Attack of the Killer Vegetables
“What are they?” squawked Hecky. “Where did they come from?” peeped Arriauna. “I saw Mom put them in here, so they can’t be bad,” offered Henny. “Let’s just freeze in position and see if they move,"whispered Queen B.
The girls are very cautious about unknown things outside their area, but even more cautious when four odd shaped things are inside their run.
Henny, the more mature levelheaded chickie girl advanced on one of the interlopers. Actually it was more like a canta-louper. I had placed a corncob, two cantaloupe slices, a cornhusk and a tomato inside the door of their run. At first they all ran to the opposite end, away from these unknown objects. Little by little they slowly came forward. Arriauna pecked at the cantaloupe, maybe drawn to the color similar to her own feathers. Queen B stepped on the tomato as she moved to pierce the green cornhusk with her beak. Henny and Hecky are always interested in stealing whatever Queen B has in her beak so those three darted and bobbed around for awhile. Later I saw the tomato had been reduced to a small dirt-coated blob. The cornhusk was in a zillion strips. The cantaloupes were history.
1 comment:
I just wondered: is Henny related to Henny Penny? I hope, if so, she didn't get some of that 'the sky is falling' gene? I don't think it would be good for the other chickie girls, particularly vulnerable little Arriuana. When is the next photo of the flock? What are their autumn plans?
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