I knew I couldn’t leave them there. I started making calls.
My friends Melanie and Russ Walker dropped everything and were at the gas station within a half hour with an animal crate and towels. I had been sitting
near the mama hen working on getting her used to me. We bought sunflower seeds from the store and fed her a few. She was coming right up to me as I was
talking to her. I got my hands near her as she was pecking at a seed and quickly gripped her and gently put her into the crate. Next it was all hands on
deck snatching scattering, peeping chicks! We quickly gathered all seven and put them in with mom.
A new farmed animal sanctuary in California called Goatlandia agreed to take the feathered family. Deb Blum, the founder of Goatlandia, has been caring for
not only goats, but rescued pigs and a flock of a couple dozen chickens on her land in North Santa Rosa for many years. I was so grateful that she agreed
to take them, and right away too. After we got the crate in my car, I headed directly there.
As a vegan activist, I think about farmed animals every day. I think about the suffering they endure, their horrible living conditions, the tortuous
procedures they must undergo, the loneliness and misery they must feel, and what I can do to help them. But I rarely actually encounter or engage with
animals, though I have been trained to handle them in rescue situations. It was a treat to have this family in my car and I was so moved by the soft,
cautious vocalizations of the mama hen on the drive to the sanctuary. She seemed to be saying, “Yes, this is a somewhat distressing situation, but we
will be okay. It’s true kids, I’m a little concerned, but mom is here and we will be okay.”
When I arrived at the sanctuary, Deb was preparing a small coop in a separate area, but near the chicken runs. She fluffed fresh straw on the ground and I
helped her clean water and food dispensers and fill them. She prepared a large dog crate and lined the bottom with towels and then took a bulky towel,
rolled it up, and formed a circle with it in the back of the crate. Deb knew just what she needed because as we coaxed the family out of the travel crate
and into the larger dog crate, mama knew exactly what to do with the nest of towel. She immediately gathered her brood under her and settled down on the
“nest,” seeming right at home.
The next day, a storm rolled into our area with a steady, cold rain and I had a smile on my face all day thinking about that little feathered family and
how they were now safe, warm, and dry. Eight lives are now out of harm’s way. It was a good day.
A huge thank you to Melanie and Russ Walker for quickly coming to the rescue and to Deb Blum for taking them in!
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