The person who first suggested that I raise chickens reassured me that the basic chores took no more than ten minutes a day. That was all the convincing I needed. Even someone with as speckled a history of pets as I have could manage that. We have failed at bunnies, cats, hamsters, and fish. But to be fair, it had more to do with the fact that I
was raising a bevy of small children. Now that the youngest are in high school there is time for animals.
But what my friend did not mention is that while the feeding and watering only take a few minutes, I would want to spend an hour each afternoon just enjoying their company. I putter around adding perches, and getting fresh nesting material, giving extra scratch or simply holding them.
There is a broken limb hanging
over the coop that I look at from my chicken chair. It is shaped rather like a wishbone, and is suspended precariously above my birds. Since it is perhaps eighteen feet long, it has the potential to pierce the roof, and kill my flock. Or me. It broke off of a larger branch in one of those fierce windstorms last year and has been teasing me ever since. This month it is framed by a tree as lemony as any cream pie.
The proper name for a wishbone is a furcula, and it is the
bone between the neck and the breast. It is created by the fusion of the clavicles, and "strengthens the thoracic skeleton to withstand the rigors of flight."
As I sit in the chicken yard, I have decided to pretend that it is my wishbone. Although I stopped eating turkey back in college, I do have a fondness for my father holding up the Thanksgiving wishbone to me and my brother. According to the rules of etiquette, two kids tug-o-war on the bone and the
one who ends up with the lump in the middle wins.
So every day, I make a wish.
Often it is for someone whose struggles have come into my peripheral vision. Other times it is for the well being of people I spoke with that day.
The shape of a wishbone is suggestive of two people, hanging in the balance. Like a marriage. The appearance sometimes is that those two people are at odds with each other, and only by
sheer force of will can one come out ahead.
Yet when we summon the strength that rests between our stiff neck and beating heart, it can grant us the ability to withstand the rigors of flight.