written and posted by members of Lancashire Dead Good Poets' Society

Showing posts with label Robert Burns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Burns. Show all posts

Saturday, 25 January 2025

Chickens

Typically around the penultimate week-end in January, we have an avian theme to the Dead Good Blog, to chime in with the RSPB's 'Big Garden Birdwatch' event. But given all the little garden birds have been blown away by thirty-six hours of Storm Éowyn, that only leaves me chickens to write about, and eggs. Let's crack on.

Of course, it's also Burns Night, so the first thing I did before sitting down to write this was to Choogle the Internet so see if there was any connection between the celebrated Scottish poet and these latter-day descendants of the dinosaurs, a poem perhaps, or an interesting fact such as "Robert Burns owned a pet chicken called McNugget to whom he would recite verse each morning in return for a wee egg." Sadly and surprisingly not. The closest I came was to stumble upon his 'Sonnet Upon Sonnets,' a play on the number fourteen. I won't reproduce the whole thing here, just these two salient lines:

              Your hen hath fourteen eggs beneath her wings
              That fourteen chickens to the roost may fly

That made me wonder if Burns knew anything very much about chickens at all, as a clutch of fourteen eggs seems highly improbable. I suppose he must have been more of a haggis man.  I decided to investigate egg laying statistics a bit further on your behalf.

free-rangers in the snow
It would appear that a chicken (or more correctly a hen) can start laying eggs from about eighteen weeks old, depending on the breed. Some start as late as twenty-eight weeks. Peak laying capacity normally occurs around the seventh or eighth month, and a layer's first year is its most productive. The world record for the number of eggs laid by one hen is 371 eggs in 364 days (with time off for Christmas).

After the first prolific year, a hen's productivity gradually tails off by on average 15% per year, so that by the time a hen is six years old, she is unlikely to be laying many eggs. Again, this depends upon breed. Some types can continue producing at eight or nine years old, but they are very much the exception.

Temperature and time of year also influence laying rates. A chicken needs about fifteen hours of daylight to give her enough vitamin D to help metabolise calcium in the body (without which there is no shell). And hens lay best when the temperature is in the range of 12 to 23 degrees. So summer months tend to result in higher yields, though many commercial poultry farms use artificial light and heaters to boost production in winter.

There are hundreds of different breeds of chicken worldwide, and though white and light brown are the main colours for egg shells, there is considerable variety, including cream, dark brown, pale blue, green and speckled, as the box below illustrates. Then inside, yolks can vary from almost white up to a rich orange tone, though shades of yellow are by far the most common. And what nutritious little packages they are, for those not averse to eating them boiled, coddled, poached, scrambled or in an omelette - such as I will be enjoying as soon as I've dispatched this Saturday blog.

the many colours of chickens' eggs
Of course not all chickens are bred for their egg-laying capabilities. (Vegans and vegetarians look away now.) Of the 33 billion chickens in the world, the majority are bred as meat, white meat being healthier than red meat. Chicken is the UK's favourite meat. And in the USA (bizarrely) some restaurants even list chicken as a vegetarian option! I'm happy to eat it, but will always opt for free-range produce if possible. By the way, as of today the world's human population is just over 8 billion (8,201,490,228), so chickens outnumber us by a ratio of 4:1.

Coming back to that throwaway reference I made earlier about chickens being the descendants of dinosaurs, I believe this to be true, in as much as all birds share a common ancestry going back to the theropods of the late Triassic period, saurischian dinosaurs characterised by hollow bones and three claws or toes on each foot. Scientists have even experimented with attaching long tails to chickens in order to model how tyrannosauroids might have moved. It is thought that theropods were carnivorous but appear to have become largely herbivorous and insectivorous through the aeons, and maybe that is how they managed to survive the great extinction, by down-sizing and living off scraps.

All of the hundreds of modern day breeds of chicken can trace their most recent origins back to the bankiva, or red jungle fowl of south east Asia (a close relative of the pheasant). The red jungle fowl became domesticated as recently as about 8,000 years ago and regional varieties have been carefully bred and farmed for millennia to accentuate desired characteristics. Chickens are generally sociable, inquisitive and intelligent birds and often make great pets, which is something I try not to think about at mealtimes.. 

coming home to roost
I decided to Choogle the Internet one last time to verify the provenance of the phrase about chickens coming home to roost, which I've always assumed is a metaphor for karma, in the sense of bad deeds rebounding. There's a strong case to be made for its literary debut being in Chaucer's 'Pardoner's Tale' (printed in 1390):

              And ofte tyme swich cursynge wrongfully retorneth agayn to hym that curseth, 
              as a bryd that retorneth agayn to his owene nest.

though it could well have been in use as a colloquial phrase much earlier than that. Anyway, it's the stepping-off point for my latest poem. Its working title was It's Murder When Santa Ana Blows, but I thought I'd call it something more in keeping with the vocabulary of the young boy.

Farmer's Chickens
A hot-throated wind had been screaming all day,
bending trees low making telegraph wires to ring
and the sky a darkish threat, so I weren't let to go
to school or play out neither, just fret those hours

through afternoon. Farmer arrives home, so soon
we hear shouts from next door over the whine of
the wind then crashes like something's getting all
bust up in there and pa says it's Farmer's chickens

coming home to roost and ma says Farmer's wife
got every right and I think of that party game: the
farmer wants a wife, we all pat the wife, the wife
wants a dog...I always wanted a dog, not allowed.

Then those shots and just like that the wind drops
and there's only that awful sobbing that don't stop
even after them cops pull up and I ask did Farmer
done killed his chickens because I never knew he

even had any, then ma hugs me up so tight it hurt
and says one day I'd understand. Well that night I
dreamed of blood and feathers everywhere and it
was so quiet when I woke up in a hot sweat. I felt

all alone in the world and the bad stuff was right
close by in the shadows, like the men I sometime
saw visiting at night next door but if Farmer had
chickens, they were maybe just buying his eggs?  

Thanks for reading, S ;-)

Thursday, 9 March 2017

Selfies - body image.

I understand self-image.  I was a dancer.  The art of looking great was instilled in me from an early age.  My father was a 'dresser'. He was a 'dapper little chap' to the extent that in a recent conversation with a lady who used to come to our village pub, remarked to my Mum, that Fred was always immaculately dressed and went on to compare the uber casual, lack of grooming style of the current incumbent.  Times change I suppose but taking a healthy interest in your own appearance is really important.  Unless it becomes an obsession.

There was time when the only people with an image portfolio were actors, dancers, models and musicians.  Now it seems that everybody has one and the idea that we all have to self-promote continually is a phenomenon that I find very alarming. I worry about the effect that posting frequent 'selfies' has on the body image of young girls and boys. It seems to me that many mental health problems begin with the need to compete in the body image race.

I hope that you youngsters don't think that eating disorders like anorexia or bulimia are anything new.  As a dancer who began to pile on the pounds during a lull in my career, I can tell you that pleasing family by appearing to eat and then throwing up as a way of not getting fat, is nothing new. I suspect that for many girls and some young men, in the public eye, self-starvation has been around for a very long time. Unfortunately the need to be slim, look good from every angle and continually show the entire world that you do, is a pressure that has extended through social networking, to everyone.

Who wants to show off a photo of a spare tyre, a double chin or at my age, an increasing crop of wrinkles. This constant exposure and the need to look good at all times must be such a chore. I remember once as a teenager, I had been getting ready for a date but had fallen asleep on the couch with rollers in my hair. When my date arrived to pick me up, my Dad brought him through from the bar.  I remember being so embarrassed that this guy was seeing me in a state other than perfection.  Fortunately he was a hairdresser and we ended up having a laugh about it.  Of course, I am older and wiser now and far more relaxed about bad hair days and no make up. I still take a good two hours to preen and coif before I go out on a big night out - I doubt that I will ever use 'face time' to communicate.

My daughter despairs that my mobile phone is an ancient brick and that she can't send me constant updates. I am just over the need to share my image with all people at all times. I use Facebook sparingly, use the bathroom for relaxation and often have bedhead-hair until well after lunch. Vanity is not an attractive trait. Feeling ugly, because the beautiful people continually promote themselves, can lead to depression and isolation. If you are in the habit of posting pictures of yourself at every opportunity perhaps you should take a look at some old family photos.  Check out the older generation's fashion blunders. It is always good for a laugh.

My friends and I don't really make fashion blunders now. We have each developed a style, acquired over time, through looking back at photos that can be ripped up and never shared. We wear what suits us. Our body shapes dictate what we wear and how good we look, we don't follow fashion. We are boho or chic/smart or curvy but all true to ourselves as empowered women. We are all happy in our own skin, growing older with confidence in ourselves and life is fun.

Occasionally, one of my lovely photographer friends will send me an image that I post on social media but just like everyone else, catch me at the wrong angle, I would curl up and die.  This week's poem is by the Scottish bard, Robert Burns. It was written after he noticed a louse on the hat of a fashionable, well-to-do lady in church.  There is little vocabulary at the end to help you get the gist.




To a Louse

Ha! whare ye gaun, ye crowlin ferlie?
Your impudence protects you sairly;
I canna say but ye strunt rarely
Owre gauze and lace,
Tho faith! I fear ye dine but sparely
On sic a place.

Ye ugly, creepin, blastit wonner,
Detested, shunn'd by saunt an sinner,
How daur ye set your fit upon her -
Sae fine a lady!
Gae somewhere else and seek your dinner
On some poor body.

Swith! in some beggars hauffet squattle:
There ye may creep, and sprawl, and sprattle,
Wi ither kindred, jumping cattle;
In shoals and nations;
Whare horn nor bane ne'er daur unsettle
Your thick plantations.

Now haud you there! ye're out o sight,
Below the fatt'rils, snug an tight,
Na, faith ye yet! ye'll no be right,
Till ye've got on it -
The vera tapmost, tow'rin height
O Miss's bonnet.

My sooth! right bauld ye set your nose out,
As plump an grey as onie grozet:
O for some rank, mercurial rozet,
Or fell, red smeddum,
I'd gie you sic a hearty dose o't,

Wad dress your droddum!
I wad na been surpris'd to spy
You on an auld wife's flainen toy;
Or aiblins some bit duddie boy,
On's wyliecoat:
But Miss's fine Lunardi! fye!
How daur ye do't?

O Jeany, dinna toss your head.
An set your beauties a' abread!
Ye little ken what cursed speed
The blastie's makin!
Thae winks an finger-ends, I dread,
Are notice takin!

O wad some Power the gift tae gie us
To see oursels as ithers see us!
It wad frae mony a blunder free us,
An foolish notion:
What airs in dress an gait wad lea'e us,
An ev'n devotion!

Meaning of unusual words:
crowlin ferlie=crawling marvel
strunt=strut
fit=foot
Swith!=Off!
hauflet squattle=temples squat
sprattle=scramble
fatt'rils=falderols
grozet=gooseberry
ozet=resin
fell=deadly
smeddum=powder
droddum=backside
flainen toy=flannelcap
aiblins=perhaps
duddie=small
wyliecoat=ragged vest
Lunardi=balloon bonnet

And finally... the last verse translates as.


And would some Power give us the gift
To see ourselves as others see us!
It would from many a blunder free us,
And foolish notion:
What airs in dress and gait would leave us,
And even devotion!
 
Have a great week. Thanks for reading.  Adele