My Reggae Geese
I had fenced off a small piece of land with chicken wire and star pickets, got an old chook-house delivered and bought seven bantam chooks. They were down to three before I discovered two very large and lumpy scrub pythons. My fear was such that I called the local zoo who sent a fearless keeper. She was 18, blonde, 60kg wet, and asked me to hold the bag! With adrenaline dribbling out of my ears, I watched her lift these snakes, tail-first into said bag, tie it and carefully place it in her ute and take off.
Then I got a family of Toulouse geese, substantial and very individual. The parents were Honk and Pip, and the teenagers were Crash, Bang, Tinkle and Wallop. For whatever reason, my communication with Honk was in Jamaican patois.
‘All settled in?’ I asked as I spread food for them to glean. (Curious, the Jamaican newspaper is called, The Gleaner!) ‘Me de Goose, Man!’ he assured me. ‘Enjoy your time. If you need something, just Honk!’ I said unnecessarily. ‘Me keep me eye ‘pon you, Man!’ he said. They gave the family some entertainment, but I’m not meant to be a farmer, and the chance came for them to roam free on forty acres was too good to pass up, especially since I convinced the man to come and get them.
When first retrieved, they had wrecked the interior of my wagon with scratches and squirts. Honk had got between me and the steering wheel at one time, and for a powerful goose blocking my vision, ‘beaking’ my face, and creating a family cacophony to compete with ‘Death Metal,’ had now all been transferred to the purchaser. At last, a win, although they had cost a fortune in food, just to act as Guard Geese. Lessons learnt. You are not a farmer, Chris!


