Our neighbors, Barb, and I have had a lot of fun this year with our four hens that we raised from chicks and it has prompted us to learn a great deal about chickens. But the payoff always was the eggs.
What would they look like? Would they be misshapen or fragile with thin shells? Would they be brown as we had hoped? Which hen would be the first? How soon would they start laying eggs?
Yesterday came the first eggs! Both smallish (as we had been told they would be) but both with strong shells and a nice brown color. The only question would be: which hen was responsible? And since we got two eggs in a 12 hour period, was it two hens that laid the eggs. More questions. More mysteries. I can only report that the Buff Orpington (Buffy, as Art likes to call her) was particularly vocal yesterday morning. I rewarded them with sunflower seeds and adult chicken food. This morning, all of them were up on the roof of their coop or on their roost bar which is five feet off the ground. They are big girls now and we can't wait for the next eggs to arrive.
What a neat Christmas present!
Saturday, December 28, 2013
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Volunteering fun
I have been helping my high school class find missing
classmates in preparation for our 50th reunion next year (see www.catonsville1964.com) and I
discovered that one of the classmates uses the name “volunteeringfun” in her
e-mail address. What a wonderfully
appropriate description of what I have been experiencing this year.
It’s been said many times that you “get more than you
receive” when you volunteer and that certainly was the case when my
Cockeysville church (Epworth UMC) sent 24 volunteers to the annual Goodwill
Thanksgiving dinner to help serve. John
McGucken was again the perfect “Santa Claus” and he was helped several of our
youth who were “elves”. In part, it was
fun because it was multi-generational.
The energy and vitality of the youth brings a little livelier step for
us older folks.
I’ve been doing a lot of other things for my church this
year including
construction of a new office, going on a mission trip, and even painting several of the exterior doors to the church to give them a consistent dark green color. I also helped paint the storage shed and that’s when I got to learn about the new HVLP latex paint sprayers. Very ingenious. I’m also the “sign guy” who changes the message in front of the church and now I have been tapped to be the chair of the Staff-Parish Relations Committee. It’s a lot of work, but its fun.
construction of a new office, going on a mission trip, and even painting several of the exterior doors to the church to give them a consistent dark green color. I also helped paint the storage shed and that’s when I got to learn about the new HVLP latex paint sprayers. Very ingenious. I’m also the “sign guy” who changes the message in front of the church and now I have been tapped to be the chair of the Staff-Parish Relations Committee. It’s a lot of work, but its fun.
The Hereford Community Association needed my help this year
with representing them at the Baltimore County Police Community Association
meetings. This was a particularly good
fit for me because of the many years that I served on the Washington, D.C. Police/Media
Relations Council. It was a place where
police and media officials could discuss their problems without being in the
heat of a crisis and an opportunity to build trust. In the 60s and 70s, trust was a big issue separating
those groups. I found that trust can
still be an issue today when people don’t know how they feel about devices that
automatically scan their license plates at shopping centers and create a record
of where they have been.
The Baltimore Public Relations Council is another place
where I volunteer (I’m their treasurer) and except for a snafu concerning our
tax –exempt status, it also has been a lot of fun. It’s an opportunity for me to keep my hand in
media relations, hang out with a lot of people that I truly respect, and even
get a free meal once in a while.
Volunteering fun.
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