Another day, and another slew of contributions to Britain's
funniest blog – Angry People in Local Newspapers.
And every now and then I get one that strikes a chord with
me. This time it's one of the repeated themes that I see on the blog – school gets
chickens, chickens go missing, kids are photographed looking sad.
These stories come round with depressing regularity, and it
makes me wonder why is it that schools will invest in chickens if they're all
going end up tortured by local psychos, casseroled by local crooks, or ripped
to shreds by foxes.
Then I realised that this is the exact outcome that schools
are hoping for. Yes, the kids learn citizenship, responsibility and how to care for something
with the precious gift of life. But they're also taught to expect disappointment,
betrayal and the inevitable victory of the cold hand of death.
This is the exact lesson I learned when our teachers set up
a chicken run outside our classroom window, the lesson being "You will
arrive in class one day to find a bloody and feathery mess after the chickens
were eaten by foxes".
And so it came to pass that the chickens were eaten by
foxes; and the run remained outside our classroom window for the rest of the
year, a bloody and feathery reminder that the things you love will be eaten by
foxes. It was a lesson deeply ingrained in my mind, reflected in my (rejected) submission for the year art project: Chickens Getting Eaten By Foxes, A Study In Red.
Chickens Getting Eaten By Foxes, A Study In Red (Medium: Poster paint on teacher's Ford Escort) |
And it was a lesson that rang true. For when my grandfather got
a pet tortoise, my take-home lesson was this: "He'll end up dead and in a
pie."
7 comments:
It wouldn't be too much of a transformation for a tortoise who is, after all, already alive in a pie.
Not,in any way, an attempt at selfpromotion
http://vicusscurra.blogspot.co.uk/2009/09/goodbye-mr-steak-and-chips.html
You killed your grandad and put him in a pie?!?!?!
I'm telling the Daily Mail on you.
Are we sure the school chicken run held chickens? It seems there is a pile of leafy lettuce in the pen. I'm thinking rabbits - or tortoises.
No, definitely chickens. You can tell this cos the kids are in blue tops.
Chickens eat green leafy stuff. They prefer it still in the vegetable patches they're growing in it's true, but they'll eat it however it comes.
Chickens will eat anything.
Even chicken.
I stand corrected TDCT. Here I was thinking the blue tops signified a secret allegiance to those bekilted Picts - the distraught girl in the centre has a Caledonian forehead as wide as Fingal's Cave - and had nowt to do with the species of animal.
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