I know that some people take offense at taking the lives of animals, and I don't want to alienate anyone here. The truth is, both Steve and I were vegetarians for many years, but my body didn't feel particularly healthy without eating meat. Plus, we are raising three children, who eat as much as an army, and they are not even teenagers yet. We feel good about consuming the meat of animals that we raised ourselves: humanly, living on green pasture, with lots of space to roam, feeding on organic feed we provide for them. When slaughter time comes around, our animals are not subjected to being transported to a slaughter house, but their lives end right there, on the pasture they grew up on.
Before we start our chicken harvest, we
stand in a circle, hold hands, and give thanks to the animals we are
about to put in the freezer.
This year, my ten-year-old Kai wanted to
learn how to actually kill a chicken, and so did I. In the past, I
helped with scalding, plucking, eviscerating and packing, but I never
had the guts to actually put the knife to a chicken's throat. It was
a job the men always did (Steve and our neighbor Rich). Kai and I wanted to
be able to do the whole process from start to finish. I will spare
you the gory details (and Kai's blood splattered glasses), but let me
just say that we did succeed, and although we both hated doing it, we
did it successfully several times.
And I get teary remembering both Kai
and Lukas, plucking chickens, and later with their hands in chicken
cavities, tireless cutting off feet and heads, pulling out guts,
examining chicken livers and gallbladders. They didn't complain
once, and they really, really helped, instead of just being in the
way or wanting to goof off. I am very proud of them, knowing that
they do live on a farm, and that this is one of the ways we sustain
ourselves. They know how to plant seeds in the soil, weed a
vegetable garden, and process a chicken. Not to mention a whole new
appreciation for chicken anatomy (talk about hands-on
homeschooling!).
Today, I shall make liver pate and have our friends over for dinner, to thank them for entertaining little Miss Eva while we did this nasty job. It takes a village to raise a child. And a chicken.
Steve, Rich and my sons preparing all the equipment. Here is the cooling tank. |
And this is the hot water tank for scalding and the nifty plucking machine thingy. |
It helps to do this job with people you love! |
If I haven't you grossed out enough... we fed the chicken innards to the pigs. They loved it. |