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Lena
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Mar 10, 2013 04:37PM
I enjoy hearing your childhood stories; and it is a good thing that Marny didn't come back to visit that poor lamb. It reminds of a time when my father actually tried to bring home a few chicks to grow (even though we lived in town), and he planned to slaughter them. I couldn't eat them because they had been like pets for me. It is strange how most of us go and buy animals in the store and have no problem with them, but if we grow them we don't always want to eat them. Thanks for sharing, Mari.
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Lena wrote: "I enjoy hearing your childhood stories; and it is a good thing that Marny didn't come back to visit that poor lamb. It reminds of a time when my father actually tried to bring home a few chicks to ..."That was the difference. We lived on the farm. The runt whether cattle or sheep was the one to be butchered as they would not bring a decent price at the market. We knew the economics of reality.
Very vivid memories, Mari.My grandparents farmed for some years, before I was born. Some cows and pigs, and there were stories about the runt of the litter with the pigs.
William wrote: "Very vivid memories, Mari.My grandparents farmed for some years, before I was born. Some cows and pigs, and there were stories about the runt of the litter with the pigs."
And then you live us hanging, William. Would have loved to hear one of them.
My mother would adopt the runt of the litter, like Percy, the pig, who lived behind the stove in the kitchen for the first part of his life! but poor Percy ended up going to market when he became big and fat like his brothers and sisters. There was a lamb we fed with my brother's baby bottle. but always these little critters would end up in the back of a truck headed for market, reality of life on a small family farm back then. I remember the four children sitting around the dinner table asking, "Is this Blackie, mom?" when we were eating a roast beef dinner. That was considered de riguer to ask.
Kenna wrote: "My mother would adopt the runt of the litter, like Percy, the pig, who lived behind the stove in the kitchen for the first part of his life! but poor Percy ended up going to market when he became b..."That's funny. It is only the runt pigs that I remember growing large enough to market.



