Getting the flock out of here - a diary of a crazy chicken man

Aww but you can explain the excess with chicken math....  Chicks dont count Bantams dont count  Well may be one and a half bantams count as one .... Roos   Naw they are just rare calling ground fowl.   Then play rooster song on the computer mix it with some quail and peacock too.   or Guinea Fowl...  :gig   just kidding but I know people who keep their roosters in a rooster box after six or seven pm...  sound proof.
d
e
b

Ok Miss Deb...I'm setting here after a generous glass of old grape juice, and you avatar seems to be moving. Now I'm not a drinker, but not a light weight either, but that horsey is swaying. Wonder if maybe, just maybe, this grape juice is mixing well with my old man meds,or I'm just losing it. Hummm...
I LOVE your chicken math and thank you for my CM101 course. Grin. You should hear me telling my neighbors that hens do in fact crow, in the absence of a rooster.
(That durn horsey is still dancing)
 
Quote:
Bwhaahah... its a GIF


but he looked so much like my Girl I couldn't resist

gig.gif
Old Grape juice
 
Oz, thank you for posting this. Dh is constantly fussing at me because my truck is not show room clean. It's "dirty", but not with actual dirt. He simply doesn't get it that I have a few bags of feed, oyster shell, various tools, and dairy boots in the back at all times, then sometimes a bale, or two of hay, a cage or two, etc. He seems to think I should unload everything when I get home from the coop, wash the truck, then reload it all again the next day, rinse, repeat. Yes, I do clean it up, but not on a daily basis. After seeing this pic, he asked "does everyone that owns livestock have "dirty" vehicles? Since there is no good answer to satisfy his question, I replied "of course".
Definately OCD because I can't find the dirt except for a smudge on the big blue thing on top. And as far as my vehicles go, if a CSI team ever gave any of them the once over they would know that it was a rural vehicle because of all the grass seed and grains that worked into the seams and under the carpet.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom