Welcome To The Monkey House

April Scrapbook 014

Disturbers of the peace

The sounds of farm life are, on the whole, pleasing and conducive to a reflective life. A quiet early morning walk to complete chores before sunup, the soft thud of chickens jumping off the roost to greet me; a mid-afternoon amble through the woods, a light drizzle muting the outside world; even the reassuring rumble of Lowell on his tractor across the ridge—all help quiet the rumpus of this modern life.

Morning chore time is my chance to evaluate what needs to be done for the day. As I feed, water, and move the animals to their daily pastures I am mentally recording my to-do list: finish installing the new electric fence line, clean out and refill the sheep watering trough, add fresh bedding to the chicken coop, reattach gutter to the barn. It’s a constantly evolving list, one I need only remember until I’m back in the house and can record it on paper.

But as the seasons change, so do the livestock’s expectations and so too does my opportunity for introspection. When fresh grass gets scarce and they transition to hay, the cattle and sheep become more vocal. They will eat the hay, but they miss the grass.  So, for the first hour in the morning, at this time of the year, the ewes run around bleating, loudly. The cattle catch sight of me and thunder down off the hill, bawling all the way.

My inner calm disturbed, my train of thought derailed, my ability to form and retain my to-do list crumbles with each bleat and bawl. Finish installing new elect … baahh. Let’s see, clean out and refill … something … baahhh, baahhh, baaaahhhhh. Reattach … baaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhh.

Like the Vonnegut character living in a dystopian world where the IQ is leveled out by subjecting the brighter individuals to periodic earsplitting noises, I can’t help but think that the sheep have conspired to … baaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhh.

Now, what was I starting to do?

………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

Reading this weekend: Greek Myths by Robert Graves

FollowEmail this to someoneFollow on FacebookFollow on Google+Tweet about this on TwitterFollow on LinkedIn

6 thoughts on “Welcome To The Monkey House

  1. Have you ever wondered whether the critters are somehow smarter than we usually give them credit? Or perhaps we’re not so smart as we imagine. But either way, the relationship between them and us seems to work better when there isn’t such an exaggerated gap… at least a gap that might preclude effective communications between us.

  2. Hah! Made me laugh. A similar loss of brain-power occurs in parents of young children. Thanks for starting my day with such a great set of images!

This author dines on your input.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.