I suppose we transgressed the social isolation rules by collecting the
chickens, but at least the lady at the cash desk wore gloves and wiped my
credit card with an antiseptic tissue.
The chickens were subdued as I drove more placidly back to
Stow-on-the-Wold, but they did not know that they were now homeless. Fortunately,
I knew what I had to do. I left them in their cardboard box and entered our small
garden shed. I removed the two bicycles, many buckets of hand tools, the
recycling containers and no end of bags of stuff for Margaret’s flower garden.
I then cut a small door into the rear wooden wall which faced the back garden
and started to make a run for our guests on the garden itself. Luckily I have
lots of stuff for this sort of thing. I made the run from beanpoles, surrounded
it with some rusty chicken wire I had stored in the field and then covered it
with netting from an old fruit cage. After that I used an old gate and other
stuff to section off the chicken area of our little shed. I then placed the
cardboard box on the hay-strewn floor and opened the lid.
And what happened? Nothing! The girls had either taken to the box or
were terrified of entering their new home, perhaps both. I tipped the box up a
little, the poor things hung on for dear life. Then I tipped it right up and three
fell out, fluttering and squawking. The last one, Blackie (they suggested their
own names) would not budge, even with the box upside down. I had to give it a
sharp tap and then she too fell out with a resentful squawk.
It took a while before they ventured into the run. Whitey was first. She
stepped very cautiously down the drawbridge which also serves as their door to
the outside. Taking a quick look around, she presumably decided that she did
not like the place and re-entered the shed. The others watched in wonder.
However, after some time they all ventured out and did what chickens do: they
pecked away at the ground searching for edible morsels. It felt nice to have
them.
Then I had a thought. This corona virus thing will not go on for ever,
things may never return to what we now regard as normal, but, assuming that we
do survive, we will be able to associate again. I will return to Oxford to
resume guiding and my other pursuits and we will be able to visit our home in
Spain. But what about the chickens if we do all that? This is the moment when I
started work on my prototype automatic chicken feeder.
I am still running every other morning. There are not many people about
and those that are look worried, as if I might transgress the two meter rule.
On the other hand it can be difficult to avoid close encounters, especially on
narrow pavements. This morning I ran away from Stow towards the village of
Broadwell, then took a footpath back towards the town. As I turned a corner
towards home there was woman just in front of me, walking in the same
direction. I could smell her perfume! Social distancing had been transgressed!
Perhaps I should run around our field where the only person I might meet
is the woman I sleep with! Be a bit dull though, the running that is. That
morning I saw the three llamas that live in a field near Broadwell. As usual
they looked shocked to see me, like giant rabbits caught in a car’s headlight.
No eggs yet. Yesterday we went to the nearby supermarket to purchase
supplies in the hour allotted to over 70s. The place was packed, almost every
trolley was taken and the car park full. People were waiting outside in a
spaced-out, highly-organised queue. Surely that spoils the whole point? This arrangement created
a false peak in shopping. We did not wait. Fortunately Margaret, after much
groaning at her phone and general frustration, managed to acquire a slot for
deliveries from the Sainsbury supermarket. Phew, my small emergency beer hoard
remains intact.
There is some light at the end of this strange tunnel though.
I see that scientists from Oxford are recruiting healthy people to sign up as guinea
pigs for a potential coronavirus vaccine. And someone else is working on the
use of infected blood as short term method of training our immune systems.
Worrying news from the USA though where the death rate seems to be running
high.