I’ve been
thinking about the fate of roosters on our little homestead lately as I have a
couple of hens determined to hatch out chickies and that always means…several
more roos. We have few rooster stories around here. There’s the one with me
chasing Big Red in my sock feet with a newborn attached to my breast as the
giant rooster tried to chase my 4 year old into the street. There’s the one where Kent thought he would
eliminate the said rooster with his bow instead of more tried and true rooster
harvesting methods…(it did not go as planned). Then there is the tale of Sir
Lancelot who became Sir Limpsalot after taking a serious disliking to a certain
Helenator. The most gripping tale of all though comes from last fall in the
dramatic final chapter of Redneck the Horrid Roo.
Poor Redneck started out very meek as a rescue bird from
Uncle Jake’s farm. He was the low man on the totem pole both in his former life
and, at first, his new life as the only rooster in our flock. The hens wouldn’t
allow him past he lowest rung on the roost and he emerged every morning with a
little poop on his back. His spurs began to grow though, and it wasn’t long
before he took his place as leader and protector of the flock. Unfortunately,
as sometimes happens when the underdog finds himself in a position of power, he
became a bully. He actually killed one of my smaller hens and, in his new found
audacity, began to randomly attack me, Helen, and occasionally Wyatt. The last
straw came one afternoon as I was landscaping my front flower beds. I asked
Wyatt to retrieve a shovel from the barn and he was gone for less than a minute
when his blood curdling shriek pierced through the music on my headphones. Sprinting
around the side of the house I was faced with the image of my six year old with
a large flailing rooster where his head should be. I knocked the attacking
rooster from my son’s head with a roar and was doubly horrified by the blood
that now ran down my son’s face. I could hardly contain my rage long enough to
clean Wyatt’s puncture wounds but once that job was done…I was hunting rooster.
My initial weapon of choice was a broken shovel handle. It was with this that I
herded the unruly rooster into the enclosed chicken run. I tried to dispatch
him with well-aimed swings of my makeshift club but my hand/eye coordination is
notoriously inadequate and I only succeeded in working myself into a further
frenzy. My next idea was to grab a wooden crate and trap the rooster underneath
it. I had more success at this but was soon stuck with the conundrum of what to
do once I was seated on top of a crate full of rooster. If I leave…so will he.
I finally convinced my son that it was safe to sit on the crate just long enough
for me to grab a concrete block to weight the crate down. With the rooster
temporarily secured under the crate, I made a quick phone call to my husband to
confirm that the shotgun was indeed the proper choice for ending the battle. He
called me back within a minute or two to say, “DON’T SHOOT THE ROOSTER! Ammon
will take him!”
Too Late.
Now, I have a headless rooster on a hot summer day.
I know how to process a chicken. I have done it many times
before. What I did not, at this moment know was where in the heck I was going
to find a sharp knife. I later set aside a stash of razor sharp knives and a
pair of chicken shears (a gift from my amused mother upon hearing this tale).
On this particular afternoon though, I was stuck with a rather dull hunting blade,
a sense of mental and physical fatigue, and a determination that I would finish
what I started. I ended up processing the bird as Wyatt held up my phone with
my best friend on speaker phone googling chicken butchering techniques because
in the intensity of the moment, I COULD NOT recall my own knowledge on the
subject.
Half the bird went in the freezer labeled: The Great Chicken
Fiasco 2014. The other half was slow cooked into a delicious pot pie.
Post script: We have
butchered one rooster since Redneck. He was a no-name hatch who we knew was
destined for the freezer as he started showing aggressive tendencies very early
on. I actually videotaped the process as we did it clinically and he went
quickly and peacefully to the great scratching grounds in the sky. The most
recent rooster dispatch came in the form of adopting out our older rooster to
friends when he became too aggressive for my young children. I find great
appreciation in knowing where our food comes from and most harvests have an
almost spiritual aspect to them. The end of a happy life comes quickly and
without fear. The death of Redneck was, I admit an act of revenge from a VERY
angry Mama.