Wednesday, October 2, 2019

The Fox in the Hen House



“Let’s build a wall between us and our neighbors,” says the Fox.

“Okay,” says the farmer.

“Oh, and build a mote around it, and put alligators in it.”

“Alligators? That’s not a good idea.”

“Shoot the people if they come over to our side of the fence.”

“But Mr. Fox, you can’t kill your neighbors. It’s against the law.”

“Well, shoot them in the leg.”

“Mr. Fox, you can’t go around shooting people, that’s against the law too.”

 “Really? But, I’m The Fox, I can do anything.”

The farmer, because he was fed up with the way things were going and wanted a change, invited the Fox into his chicken house. (He has roosters too.)

He believed the story when the fox told him he would clean up the hutch, put in new straw, keep out the riff-Raff. The chickens would have a better life, he said. He would throw a few crumbs their way and the chickens would be happy. 

The farmer was so enamored with the Fox that he forgot that the fox ate chickens.

And so the story goes…

This came to my attention yesterday: A sixty-five-year-old woman fears that she might be sent back to Germany in the sweep to clean up the chicken house.

She was adopted as an infant but does not have papers to prove it. 

Her folks are gone, what does she have now to prove she has lived in the chicken house for over sixty years? She provided eggs for the farmer and thought she belonged.

And the hapless farmer, fearing repercussions from The Fox, has orders to pull baby chicks from beneath their mommas on cold nights and leave them to their own devices.

We have to help that farmer. He has lost his marbles.

And get that frick’en Fox out of the hen house!

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Head Over Heels

You never know what you will find on the trail.

That's the fun of hikes. Well, you don't want to run into a bear, or poison oak, but come on, here's a trail right smack dab in the middle of a residential community with probably no bears. If there is, he deserves to be there.  

 We found the trail on google. 

Having driven from Eugene to Hillsboro Oregon in daughter’s electric car we had planned to stop for a charge along the way, so we left early. It only takes about 20 minutes for a high-speed electrical charge, and that gives time for a pit stop anyway. Daughter dear's Kia Soul will go about 90 miles on a charge and costs about $7.50 for a fast charge. At home, with an overnight charge, electricity cost is about a buck and a half. 

Electric cars are probably the wave of the future, and I've learned that charge facilities are scattered across the country, and easy to find on a charge station map, or the GPS.  
 

We arrived in Hillsboro early, and instead of going straight to our destination, a family potluck, we decided to take in some of the sights. Orenco Woods Nature Park popped up on google, and there was something there that intrigued us. 

Okay, we take off on a trail where the website had warned us to wear hiking shoes--what we didn't. It was a beautiful day, though, and so we traipsed down first a cement trail, then a sawdust one, then light gravel, continuing around bends where we were sure we would find what we were looking for, and then another bend, only to show more trail. 

We had a couple of false turn-a-rounds, as time and feet were growing thin and sore respectively. 

 But we didn't. We came upon a bridge. 
 


Grandson on bridge. 
 And I photographed Oregon Grape--Oregon's official state flower.




To my surprise, I found that Oregon Grape has medicinal properties. 

 'The chemicals in Oregon grape might help fight bacterial and fungal infections. Oregon grape may also slow the overproduction of skin cells in diseases such as psoriasis." 

I better take another trip to the woods and gather some, my skin could use it.  

A couple of ladies hiking the other direction told us that what we were looking for was only about 1/8th mile ahead. Okay. We trudge on. 
  
And there it was--as surprised to see us and we were to see him.










 "Head over Heels," these stick sculptures, were the brain children, of Patrick Dougherty, who has over the past 30 years built 200 of such sculptures--different designs--all over the world. They will last about 5 years before disintegrating, and the ladies on the trail told us we were about two years into that time-frame. 

They are 18 feet tall, and made of willow and dogwood collected from local parks. One hundred and fifty volunteers helped to build them. 

Like I said, you never know what you'll find on the trail.