I think most
of you know I have one chicken…Mabel. What you may not know is Mabel’s
background. The woman, Gail, who cuts my hair wanted chickens and got three
little chicks. They were so tiny, she kept them inside and even carried them
around in her shirt to keep them warm. She named them Lucy, Ethel and Mabel.
Mabel |
The ladies had the run of her backyard
once they grew up and trashed it with their scratching for bugs and worms. They
had a little coop Gail’s mom purchased for her. It was very cute, but not
really built for outside in the rainy northwest.
This was all years ago when we were
part of a book club. At one of the meetings, Gail was upset because she was
going to have to get rid of her girls. Her husband hated the chickens because
at first light, Mabel would crow. Then, a neighbor got into the mix and
complained about that rooster crowing. The girls had to go.
Without checking with John, I piped up
and said I’d take them and give them a good home. Gail was elated. She could
come the few blocks to my house to visit her girls. So, one nice day, Thor and
John went to Gail’s and hauled the coop and the girls back to our place and
established them in what we’d called the chicken yard for decades. It had
previously been home to chickens, rabbits, ducks and one goose.
L-R, Lucy, Ethel, Mabel |
Gail was right, Mabel did crow. I took
her to the feed store at Thrasher’s Corner and asked them if she really was a hen
and not a rooster. The staff assured me I had a hen and that sometimes, a hen
will crow for no apparent reason. After a time here, Mabel gave up crowing and
began to cluck just like her chicken yard mates.
Time passed and we loved the eggs they
laid and made sure to give Gail a dozen now and then. Gail also came to visit
her girls. Lucy and Ethel were always happy to be picked up and held…Mabel, not
so much. We could never decide who was laying the eggs because we never got
three on one day. There’d be one, maybe two, but never three.
Original Coop |
The little coop Gail had for the girls
didn’t do well in the rain. John, AJ and Thor spent a weekend putting up a
shed. John had the plastic material for the roof, but put up a blue tarp “temporarily.”
It was years later when my handyman installed the plastic on the roof.
Meanwhile the girls lived there and various largish tools were stored in there too.
It had electricity, i.e., a long cord that goes from the garage to the shed. Initially,
John put part of the old coop inside to make the girls feel at home. When that
began to fail, John installed some nest boxes and a part of a cupboard with a
railing for them to roost on.
Father & Sons abuilding |
Time went by and John’s exercise for
the day was usually going to the chicken yard to let “his” girls out and then
again at night to close the door to keep them safe. One evening, Ethel was
missing. She couldn’t be found anywhere. She was just gone. No evidence of a
hawk or an owl or eagle, no loose feathers floating around. It was like she’d
moved into another dimension. It was at that point we came to the conclusion
that Mabel didn’t give us eggs. Now, we only got one every other
day.
One morning John went to let his girls
out and found Lucy on the floor of the shed, dead. He was very sad and took issue
with my saying I’d put her in a plastic bag and into the garbage. Nope, she was
a family pet, she had to go underneath the apple tree. That’s where Lucy is
today.
So, Mabel was left alone. She didn’t
really seem to mind since she was given the run of the entire garden. How much
damage can one chicken actually do? Not too much, so I don’t have a problem
with her roaming around. Back when I was having the rat problem, I began to
fasten the gate to the chicken yard. That meant I had to pick Mabel up and
carry her out. Then, in the evening, I’d open the gate and have to either carry
her in to her house or wave a broom around to get her to go there on her own.
Then, Haley began spending a bit more
time here and wanted to hold Mabel. So, she did. Well, between my carrying
Mabel in and out of her shed and Haley holding and stroking her, she’s become a
very needy chicken. I go work in the garden and she’s right there beside me.
When I move to the next patch, she scratches through the loose dirt and follows
me. This isn’t a problem, but Mabel has become a challenge in another way.
Almost Finished Coop/Shed |
Mabel thinks she should be allowed in
the garage and even in the house. A couple of weeks ago, I went looking for her
so I could keep her safe from the racoons and coyotes. I couldn’t find her
anywhere. I looked all over and clucked and bock-bocked to no avail. Then, ready
to give up, there she was, sitting absolutely still on the table in the garage.
Who knows how many times I looked right at her without seeing her.
Then, she began coming into the laundry
room and nesting right against the door to the dining room. I almost stepped on
her several times. Earlier this week, I left that door ajar so the dogs could
come and go. I was on the phone and got up to close the sliding glass door
which had the screen in place. Who was nesting on the carpet in front of the
slider…Mabel. She’d come in through the garage and laundry room and made her
way into the living room.
Now, the thing is, I wouldn’t care if
Mabel became a house chicken except she poops and it’s disgusting. It is bad
enough in the filthy garage, but the laundry room and entire house is
completely off limits. I’ve begun trying to keep the back-garage door closed
during the day so she’ll stay in the yard, but sometimes I forget. If that door
is closed, Mabel goes to the deck and huddles against the sliding glass door…like
I’m going to take pity on her and say, “C’mon in.”
Wednesday was one of the days I forgot
to close the back-garage door. At dusk, I went out to lock Mabel in. I’d left
the gate to the chicken yard open so she could access her house. No Mabel in
there. So, I figured I’d just wait until it was completely dark and then close
the shed door. At 10:00 pm, I went with my trusty flashlight to close her door.
Still no Mabel. Where could she be?
So, I wandered the garden, deck and
looked all over. No Mabel. I took another turn through the garage and was
giving up when I went to the back side of the big table full of tools. This
time Mabel had maneuvered herself into a tiny space between two boxes. She just
nested there and looked at me like, “So, what are you going to do now?”
I gave up, closed the back-garage door
so nothing could get inside, and went to bed. This morning, Mabel had come out
from her tiny hiding place and was under the table waiting for me to open the
garage door. I did so, the dogs ran out and I escorted Mabel outside by waving
my bathrobe at her.
Looking out my window just now, I
couldn’t see her anywhere, so I got up and went outside. I traversed the yard,
checked her house and her yard and looked in all the places I thought she might
hide…no Mabel. She sure is good at hiding.
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