Goodfeathers
08.July, 2010

Leghorn chickens are a new addition here at the hacienda. The first graders at the school where my girlfriend teaches had hatched these birds in the classroom, and at just two weeks old they were looking for a more permanent home. After our addition of a large vegetable garden about six months ago, a small laying flock seemed like the next logical step. Luckily the roommates were all in.
There is a long table in the garden where we take our meals. I like to sit out there with my pipe in the afternoon and watch the chickens scurry back and forth beneath the tomato plants. There is something about watching them that makes me very calm and happy.
The Life and Death of Frank the Fish
20.July, 2009

I got the call today. Frank the Fish is dead. At nearly five years old he was the final survivor of the Fishbowl Gang, a motley crew of feeder fish I’d bought in the fall of 2004.
It was the first assignment in a photo class I was taking. Photograph one object 36 different ways. 36, of course, because everyone was still shooting film then. So I went to Walmart, spent under $10 and walked out with a large fishbowl containing five goldfish.
Tara and I were still newly dating. She dutifully held the fishbowl in the passenger seat as I tried unsuccessfully not to slosh the water onto her jeans. We drove all over town looking for places where the light seemed just right. At a park, at a bustop, in the center divider on a busy street. It took several hours, but I was happy with the results.
At the end of the day I suggested that we give the fish to the first kid we saw on the street, or else set them free in a local pond, but Tara would hear none of it. She’d named the two largest fish Frank and Fatty and she was determined to keep them for what we assumed was their short lifespan.
The three smaller fish did die almost immediately, and Fatty passed after several months. But Frank was a fighter. As the years passed his fins grew impossibly long like an old man’s whiskers, and he took to spending his days just sitting on the bottom, watching us.
Several times I mentioned that we could buy Frank a larger tank, perhaps a couple of friends, but Tara seemed to think that Frank was staying alive out of pure spite for his circumstance and that spending any additional money on him might be issuing him a death sentence.
And so Frank lived on in that same bowl, the regal lord of Tara’s parents’ kitchen. Always watching, only bothering to swim at meal times or when his possible demise had come into question.
But alas, old Frank’s number had finally come up.
Tara called this afternoon and said,
“Bad news, I just got to Mom’s house and Frank is dead.”
“Are you sure he’s not just resting?”, I said.
“Sorry honey.”
That was it. The undignified end of what was a remarkably long life for a lowly Walmart feeder fish who rose to prominence in the lives of a lucky few.
Frank will lay in state until tonight, when I can give him a proper burial.
Goodnight sweet prince.

iPhonotypes pt.4
15.July, 2009

Ann and Bella

Randy

Tara
