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The Rural Voice, 1991-12, Page 43NOTEBOOK HOW DAD SAVED THE PRIZE ROOSTER by Lyle Fraser Never slam the door of a hen house on a chicken's leg. The outcome could be disastrous! This fact of life I discovered one beautiful spring morning while hurry- ing through my farm chores. Ten- year -olds often have their minds in the clouds, and it so happened that mental plans for my pending birthday party seemed to be taking preference over poultry affairs when the catastrophe occurred. To my dismay I soon dis- covered that this wasn't just any old chicken! There — lying in a crimson pool of its own making — was my father's prize rooster, its leg severed just below the knee joint. Nobody in the neighbourhood had ever heard of a Bufforpington until our family introduced the breed. When my father noticed a pair of blue ribbon winners pictured in an eastern poultry publication, nothing could deter him from acquiring them. Al- though money in depression years was as scarce as summer frost, he managed to scrape up enough to purchase the prize winners through mail order. Be- fore long, we were stocking our incu- bator, intent upon the future sale of Bufforpington breeders. It wasn't his plan to become fabulously wealthy from his new undertaking, but he hoped this venture would add further to his stature as a progressive farmer (which he was in many ways). And now! Tragedy! What could I say? What feeble excuse could I dream up for my clumsiness? There was no time for excuses after my father got wind of the com- motion. He dropped his wood- working tools, stampeded to the scene of the carnage, and flew into action. "Climb into the loft and grab a handful of cobwebs — a thick handful!" "Cobwebs?" "Don't just stand there gawking! Move!" I suspected that he was a little upset and in no mood for further discussion as I leaped for the ladder and scrambled up monkey -style. How he knew that cobweb was the perfect cauterizer I never learned, but in gig time the bleeding ceased, and that old rooster, despite his amputation, looked like he was ready for action again. Now when you're only 10 years old and countrified, it's not always easy to fathom the resourcefulness of your father, nor the wisdom of his actions. "Why?" I asked myself re- peatedly, as I scattered feed into the patient's private cage each morning, "would anyone be foolhardy enough to keep a one -legged rooster?" It was true that the initial invest- ment stretched the family's finances, but isn't it better, when you gamble and lose, to cut your losses and start over? My father apparently didn't sub- scribe to this line of reasoning, and in my precarious position after the acci- dent, I wasn't about to get in any deeper with my juvenile suggestions. He patiently observed the victim's progress, and I assumed deep down he was shrewdly scheming to compensate for his loss. Easter Holidays! Ten days in the city with my grandparents, and no chickens to feed! Then the home- coming surprise! When I spotted the open slide door on Buffie's empty cage, I feared the inevitable. Was the family's prize possession to be the main course of Sunday's dinner? When my dad beckoned me out- side, winked, and pointed mischie- vously at the chicken run, I raised a curious eyebrow. There he stood, as proud and as boisterous as ever! Old Buffie, at ease amongst his harem — perfectly poised! His one natural leg scratching away at the feed on the ground, the other, a three -pronged maple cutting spliced expertly to his stump by leather thongs — the artful product of my smiling and resourceful father.0 (Lyle Fraser is a writer from Pitt Meadows, BC.) 40 THE RURAL VOICE