. He may or may not be in active use, but someone has been doing lines on the table at the county property. We are losing our winter help, which is the least of my concerns. We are watching a gifted, capable, competent human being choose all the things that are wrong for him, and because we evicted him, we are the enemy who cannot help further.

And so it goes. There is no one in Appalachia who has not been touched in a personal way by the substance use disorder crisis. But sometimes personal gets right down into your soul and lies there, burning. Because you can’t help.