The last time I saw a feather was a few hours ago. I pulled into the driveway after running an errand, and I noticed two turkey feathers stuck into the edge of a foamcore poster board advertising LIVE HERITAGE TURKEYS FOR SALE. All caps.
Turkey feathers are big and plain, at least these ones are. I like that about them. No flash, just simplicity.
Jim find feathers everywhere. I ask him while he’s eating fruit salad for lunch, What do you know about feathers? He walks to the bookshelf and pulls down the Sibling Guide to Birds book he and the girls got me for Mother’s Day last year.
Well, he says, there are all kinds of feathers. Body feathers and head feathers. Feathers from the nape of the neck.
I ask him if he liked feathers when he was a boy. Not any more than the average kid, he tells me.
Our girls love feathers. They get a new peacock feather every other Sunday or so when it’s Growers Market season. Fifty cents each, although sometimes Mr. and Mrs. Johnston give the girls a feather each for free.
I once found a tiny pale orange feather, perfectly formed. It stood out against the gray gravel in the driveway, and for weeks I kept it in my car in the well between the bucket seats. I twirled it between my fingers while waiting in the drive-thru at the pharamacy or the parent pick-up line at school.
I now know that the feathers in the outermost tip of the wing are called Primaries. Or are they Secondaries?
There are tail feathers and rump feathers. Jim mentions Scapulars, and when I look at him for clarification, he says, Shoulder, scapula…you know, just remember, I-broke-my-scapula.
I think of football players and their shoulder pads and the playing fields we walked across at Valley High School in the days before any of us had our drivers licenses. So green and manicured, those fields.
I don’t recall ever seeing a feather on that carpet, but I do remember my best friend’s older sister’s collection of feathers. She kept them on a nightstand near her reel-to-reel. We snuck into her bedroom and snagged a few, braided leather to the quill and wore them in our hair or made roach clips out of them.
One of the first feathers I ever saw was the light gray of the guinea hen, distinguishable by its many white dots. I picked up handfuls in Grandma’s yard one afternoon, walked in through the kitchen. Mom and Grandma sat at the table smoking cigarettes and when they saw what was in my hands, they both yelled, Get those dirty things out of here, NOW!
-related to Topic post, WRITING TOPIC – LIGHT AS A FEATHER
I enjoyed these feather (pracitices).
l laughed out loud about the roach clips and your getting yelled out about bringing the guinea feathers inside. I can just see the scene in my mind. 🙂
Reminds me of my homemade gallon jar ant farm when my Mother discovered it…seems she did not want bull ants in the house.
Thanks for sharing!
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forgive my spelling…geez I can’t even claim that I didn’t proof read it because I did!!
Ithink I wasn’t really paying attention because I am listening my new Amy Winhouse CD..not to everyones taste I am sure..but I love it.!!
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Yi yb,
I like the rhythm of this piece – I felt as though it came out quietly and steadily – reflected in the nicely ordered paragraphs, rather than in one great rush of emotion. And for me it has a particular charm for NOT being a piece full of heavy passion, more like a quiet reflection, where one thing drifts almost imperceptibly into another. So in the end it’s about very ordinery, everyday moments and in some odd way that kind of experience, which perhaps anyone would or might share, I find touching in a way not possible for something breathtakingly unusual and exceptional, which would be quite outside my own life, or that of a typical reader.
I feel as though I expressed that really BADLY! I hope you got it despite that.
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LOL, gypsy-heart (about the Amy Winehouse CD). I’m pretty fascinated by her, to tell the truth. I like some of her songs, too.
Yes, my mom was a farm girl, but oddly she was taught to keep the outside outdoors. I was always sneaking in baby toads and other things that would make her mad when she found them. She loosened up a lot by the time I was a teenager. I think she finally gave up fighting.
Thanks, stranger. I did get that, and you were eloquent in stating it, in fact.
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stranger, I just read your post about closing down your blog. Wow. I’m sad to hear it. If you happen to drop by here again, I just want to say I hope you’ll still come around now and again.
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stranger, I saw your post as well. Sorry to hear you will be leaving blogworld. But it takes so much energy to keep it all going. And I totally get it. Hope you still visit once in a while. And let us know how it goes on your quest around Rainring. Your comments have a quirkiness and upbeat energy that will be missed.
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