Chicken Fishin'
By David Decker
Our church has a group of older retired men
who meet on Tuesday mornings at a local Burger King. I assume they chose
BK instead of our own church annex so they could tell lies without the
guilt of doing it on the Lord's property. They call themselves the, "Romeo
Club." Romeo stands for: "Retired Old Men Eating Out." Their weekly
sessions have proven to be an endless source of humor and
storytelling.
The dean of the bunch is an old mountain man from up
around Blue Ridge, Georgia. "Bill" grew up on a small hillside farm in the
heart of the north Georgia mountains. He was one of the older among
several siblings, and the valedictorian troublemaker of the entire clan.
If there was an opportunity for mischief lurking anywhere nearby Bill
could sniff it out better than a blue tick on a coon hunt.
One late
summer day Bill's mama gave him a chore to ramrod. With fall and winter
approaching in the mountains, the chimneys and fireplaces would need to be
thoroughly cleaned out. Few things in the hills were more dangerous and
threatening to the well-being of the family cabin than a raging creosote
fire in an old flue.
Other than being the family heathen, one of
Bill's other qualities was his quick, sharp, creative mind. This was, in
truth, his only redeeming trait. As far as manual labor was concerned Bill
was, "sorry as gully dirt," as his daddy readily admitted to friend and
stranger alike. This combination, however, served him well as he
continually searched for and usually found ingenious ways of getting out
of chores. Cleaning out chimneys was field hand work, Bill
reasoned.
The wheels in his head began to turn.
From his
shady perch on the floor of the back porch he could hear the sound of
daddy's eight prize settin' hens as they milled around the back part of
the cabin pecking out their afternoon meal. Suddenly, like an epiphany
from above, it came to him.
Bill called to his younger brothers and
ordered them to run to the corn crib and bring him an ear of the family's
scrub corn. He then sent his youngest sister, who was far too innocent to
see the plan that was taking shape, to the barn to retrieve a couple of
daddy's good cane fishing poles. Bill told them to meet him around front
as he trotted off to find the family's homemade ladder. "We're gonna' go
chicken fishing," he whispered.
Once all the pieces were in place,
Bill and his brothers climbed to the top of the cabin with their cane
poles. Once there, they baited the hooks with the corn and lowered them
down almost to ground level. Bill then told his sister to herd the
chickens around toward the area where the baited hooks were
waiting.
Bill's sister had great difficulty coercing the chickens
to head in the right direction, but finally they showed up and began to
peck at the corn on the fish hooks. The original thought was that the
chickens would swallow the corn like a fish would have. When they only
pecked at the corn, the baited hooks would flitter back and forth in every
conceivable direction. Bill and his brothers were having a devil of a time
keeping the bait in front of the chickens.
An added dimension
involved making just enough noise that mama would hear from inside the
cabin and think that her boys were complying with her instructions. Too
much milling around on the roof would surely bring her outside to
investigate, and thus bring down maternal fire and brimstone once she
found out what was up.
Finally deciding that the chickens would not
cooperate as he had hoped, Bill enacted plan B. He began "gigging" the
chickens in the neck with the fish hooks. Once he had set the hook firmly
in the chicken's neck he and his brothers would pull each of the screaming
victims to the roof of the cabin, dislodge the hook, and stuff the bird
down into the chimney. His theory was that the flapping of the fowl wings
as the chickens descended would dislodge the built up creosote and thus
clean the flue.
Bill's plan did not include at least three
significant contingencies: One, what to do if the chickens got stuck on
the way down. Two, what to do if the creosote was hardened past the point
of being affected by the fluttering of the wings. Three, how to explain to
mama what those prize settin' hens were doing coming out of the cabin's
fireplaces screaming to the top of their lungs.
The whole
experiment turned out to be a miserable failure. The process removed
precious little of the creosote, three of the chickens got permanently
stuck and had to be put out of their misery before being removed from the
chimney, at least one of the chickens got the better of Bill pecking him
profusely around the neck and ears before flying off, mama did come
outside to investigate the ruckus and received an appreciable shower of
chicken fecal matter as hens flew overhead on their way to safer ground,
and Bill and his brothers each received their reward from a razor strap
when their daddy came in from the fields that evening.
The next day
Bill was seen back on the roof of the family cabin with his arm stuck down
the chimney. His two brothers were inside attempting to catch the falling
creosote in two large tow sacks. His sister, having been given a parental
pardon due to her age, continued her daily routine of play in the creek -
her stripes having been partitioned among the three brothers. Mama and
daddy sat at the kitchen table at dinner discussing Bill's certain future
as an inmate in the Georgia Correctional System.
And, there wasn't
one chicken anywhere in sight.
© 2005 David Decker
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I am southern boy birthed in Alabama, reared in Georgia, matriculated and married in Tennessee, and initiated into manhood in South Carolina. To read more, visit
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