Thanksgiving the neighbor turkey must have consulted with the Obama campaign folks and pulled an upset victory late in the week. Either that or he was purposely misnamed and we feel misled because we saw him early Friday morning strutting around the barnyard along with Christmas (the other turkey) Blue the peacock, the potbelly pig and chickens and cows. We don’t want to think that Brad and Mia were purposely deceptive so lets consider the possible reasons for the turkeys continued existence. Perhaps the neighbors have suddenly turned from carnivorous liver mush consumers into left wing ultra liberal tree hugging vegans and are plotting the demise of the entire pork, beef and chicken industries as we know them. Or maybe the turkey has learned the art of hypnosis and convinced everyone next door that he is actually a long lost relative and that he will be living with them for a period of time until he recovers from the current financial crisis. Could it be shape-shifting aliens in farm country? We may never know the truth but we will go with the story that Mia and Brad are really running a retirement home for farm animals and they will all live long happy lives.
Kaitlin and Nate and Chris visited the Great White North for the holiday weekend and saw family and old friends. They all reported having an enjoyable but hectic time and were relieved to make the trek home to their own homes and beds. Chris as usual had quite a few misadventures during the trip, mostly involving his refusal to use the GPS for navigational assistance, but after many miles he still managed to find his way back home again. On Saturday when they all left for home there was some snow on the ground in Cleveland while it was sixty-two degrees on the farm.
Christopher had the opportunity to share Thanksgiving dinner with his Aunt Jenny and family at the Keener farm in Wakeman, Ohio. He swapped farm tales and received farm animal rearing advice. Chris decided that he likes the Keeners goats Franklin and Claire better than ours because they are friendlier and will walk in the woods without a leash and behave. I think the truth is that he sees a lot of himself in our goat Laverne. They are both very idealistic and opinionated and choose to approach life in their own way. Neither of them is influenced by peer pressure at all when making decisions and consequences are just minor inconveniences that are the price you pay for proving a point.
While we missed our visit with the Schoenherr family due to their trading a virus back and forth for the last few weeks we did have Dan Kelley come and visit. Now that motorcycle-racing season is over Dan found time to get away from home and see how the farm half lives. While Dan seemed to enjoy the warmer weather I think he could do without roosters crowing in the morning and the special aroma that twenty-five three-week-old chickens seem to produce. While the chickens don't seem to mind the smell it is definitely not something you would want sprayed on you by an over zealous salesperson while trying to navigate the perfume counters at Macys in the mall. Dan is very good at observing the activity from a distance with a coffee cup in one hand. We did get to use up some of those pesky old bullets that have been lying around Dan’s house out on the rifle range (also doubles as the deck). Apparently the gun law enforcement in Rowan County, North Carolina is not as stringent as Avon Lake, Ohio. Gee, who would have known? And of course in Dan’s honor we had a two Nate fire in celebration.
All in all we had a quiet and relaxing Thanksgiving that reminded us once again of the magnitude of the blessings that God has granted us.