A brief-yet-ongoing journal of all things Carmi. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll reach for your mouse to click back to Google. But you'll be intrigued. And you'll feel compelled to return following your next bowl of oatmeal. With brown sugar. And milk.
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Sunday, October 09, 2005
Gobble
Up here in the Great White North, we find ourselves enjoying an early-autumn long weekend. Yup, it's Thanksgiving in Canada. We do things earlier here because we simply want to be different from our American neighbors. For example, we punctuate our sentences with "Eh", worship at the altar of Tim Hortons, and use bizarre metric measurements like kilohectolitres instead of miles and pounds.
I'm not a big fan of turkeys. Aside from their uselessness as house pets, childhood memories of plates heaped with dry, tasteless "meat" persist into my present. I can think of many other ways to express my thankfulness beyond eating a lousy meal.
But turkeys apparently like me. On a bike ride to the beach with some colleagues last month, we stopped at a farmer's market to rest. As we set off, someone looked back and noticed that a group of turkeys had emerged from the woods. The birds were walking, rapidly, toward us.
I don't know about you, but overly-proactive turkeys kind of freak me out. So I rode away a few meters, and instead of continuing to ride like most logical folks would do, stopped, pulled out my camera and recorded the scene as our feathered friends continued to close in.
This is about as near as I dared let the most curious one get to me before I stuffed the camera back in its holder and left a dust cloud in my wake.
I am thankful I didn't get pecked to death.
22 comments:
Please note that Written Inc. has been set up so that all comments must first be moderated before they go live on the blog. I apologize for the inconvenience, but this is to ensure bots and trolls don't muck up the works. If you have any difficulty leaving a comment here as a result, please feel free to email it to carmilevy AT gmail DOT com. Thank you for your understanding.
Happy Turkey Day! They aren't the most attractive birds are they?
ReplyDeleteHere via Michele this time!
Hope you have a great Thanksgiving. As a fellow Canadian, I completly understand your reference to worshipping at the alter of tim hortons. I used to work there a LONG time ago!
ReplyDeleteoh and michele sent me.
ReplyDeleteI love wild turkeys and have asked my husband to paint one for me. I think they're stunning in a quirky way. Hey, did you ever get a dog and name it?
ReplyDeletekiller mutant turkeys!!! Just remembered an old South Park episode hee!
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving, my Candian friend!I hope you enjoy your holiday with your family!
ReplyDeleteturkeys freak me out. I went to an agricultural fair yesterday and saw some llamas. THEY are really freaky, they sort of look like that shrunken head guy from beetlejuice. eek!
ReplyDeleteHere via Michelle
Hi Carmi. Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family.
ReplyDeleteI can't wait for Thanksgiving in Chicago. It's the only holiday where all you have to do is show up, eat and enjoy one another's company. At least, that's what it's like if it's not YOUR mother hosting dinner for 30 relatives.
Here via Michele. Thanks for the close-up shot too.
"Overly proactive turkeys"..... that's a very funny line, Carmi. I have a feeling it will turn up in a sit-com sometime....hehe.
ReplyDeleteI cam on my own this time - no one sent me - no one at all!
Geeze, I forgot to say "Happy Thanksgiving!"
ReplyDeleteI'm back via Michele, Carmi, that fellow Canadian who bids us do her will! (and we willing do it!)
ReplyDeleteCarmi, you are NEVER boring! I may as well tell you that I think you make the nicest comments of anyone who plays this game. Even when the post is boring and common, you find something nice to say and a good way to say it. So I didn't mean 'Carmi, again' as a bad thing, just that the frequency today is more than usual.
ReplyDeleteI LOVE turkey! You must not have had it cooked right!
ReplyDeleteTurkeys and chickens are weird birds; they see you and come rushing, it's pretty scary!
here from michele's.
ReplyDeleteI saw wild turkeys once and they looked way too scrawny to eat. Monday is Columbus Day in the US, so some government workers get to celebrate with the Canucks.
I hate turkey too. We rebel and make quail every year. My son, who is in kindegarten also has developed a new love for the holidays this year too. We grew a few pumpkins and now as winter is getting closer he's more excited about christmas snow than presents. Next year he'll probably ask for a car thou. I'm here from michele's. :)
ReplyDeleteTurkeys freak me out...they are just freaky...LOL Glad you didn't get pecked to death! :)
ReplyDeleteHere via Michele's... Happy (freaky)Turkey day!
happy Thanksgiving to you!!
ReplyDeleteMichele sent me today.
Michele sent me your way, Carmi.
ReplyDeleteNeat experience and picture, Carmi. I've seen wild turkeys out in the woods many time, and bottles of Wild Turkey on occasion, but I've never actually seen a domestic turkey. Looks like a real ugly chicken!
I can relate to your tale of woe about Thanksgiving growing up. Turkey long ago was so dry! It's so much better now.
happy thanksgiving weekend, my fellow canadian!
ReplyDeletehere ia michele :)
Happy Thanksgiving! Enjoy the day! I wish the US would switch Turkey Day to a Monday. It makes so much more sense.
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving! Turkeys are weird creatures. I wonder why God chose to give them extra elbow skin around their necks? :o)
ReplyDeleteMichele sent me a second time!
here via michele's today, though i'm blogrolling you so i remember to come more regularly. the aggressive turkeys remind me of the similarly aggressive geese we have at a local park.
ReplyDelete