Photo copyright Aji, 2018; all rights reserved. |
We had to be out bright and early this morning for Wings's appointment (which has set us back nearly $400 cash on the barrelhead); my own is deferred yet again, because the imaging has had to be rescheduled. We may wind up skipping one round and going straight to the higher-end one (which will, of course, be exponentially more expensive, so it will likely get deferred for quite a while yet, because it has to be paid in advance).
At any rate, just before we left, Wings said that one of the chickens had escaped. He thought it was one of the reds, who are older and old hands (or feet, as the case may be) at avoiding danger; they have as many lives as your average feral cat. The younger ones are just coming up on a year old, and they still act brand new at some of this stuff. They're all also impossible to catch when they don't want to be caught. Anyway, she did not want to be caught, and being short on time and thinking it was a red, we assumed she'd be okay. We returned to find that the dogs had gotten Sienna.
She's one of the Americaunas in the photo — I believe the one to the right of the water dispenser, but she could be the one across from her, or the one solidly in the food tray; I can't tell which of those three from this photo. These girls and their slightly lighter-colored sisters are the so-called "Easter-eggers," the ones who lay turquoise eggs. They also look remarkably like a cross between a pheasant and an owl and a hawk, and they're full of personality (chickenality?).
And one of their number is now gone. I won't put the details into your mind; suffice to say that it was bad.
We love you, little Sienna girl.
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