DogAndCat - I lived that one!! In 1981 I lived on top of Green Ridge Mtn in western MD on a 500-acre farm. On March 17, I had a foal born from my mare - her first. (This helps me keep my dates straight! lol)
Later that evening, I had to go out and get firewood (yup - only heat was a wood stove) and went out on the back porch to get wood off the wood stack. Lo and behold, I found a chicken - a naked neck (or turken) laying on top of the wood.
Frozen.
Stiff as a board. Seriously. So frozen that when I picked her up - her neck was stretched out in front of her body and her legs straight out behind and she didn't have a bend in her. I do believe had I slapped her against the woodpile, she would have broken in half!!
Unfortunately, the particular chicken was the pet of my then 10-year-old son. Her name was Gretchen (all the animals had names) and he went almost hysterical when I brought her inside - begging me to save his chicken.
Well, by that time I was just convinced there was no way in hell that was going to happen but decided it would be best if it looked like we had at least tried. So my husband got a box and laid a towel in it, put the chicken on the towel, covered her up with my son's favorite blanket - and put her behind the woodstove. As parents, we thought once my son had gone to sleep, we could come up with another idea - like have a funeral the next day.
The storm had started around 3 pm that afternoon and I guess it was around 6 pm that I went to get wood. So that chicken laid in that box for about 4 hours. When she suddenly came out from under the blanket, out of the box and was pecking around the floor.
To say our jaws hit the floor would be an understatement.
My son was ecstatic, to say the least, and insisted on keeping her in his room that night. I didn't argue the point.
All we could figure is that the temps had dropped so fast and so hard, that chicken went into a form of suspended animation?? And because the woodstove sent most of the heat out towards the room, she just slowly "thawed out". In any event, she lived another 3 years after that.
I will swear to this day - she was Frozen. Hard as a rock.
