This week in Grady livestock

More in Life on the Farm: The animals: Part 1 In the past few weeks, we've unfortunately lost 3 of our flock. Well. Not exactly "lost". I found 2 of them. The first (and my favorite chicken, of course) just wandered off into the woods and never came back. She was fat, not particularly agile, and kind of dumb. But she was pretty (a silver gray dorking, for those interested). The second (a silver spangled Hamburg - pretty little hen all white with black spots. Kinda looked like a Dalmation slept with a chicken) disappeared one day, and I figured something similar had happened. She was always flying in and out of the coop. Then on Friday, my Bride called me to tell me that a third chicken was dead - she found its body on the floor of the coop next to the door. It had apparently broken its own neck, and been lying there since the morning. (Someone asked me how I knew that it had broken its own neck. I explained that it had left a tiny little note... "goodbye, cruel world..." That, and it had kind of clearly gotten its head stuck in the wire mesh where it fell. Silly chicken). It had also dropped an egg in its final moments. ... Hey. Waste not, want not, right? We ate the egg. I found that Dalmation-chicken later in the weekend, or what was left of her, at any rate. Her poor remains were in the coop, which was odd. My money is either on a hawk (though I haven't seen any hovering, and there's a tree that covers most of the run), or that the hens have gotten together to recreate Shirley Jackson's morbid short story, "The Lottery". We're counting the hens every day at this point. The animals, Part B: Last Friday, I sent the Critter's teacher a note: Dear Ms. Kelly - please forgive the Critter from school on Monday. I'll be taking her the slaughterhouse. We bought two pigs recently, and as a part of our ongoing lessons in "where food really comes from", we'll be making a field trip to pick up and deliver them to the butcher. Yep. I really did.
To her credit, the Critter was really cool about the whole thing. One of my semi-horrified colleagues said "you know, you might have ended up with a life-long vegetarian..." Yeah, maybe.. but not likely. I knew better. You have to know my kid, but she really likes her bacon. And when I came home late on Friday and had to deal with the suicidal chicken, I shrugged my jacket on and picked up a flashlight. I figured I'd just toss the body out into the woods, and let the fox or raccoons bring their own bucket. The Critter was mortified. "But daddy, we have to eat it!" I seriously love that kid. (No, we didn't eat it in the end. It had been sitting on the ground all day in kind of an odd position, and it was late, I had just gotten back from the pizza place that had jerked me around about my order, and I had my sights set on a mojito, and not on plucking my first chicken.) Monday morning, then, the kid & I drove out through the Massachusetts woods to the slaughterhouse, which (and I couldn't make this up if I tried) is named Blood Farm.
Our two pigs had been delivered over the weekend, and were ready to go. The folks at the farm were super nice, letting me take pictures over their heads, and around their shoulders to get a good view of our pigs. I'm not sure how much they weighed coming in, but when we wrapped them up and prepped them to go, one weighed a hefty 230 pounds, and the other was a more svelte 210 pounds. Add that up, and you get 440 pounds of happy.
Note: each one has been split longitudinally - I didn't know that was going to happen before I got there, but it makes sense. We threw these things in the back of the truck (don't know how to transport a pig carcass? Yeah, I didn't really think about it either. Fortunately, these guys are pros. They wrapped this stuff up in clear plastic and tossed it into the back for me). After an initial bit of "holy crap, I can see the inside of that pig" from both the Critter and myself, if I'm honest, we were fascinated. We poked a their teeth, and looked at the ribs, and saw how things were inter-connected. If she wasn't salivating so much, I'd have thought that we might be raising a next-generation veterinarian. She asked me which bits were made into sausage, which into sandwiches, and which into bacon. Also, she described it's skin as "ick". But that's only because she hasn't had it fried yet. With salt. The way God and every roadside stand along Georgia Highway 138 intended.
We moved our happy pig halves over to a butcher in Concord, MA (Hi, Mike!), and he's slicing and cutting, chopping and grinding these lovely porkers into more recognizable cuts. And a few less recognizable pieces. He convinced me that "the jowls are good eating." ('Roast it with blood-orange juice, a bit of honey, vinegar, achiote and garlic...' See? It does sound good!) I've got an empty freezer and some hooks for hanging my hams in the wine cellar, anticipating the porky bounty. A buddy of mine from Siena, Italy brought me a fantastic book titled Preserving the Italian Way, with a whole chapter on meat. I've already got a chorizo recipe & a country sausage recipe ready to go, along with trying my hand at making bacon & pancetta from scratch. And to sell to my lucky friends and neighbors, I've got cuts coming of tenderloin, spare ribs, and 1.5" thick pork chops - I'm also going to make up "Grady BBQ packs" - pork shoulder, a bag of brown sugar rub, and a jar of home-made Carolina BBQ sauce, ready to go for those who want to make their families fall down on their faces in awe at dinner time, right there at the table, because it is just that good. I did the math with the Critter (always bringing it back to the practical application, to sort of justify keeping her out of school) - with my costs all in, assuming we'll get a bit more than 400lbs of meat (not much of it will be de-boned), even if we charged $3 a pound, selling off one pig's worth of meat will have paid for the costs for both. That's right, people. We worked ourselves into a whole pig's worth of free bacon. Just look at the expression on that child's face, with all that pig in the back of the truck. You cannot argue with the happy.
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Memory. The 7 year old version.

"Hey, Dad." "Mm." "Remember when you said we would send Maggie back to school again if she needed it? I think she needs it." "Huh? I didn't say that." "Yes you did. A while ago. I think she needs it." "What 'while ago'? I don't remember ever saying that. And no, she doesn't." "Yes. It was March. She needs more school. It's good for her." "March? What the hell? When in March did I say that?" "It was March. March 10th. It was a Tuesday afternoon. Just after 3 o'clock. It was gray outside, with high cirrocumulus clouds. You were wearing a striped shirt and your new cufflinks. There were five geese flying overhead in a northerly direction, and a pair of ants were crawling slowly across the window." "Whatever. The dog is fine. Now come on - we need to go to the store. Where are your shoes?" "I dunno. I can't remember."
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Not quite bluegrass. But there was livestock involved.

After the last several years of annual Grady Bluegrass events to celebrate the survival of our firstborn, anything less than a full-on Appalachia themed event seems like a walk in the park for the Critter's seventh birthday party. But this year we had moved, and we weren't exactly sure how our Yankee neighbors were going to receive an infusion of Southern culture. (Let's not talk about how we've twisted our daughter's mind into thinking that having a live bluegrass band at a little girl's birthday party is normal. These are the things that make parenting fun.) But still, even without banjos, we stuck persistently to the bbq theme. This year: chickens.
The whole party was themed around the chicken. The invitations had chickens on them. The cake had a chicken on it. I schleped a few chickens up to the patio for the kids to pet and look at. And as you can see, my bride got the bright idea of making little chicken-on-a-stick cupcake party favors. But because she's a dark and twisted soul, she made the bodies of red velvet cake before dipping it into melted yellow candy coating, making each bit a bloody festival of sweet and tasty party takeaways.
I got suckered into prepping the sticks. There were a lot of kids to prepare for. More on that in a moment.
The whole week leading up to the party involved rain and cold. Fortunately, the afternoon before, the sun broke through, and the day of the party dawned bright and warm. The food involved was our standard birthday party fare: fried chicken, brunswick stew, tomato cobbler, collard greens, corn pudding, etc. We lit the grill for some hot dogs and hamburgers, threw juice and sodas and beer into the coolers, and raised a ridiculously large bouncy castle in the yard, and told all the parents and siblings to hang out as well. Because that's how we do the parties where we're from.
When the kids got too hot jumping on the bouncy castle, we laid out a couple of giant buckets of water, and some of our home-made sponge balls. Imagine a koosh ball. Made of strips of sponge tied together. Now dunk them in water and throw it at your neighbor. Sounds like fun, eh? We lined the kids up, girls vs. the boys, and told them to throw until they couldn't throw any more. They seemed to enjoy it.
After about 5 minutes, the girls stopped throwing. The boys didn't. Soon, the boys realized that they had no more sponge balls. The girls had collected them all, hording them for a massive assault, to which the boys had no defense.
This repeated itself two or three times. One of the boys looked at me helpless and a little confused as to why the girls kept getting the better of them. Consider it a life lesson, my friend. This is only the beginning of a long road ahead of you...
All in all, it was a great start to the summer. I was particularly proud of the Critter, who chose to ask her friends to donate to the Lowell Humane Society, rather than bring presents. She had enough stuff, she decided. At least for now. Well done, little girl of mine. I love you. - Daddy.
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