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supose i had better introduce myself properly...

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 6:52 pm
by Gooner Girl
...though dunno how long i will stick around for given i don't have many pearls of wisdom to spout on Bolton Wanderers but you seem a nice lot.

I'm Helen, 29, live in Sussex and a gooner (went to first match in '93 and get up there about a handful of times a season, fave players - Dennis Bergkamp, Paul Merson and Tony Adams - had 3 mice named after them as a kid!)

I teach PE part time at a local private school and also do other bits of sports coaching. Am a qualified football coach and used to play a bit myself - left winger - but now do mostly athletics coaching and a bit of competing (triple jump)

Found this forum through my very good friend thebish who i met as we are mutual chicken keepers. Share my house with hubby, dog, 2 cats, 4 chickens and 3 ducks and thats about it really. Can usually be found on Gooners world forum - www.goonersworld.co.uk/forum

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 7:22 pm
by bobo the clown
I hope you do stick around a while, Helen. Looking at the current main page you'll see some animosity .... I think largely aimed at the "we're big & you ren't", "you're a set of cloggers" and the result of the poor tackle last night which flies in the face of much of the reasons for us being attacked.

Overall, however, the Arsenal team do play an attractive form of football & generally I admire that.

Left wing, eh. Don't answer any call from a guy called Megson, he'll be trying to see if you could drop to left-back.

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 7:48 pm
by Puskas
Hello.

So how big...sorry...

More pertinent questions - you keep chickens, you say. Where do you keep them? What do you feed them on? And have you noticed any oddly cooperative behaviour between them, as they attempt escapes?

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 8:04 pm
by Bruce Rioja
Do you keep Rhode Island Reds and White Silkies? :?

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:02 pm
by Gooner Girl
Would like to give you the impression bobo that not ALL gooners are a bunch of numptys. There really are some sensible, realistic ones around to.

As for the chickens i rescue ex battery hens with thebish so most of mine aren't fancy breeds but look something like this:

Image

My ducks are fancy breeds though i have 2 khaki campbell girls and a male call duck called Thierry :D

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:03 pm
by Gooner Girl
Bruce Rioja wrote:Do you keep Rhode Island Reds and White Silkies? :?
Ahhh, i just see what you did there! ;) Bit slow on the uptake this evening...

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:04 pm
by Lord Kangana
Is it true that its harder to wring a duck's neck than a chicken's?

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:08 pm
by Gooner Girl
Lord Kangana wrote:Is it true that its harder to wring a duck's neck than a chicken's?
Don't know, never tried but i would suspect so. If mine haven't died of natural causes or the fox they have had a peaceful sleep courtesey of the vets. I don't mind putting my hand up a cows arse but the thought of killing chickens is not sop pleasent!

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:14 pm
by Verbal
Hello

obviously you've kinda joined during the eye of the storm, that'll pass though over time. Probably about 5 years.

But yeah, hi. Enjoy. Or tolerate, as 99% of us do.

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:19 pm
by Bruce Rioja
boltonaremysecondteam wrote:
Bruce Rioja wrote:Do you keep Rhode Island Reds and White Silkies? :?
Ahhh, i just see what you did there! ;) Bit slow on the uptake this evening...
No worries.

Rhode Island Reds are beautiful birds that peck each other to death in batteries. I know this having been the boy that's had to pull the dead ones out and leave them for the fox.
Please, everyone, standard eggs (laid by battery hens) don't taste of anything anyway, so just don't buy them!!!

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:24 pm
by Lord Kangana
They're also lower in essential minerals, and thousands of times more likely to poison you.

And just to p*ss everyone off, every year 100's of thousands of battery eggs get mixed up and sold as free range.

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:27 pm
by Bruce Rioja
Lord Kangana wrote:
And just to p*ss everyone off, every year 100's of thousands of battery eggs get mixed up and sold as free range.
Are we sure about that, Kango? The yolk's a dead giveaway.

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:28 pm
by Lord Kangana
Indeed. And because all meats go through the same abatoirs now, you're as likely to get salmonella from a free range chicken as a battery one.

All true.

Re: supose i had better introduce myself properly...

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:51 pm
by finlayson
boltonaremysecondteam wrote:my very good friend thebish who i met as we are mutual chicken keepers.
Is one a bugger for giving the other a piggyback over the wall?

Do they eat Indian corn?

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:57 pm
by Bruce Rioja
Lord Kangana wrote:Indeed. And because all meats go through the same abatoirs now, you're as likely to get salmonella from a free range chicken as a battery one.

All true.
OK, help me out here. When Im buying a free-range, corn-fed, organic chicken or Poussin, my rule of thumb is that the fecking thing's yellow. It looks like it's smoked 60 a day. Have I got this wrong? :?

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 11:01 pm
by Lord Kangana
Generally yes, thats the corn they feed them, usually in the last week or so of their lives, to give them a loely yellow colour that makes people think "ooh, that looks natural". It can be fed to any bird, free-range or not. This next bit I'm hazy on, but I believe (like with farmed salmon) they are now feeding colour supplements to hens to combat the insipid yolk colour problem.

And hundreds of thousands was an underestimate, they reckon it was 30 million in 2006.

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 11:18 pm
by Gooner Girl
keep your own chickens - then you'll know your egg is free range. ;)

Actually, the real issue now is not so much people not buying free range eggs in the supermarket - most are aware and do try to - its the hidden eggs in things like mayonaise and cakes etc etc that are largely battery eggs. Also the eggs used in catering - restauraunts and stuff like that.

Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2010 9:46 am
by Abdoulaye's Twin
Anyone see that Jimmy's Farm programme last night? He visited some pig farm in the US. A disgrace it was. 1000s of pigs in pens barely big enough to fit in. They'd lead a male pig down past all the females to get them worked up but wouldn't let them get it on! They reckoned they sent 1,500 or so pigs to slaughter every week. The western world needs to have a word with itself about the way it consumes (and wastes food) and expect to pay feck all for it.

Maybe I should put this in the angry thread?

Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2010 9:53 am
by Gooner Girl
Oh pants. Missed it. meant to watch as I enjoyed the first one about Australia. I'm big into farm animal welfare - it's one of my passions. As well as rescuing battery chickens with the bish I run the mid Sussex branch of compassion in world farming - www.ciwf.org.uk

Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2010 10:17 am
by Hoboh
Verbal wrote:Hello

obviously you've kinda joined during the eye of the storm, that'll pass though over time. Probably about 5 years.

But yeah, hi. Enjoy. Or tolerate, as 99% of us do.
Yep we are all tolerant on here.
I'm doing a curry this weekend you got any spare chickens? Asda are so pricey at the moment.
Take heart dear girl SOMEONE has to watch Arsenal I suppose.
Left winger?I'm a bit of a right winger myself.
Welcome