I was stunned that we had gone from chickens-are-not-permitted-in-residential-areas-period-no-discussion to baby-we-can-work-it-out in just over 24 hours. Stunned but angry. Isn’t the whole point of bureaucracy that there is a fair and even application of the law instead of one person’s arbitrarily decision-making? Dan Olson chose to lie to me. He told me point-blank that I was not allowed to have chickens when, in fact, I am. Why didn’t he suggest coming over and talking about my neighbor’s complaint in the first place? (For that matter, why didn’t my neighbor just come talk to me in the first place?) This whole thing leaves a bad taste in my mouth, and frankly, I don’t know if Dan Olson’s offer to help is in earnest. Is he really interested in assessing the validity of my neighbor’s complaint or is he just coming over determined to find a problem even if no problem exists?
After stewing all of Friday evening, I decided to cut through the b.s. and go talk to my neighbor myself. Dan couldn’t tell me who it was but I had a pretty good idea and decided to approach her directly. I did. It was her. And in sum, she said that my chickens stink, and she doesn’t like smelling, hearing or looking at them.
My chickens smell and the coop I spent months carefully designing and building is ugly. Ouch.
Do my chickens stink? Obviously, I don’t think so and I spend time taking care of the coop to ensure this. But maybe I’m just sensitized to it. Maybe I’m like those women who walk around smelling like they applied an entire bottle of perfume while not noticing that everyone around them is gasping for air. With this question in mind, and also feeling that I had nothing to prove, I did not spend the weekend cleaning their coop or giving the hens baths and pedicures. I added some pine shavings, per usual. Changed their water, per usual. And went on with my life. … OK, that last part is untrue. I didn’t go on with my life. I worried and fixated on this all weekend and asked everyone I knew if my chickens were stinky. The verdict? No.
Let me be the first to say that those polled were my friends and family; as such, they support me and may be telling me what I want to hear. Can I trust their opinion? After all, they let me spend all of 8th grade believing that my electric blue eyeliner and orange eyeshadow were hawt.
I guess we’ll just have to see what Dan Olson has to say tomorrow.
If you feel like coming to our farm where we raised over 8,000 chickens last year, feel free to do so, the regular egg layers are 110 (down to about 100 now) and NO, they don't stink, the field smells sweet full of moisture and life. The meat broilers, that's another story, their smell is what most people are familiar with, but no, by no means do they represent the whole foul kingdom, some of them take baths every day, I can prove it. Let me know if I can be of any help, I would love to see the whole city full of coops and chickens eating all of the food that currently goes to waste and turning it into highly valued compost. The city would save significant dollars in garbage disposal, neighbors could reduce their expenses in fertilizer for their gardens and have some meat and eggs as a net profit plus some education as to what IS and ISN'T stinky. Politics stink much worse than meat broilers sometimes and everyone seems to put up with that just fine, what is the problem with some chickens?
ReplyDeleteThank you, Regi. I appreciate the point you make about food waste. It's true; our chickens are great recyclers. They eat what we don't then turn it into excellent fertilizer for us. Win-win! Also, I'm curious why meat birds are smelly and layers aren't. Let's make this blog educational, shall we? :) Tell me what you know.
ReplyDelete