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	<title>food. according to me. &#187; urban</title>
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		<title>Our Lady of the Circular Causality Dilemma</title>
		<link>http://foodaccordingtome.com/2008/our-lady-of-the-circular-causality-dilemma/</link>
		<comments>http://foodaccordingtome.com/2008/our-lady-of-the-circular-causality-dilemma/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Apr 2008 03:23:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Janine</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[urban agriculture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chicken]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[eggs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fowl]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hens]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[little red convent]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[neighborhood nurseries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.foodaccordingtome.com/?p=261</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I was introduced to urban chicken keeping in a Spanish class a few summers ago. We were practicing &#8220;having a normal conversation&#8221; and a woman in my group was trying to tell the story, in our nonnative tongue, about how she had discovered over the long weekend that one of her gallinas was actually a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I was introduced to urban chicken keeping in a Spanish class a few summers ago.  We were practicing &#8220;having a normal conversation&#8221; and a woman in my group was trying to tell the story, in our nonnative tongue,  about how she had discovered over the long weekend that one of her  <em>gallinas</em> was actually a <em>gallo</em>.  I don&#8217;t think anyone else understood, and their confusion only compounded when she tried to mimic a rooster&#8217;s crow.</p>
<p>My reaction to her story then was very similar to what I&#8217;ve been hearing lately from other people &#8211; <em>Chickens?</em> In the <em>city</em>?  It was my understanding that barnyard fowl, whether Chicken Little or Robot Chicken,  belonged a bit further away from the CBD, for all our sakes.  But no, I overheard her saying later, it is indeed quite legal to keep chickens in the city and yes, the eggs are fantastically delicious.</p>
<p>Fast forward through our final exam, a very unpleasant August heat wave, and a couple of years where a bunch of totally unrelated things happened &#8212; I&#8217;ve just brought home three chicks.  They&#8217;ll live in the garage until they&#8217;re older and heartier, then they&#8217;ll have the range of our backyard.  The Squeeze was generous enough to <a href="http://malaise.danieleckhart.com/2008/real-alternative/">build a coop</a> for them, which we&#8217;ve named &#8220;Our Lady of the Circular Causality Dilemma.&#8221; Two of our residents are proper Sisters &#8211; Sister Jezebel Turgenev (she doesn&#8217;t give a cluck)  and Sister We Don&#8217;t Yet Know Her Name.  The third is a cultural refugee, just looking to escape the grind and retire in peace: The Edge.  We picked them up at Livingscape Nursery, along with all of their gear: feeders, food, heat lamp.  The folks at Livingscape were quite helpful and friendly.</p>
<p><a title="Left to Right: Sister Jezebel Turgenev, The Edge, Sister We Do Not Yet Know Her Name" rel="lightbox" href="http://www.foodaccordingtome.com/picture_library/chicks_1.jpg"><img src="http://www.foodaccordingtome.com/picture_library/chicks_1.jpg" alt="" width="300" class="alignleft"/></a>The chicks are <span style="text-decoration: underline;">probably</span> <em>gallinas</em>. The process of determining the sex of newly hatched chicks is, I have read, imperfect; and the folks at the nursery said that we can be around 90 percent sure that ours will  grow up to be hens.  If there is a <em>gallo</em> in our coop, he&#8217;ll be awfully gender-confused by time we know for sure, what with being treated just like one of the girls for so many weeks.  We&#8217;ve already had some talks about surprise-rooster contingency plans, and while  I don&#8217;t know if I could kill a chicken, I am quite sure that I could eat one, even one that&#8217;s currently peeping away downstairs.  If we do have to deal with it, however, you can bet there will be a &#8220;free rooster to loving home&#8221; ad posted on Craigslist before I set out to sharpen the hatchet.</p>
<p>For most of my family and friends, the arrival of these chickens to my little home has cemented my reputation as an eccentric person, perhaps even a naive one.  Before there was any real action, when I was just talkin&#8217; chicken, they tried to warn me: chickens are stinky; chickens will attract rats and gophers and wildebeests. Chickens are noisy; chickens don&#8217;t cuddle.  I know that chickens don&#8217;t cuddle (which, I&#8217;ll admit, is usually one of the first things I think about when considering new pets), but they do four other things which I find very exciting.  One: Chickens eat food scraps.  Right now, some of my food waste goes down the garbage disposal and some into the very slow-moving compost pile.  In addition to their normal feed and scratch, chickens eat all manner of household compostables, thus eliminating my need for the frequent garbage disposal-ing and diverting scraps from the compost heap.   Then, chickens do the second thing that I am interested in: they poop.  Chicken guano is great fertilizer for the garden and I will have an inexpensive and consistent supply of it.  Third, chickens eat bugs, and while they are eating bugs they also scratch around aerate the soil &#8211; two more good things for my garden.  Finally, chickens lay eggs.  Though I am not an egg-in-the-morning kind of a person, I am a bake-lots-of-cookies person and also a give-eggs-away-to-friends person, both of which I am eager to do with their very fresh, drug-free eggs.</p>
<p>On the day we got the chicks, I was very tempted to try to cuddle them.  They were <em>so</em> tiny and <em>so</em> fluffy and <em>so</em> cute. I&#8217;m over that now, though.  Mostly, I am eager for them to grow up, move the heck out of my garage, and start pooping in the yard.  These Sisters and The Edge, I think of them mostly as employees, though I know that sounds strange.  Of course I want them to be comfortable, well-fed, and emotionally secure, but they are still chickens and, well, folks spoke the truth when they tried to warn me: chickens are <em>stinky</em>.</p>
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