Sunday, November 18, 2012

Jonah is just one of those kids.

If you were in IL with us, you will remember how very, very sick he was, and you are likely to remember how sick you were when you caught the bug.  Jonah's complications ended up as pneumonia, and ever since then he has had a lingering cough.  A couple weeks ago his lingering cough started sounding more like a whooping cough (which he had two years ago), so we took him to the doctor.

Well, the poor kid had pneumonia again.  Fortunately, we caught it very early so the antibiotics were able to do their job in short order, and the pneumonia is gone for now.  Friday morning he had his routine follow-up.  No problem, right?  I timed everything perfectly.  I put Simon down for a nap minutes before we left.  Anna's babysitting job was pretty easy while we were gone.  She had to exist and feed herself lunch.

The appt started out just fine until Jonah had to have a finger poke to draw a little blood.  He always struggles with getting blood taken, and he often faints.  He started turning white during the poke, so he laid down and everything seemed to be going OK.  The lab lady left the room and Jonah laid down recovering while we waited for the results.  

All of a sudden he grabbed his head and cried in pain.  Then his eyes rolled back into his head and his whole body tensed, completely stiff.  Then he went limp and fell off the examining table.  By then I was scared and crying, but I managed to grab his top half and pull him back onto the table.  While holding onto him I opened the door and yelled, " HELP!  Someone help me."  Some poor lady in the hallway panicked when she saw and heard me, but, ya know, we needed help.  It felt like forever before the nurses came, but they did come and they were able to get him to open his eyes again.  Jonah was just wiped out.  We had to wait another 45 minutes (including a short nap) before he was well enough to stand and walk out.

And this, my friends, is why I usually have to hold Jonah down on a cot when he gets his blood drawn.  And this is why he has had to be wheeled around in a wheel chair after blood draws.  The poor kid just can't handle it.  How awful.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Don't eat while you read this. Please, for your sake, DON'T!!

Today we butchered roosters.  I have never been subjected to this before, and I am sure I will be having nightmares about it tonight.  I can see how people become vegetarian.

Mark's parents came out to teach us young folk how to butcher chicken.  The process begins with catching the bird and chopping their heads off.  Luckily I was at the grocery store while that happened.  The kids assured me that it was a sight to behold, and the chickens jumped around after the heads were cut off.

Once they were dead, the birds were plunged into boiling water until the butt or leg feathers pulled out easily.  Whether you should test using the butt or leg feathers depends entirely on how your family tree passed down their knowledge.  We were at an impasse with which method is better, so I strategically stayed away while someone else made the call (and did the actual testing).  I suggested putting both methods to a test, but they quietly ignored me.

Once the feathers pass the pull test, the steaming, full-feathered birds were put on tables so we could....pluck them.  Have you ever smelled a wet, hot, feathered, dead chicken?  Have you had the misfortune to touch a wet, hot, feathered, dead chicken?  Neither the smell nor the feel are pleasant experiences, but I dug down as deep as I could and this is what happened.....


Yep, that's me touching a half-plucked dead chicken.  Here's Mark with his bird.




He found some amusement in the act, as you can see below.  His chicken stood up and started talking to the kids.


Here is Mark's mom with a nearly finished bird.


After plucking, the birds were singed to burn off their random strands of hair.  And here, finally, is a fully plucked bird waiting to be chopped up.


After singeing the birds, they had to be gutted.  Gutting seems to require some skill which I am sure I do not possess.  Thankfully Mark's parents clearly knew what they were doing.  Not only did they know how to cut the bird open, but they knew what the inside body parts looked like AND they knew how to clean the gizzard.  I am fully convinced that pioneer children used chicken throats for straws.  

Here is Mark's dad trying to teach me a thing or two about gutting and cutting chicken.





Once the birds were sliced, the body parts were soaked in cold water and the blood was  magically pulled out of the tissue.  One more rinse and the birds were ready for consumption.

We did not eat these chickens tonight - I'm not ready for that yet - but we did try chicken heart and gizzard.  That was another interesting experience, and next time I am certain we will leave those pieces for others to enjoy.

All in all, it was a pleasant, interesting, and disgusting morning.  Mark is making plans to hatch 2013 spring chickens for fall butchering, so call him with your order.  First come, first serve.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Election Night

Here is how the kids spent election night.  They each had an electoral map that they colored in as results were announced.  You can tell they are a new generation since they were using the Roku to stream CNN live coverage on the TV while using an iPad for constant electoral map updates.  And, I was pleased to see, they pulled out our low-tech wall map of the US.