Chickens

Chicken Chat

-

“Surf’s Up” was my life’s backdrop having lived within walking distance of the Pacific Ocean in Southern California, surrounded by friends and family who lived for the perfect wave. Long days at the beach turned into endless choices of live music at night, so after shaking the sand out from between our toes, we headed to all the venues popular in the entertainm­ent mecca of Los Angeles.

The Sunset Strip offered up little-known bands that later became famous — Mötley Crüe, Van Halen and countless others — telling us what we already knew: Socal was the place to be! I secured my career in the entertainm­ent industry. Today, however, my favorite group is a flock of chickens!

JUMP!

A 20-year deal my husband and I made about leaving Southern California was playing out. It was time to escape the neverendin­g bumper-tobumper traffic and head to Northern California, which offered access to the beach but also beautiful lakes, hiking trails and the quirkiness of our new home in the gold rush town of Placervill­e, where everyone knows your name and the local coffee roaster always brews the perfect cup. We packed up our bulldog and turned the page to our new adventure in October 2018.

I had wanted to raise backyard chickens for a few years prior to our move and did as much research as I could before we took the plunge. We decided that we wanted to select a variety of breeds and celebrate their individual­ity and with it, keep it light-hearted and fun. My daughter and I decided that we’d name the chickens after the female characters from the I Love Lucy television series, so a bit of Hollywood still remained with us in our new home. We roared with laughter imagining these fluffy beauties running to the sound of their new names.

Enter Lucy Ricardo (Red Sex-link), Ethel Mertz (Buff Orpington), Mrs. Trumble (Naked Neck), Betty Ramsey and Caroline Appleby (Easter Eggers), and our newest littles, Mrs. Mcgillicud­dy (Rhode Island Red), Marion

Strong (Barred Plymouth Rock) and Cynthia Harcourt (Barred Plymouth Rock). “The Tropicana” was open for business!

HOME, SWEET HOME

Watching our girls is one of the greatest pleasures. They’re comical and communicat­ive and reward us with funny antics on a daily basis. We’ve learned how they alert one another when our bulldog (who believes they are his chickens) is near, when the treats are coming and when one is annoyed with a coopmate. They curiously tilt their heads to get a better look at our faces when we squat down to talk to them.

To enjoy the wonderful bounty of eggs they bestow upon us, we keep them busy with chicken activities, healthy fruits and vegetables and a coop clean enough I’d even settle in for a nap! They’re living their best lives, and though they can’t know what that means, it’s enough to see them thrive the way they do.

We believe in life’s experience­s that keep us discoverin­g — that, despite what the world’s challenges are, our lives continue to build richness in memory. The age-old question of “where do you see yourself in five years” keeps us daydreamin­g in positive ways. Our girls remind us that we all have a path to follow, and we’re so grateful that these little darlings have come to roost on our path.

Take the plunge! If it’s not the plunge you were thinking of, swimming to the side always gives you time to reassess.

Lisa Wilson is a lactation consultant and perinatal educator. Her love of live music continues as does her passion for English Bulldogs, craft coffee and her new granddaugh­ter. She can often be found talking nicely to her new vegetable beds while munching on doughnuts and planning her next hike.

 ??  ?? Lisa Wilson holds Mrs. Trumble.
Lisa Wilson holds Mrs. Trumble.
 ??  ?? Mrs. Magillicud­dy, Cynthia Harcourt and Marion Strong are welcomed to the "koffee klatch.”
Mrs. Magillicud­dy, Cynthia Harcourt and Marion Strong are welcomed to the "koffee klatch.”
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Ethel seeks a roosting spot on the patio table.
Romeo Beeblebox, the Wilsons’ English Bulldog, thinks he is a herding breed.
Ethel seeks a roosting spot on the patio table. Romeo Beeblebox, the Wilsons’ English Bulldog, thinks he is a herding breed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States