Fences: 10.12.13

Two springs ago we nailed together pallets from the bread factory, forming a hefty fence to keep the goats from chewing the neighboring hydrangeas. I hated them in that enclosure. Though the two had much more than the recommended amount of room to roam, I yearned for them be free, spread across a scrubby hillside, constantly shuffling around between tufts of grass and shrubbery.

I do believe there is a good way to keep animals enclosed in fences, happy and loved, if hardly free. Like a dog can be tummy-up sun-soaking pleased, tethered to the hemlock on the east edge of the scruffy yard, a goat or duck can be living their best life under the care of a human who will eventually end their lives with a swift slice and be nourished by tender flesh and succulent bones.

I wish sometime to live in a place where the animals I take in have so much room, that the fences will feel more like subtle one-way streets than muddy urban backyards. Soul-stretched limbs wake to sunlight on food, their lives can go around with the wind, and mine can be molded around their milking cycles, their needs for new pasture, their understanding of weather approaching.

Keeping animals thus far has been like a gritty salad, unwashed and earthy but with bursts of flavor, and with strides in learning and understanding.  I have salted stubborn mats of manured hay with harsh, irritated tears, and gasped as a machete took feathered lives on the wooden block behind the goat house. And when we pushed the two girls up the ramp to the slaughterhouse, where gruff and gentle hands tugged them from us and to wherever they were going next, I wished there had been less fence, and more freedom. More scratching behind the ear, more seeing each other's inner selves through the shiny layers of eyeball cells.

This year, the pallets lay in jagged angles, where the lives of girthy oaks and beeches slammed to the ground by the whirr of the chainsaw in preparation for building. Now the contents of the freezer slowly drain into my bones, and my cells awaken from years of vegetarianism: Their flesh feels right in my body.

Fences 10.10.2013


When I was a kid, I dug up a set of bones by a brambled chainlink fence behind our trailer. Disregarding the remnants of matted fur and collar tag that read DUTCHESS, I took them to my dad, sure that I had found a dinosaur. “Take them back,” he said, then held my hands under hot water and scrubbed them with Dial.


The bones went back, but I kept part of the ribcage. I liked the way the smooth edges felt against my palm.


When we moved to Vermont, the ribs went with me, tucked into the front pocket of my backpack.


It wasn't until later that year, as I scratched my cat's belly, that I realized what I had done. I slid poor Dutchess' ribs from a box beneath my bed, and carried them to a stone wall in the woods behind my house. There, I dug a hole and dropped them in. The ribs thudded against the dense soil, echoing off the trees and sending a shiver up my spine. I covered them, gingerly, with soil and pine needles and pulled a flat stones from the wall to place on top. There, Dutchess' ribs were laid to rest with an epitaph that read:


DUTCHESS
Born in Alabama
Ribs in Vermont
R.I.P.




Fences: 10.09.13

Autumn (continued)

3.

I want to leave this task undone

the one where I mend the fence
the one that seemed so important
the one I should cross off the list without doing it

because it holds me in
but it doesn't keep me safe

at least not from myself

and so I'd rather leave the chinks in my armor of sticks
of mud
of rocks

and then you could find a way in

anyone could, really

to jump into my piles of leaves
to carry wood and stoke the fire
to break bread beside its warm glow

to pass the lengthening nights with busy hands and moving lips

or silence

words on pages
steaming mug

with the option now

not to be alone.

Fences: 10.08.2013

It is hard to let your guard down. To allow yourself to truly have faith in another human being. It is that moment, when you choose to let go, when it feels like your stomach might drop out, it is in that moment when you learn the most about yourself.

I rarely let my guard down. I have built fences so high around myself that I make Fort Knox look like a public garden. This is the result of years of trusting the wrong people and falling for well orchestrated lies. Each time I was left standing in the dust, alone, I would grab another panel and build my fence a little higher.

It is hard to allow someone behind that fence. What if you are mistaken once again? What if you let them in only to discover it wasn't meant to be. Even after they have walked away, a part of them is forever stuck behind that well crafted fence.

I rarely let anyone in. Instead I walk out from behind it. I keep most of myself inside and only allow small pieces to venture into the open. Unprotected. Years of overly optimistic views of people has left me peeking from behind my fortress.

But those I do let in, those who stay, those who allow me to be myself and love me because of who I am not despite it, they are amazing. They are the people who gently take a section of fence down. They remove the barrier and allow air in. They let the sun shine in, illuminating the love in my life.

It is hard to allow people in. To let your guard down. It is easier to built fences and live in your fortress. But the payoff when it all goes right, when the right person is let in, it is worth all the splinters.

Fences: 10/7/13

What You Know About Fences


You know, because you grew up on a farm, to always close the gate behind you. You know the fence wants new nails, new planks, new wire because it is the only thing between animals and the road. You know, now matter what materials or dimensions you use, that some horse or mule will put its hoof through the fence. You know how to joke about this, exactly how much exasperation goes into the remark “they’ll always find a way to get themselves hurt.”


You know if you see a horse caught in a fence how to walk calmly to them, hope it is not one of the stupid or mean animals. You know to keep wirecutters in your back pocket. You know how rarely they can be saved from damage to their legs.


You know because you have spent a lifetime perching on fences (pipe fences, wooden fences, stone fences) that it is best to sit next to a post, so you have something to lean against while you watch the fields and sky.


You know because gates swing and guards smile pleasantly that your white skin melts fences.


You know because you have been scolded that you cannot climb fences in a dress. You know because you did not believe the scolding that you can.


You know because of tracks in the snow that deer will leap any fence you build.


You know because you hear about it that people are shot or shelled for climbing fences. But only some fences. Only some people.


You know enough to hate barbed wire, razor wire- fencing valued only for its sharpness.


You know because a Yellowstone park ranger once told you that wolves dig under fences, escape the park and are killed by ranchers. Fences must be sunk into the ground like roots.


You know which of the horses can open gates with their strong acrobat lips.


You know which way they will run down the road if they escape, where best to head them off.


You know to always close and lock the gate behind you.



Fences: 10.06.2013

The last of the Sun Golds
Cling to the chain link out back of the restaurant,
Heavy with the last of the summer rains,
Or are they the first rains of Fall?
Their leaves deceptively drooping as if nothing left to give.

Pickets with just an inch of space between slats
Around my neighbor's backyard
Protect my fearful ten year old frame
From the menacingly aggressive German shepherd hiding behind.

The twelve foot fence of Highgate, Vermont's airfield
Toppling under the weight of hundreds of super high hippies
Trying to see if they could get as wasted as the members of the Grateful Dead.

Good thing the guard rail was there overlooking the canal.
Riding my bike home from 2nd grade;
Watching from the road above as the braver kids went down to the water's edge
To throw rocks at crocodiles.

"...to keep me out, or to keep Mother Nature in."

Driving down a long and narrow deserted Vermont country road,
A driveway with a giant black gate
That no one is trying to get past.

Closer to civilization,
A displaced Italian villa in southern Vermont
Surrounded by ten foot tall protective fencing.
Around the tennis courts and gardens...
Has anyone even lived here in the last twelve years?