My late evening Slurpee run ended in tragedy

I feel your pain...

I hit a chicken on my way to work yesterday. It was just standing there in the left hand lane when another of it's flock jumped out and scared him, right into my left front tire!

Feathers flew!
 
Image said:
I feel your pain...

I hit a chicken on my way to work yesterday. It was just standing there in the left hand lane when another of it's flock jumped out and scared him, right into my left front tire!

Feathers flew!

That's pretty gangsta. My friend and I were driving to the beach this summer and got behind a chicken truck and all the chickens looked cramped and sad :( we wanted to set them free.
 
Image said:
I feel your pain...

I hit a chicken on my way to work yesterday. It was just standing there in the left hand lane when another of it's flock jumped out and scared him, right into my left front tire!

Feathers flew!


that would really upset me
 
goodmorningdavi said:
That's pretty gangsta. My friend and I were driving to the beach this summer and got behind a chicken truck and all the chickens looked cramped and sad :( we wanted to set them free.


that would be enough to make me cry :( poor chickens. and i'm weird.
 
Ingredients
Amount Ingredient Preparation
3 pounds rabbit fresh or frozen
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons canola oil
--- Marinade
2 cups red wine
2 cups chicken broth
1 teaspoon allspice
2 each bay leaves
1 teaspoon thyme leaves
--- Sauce
12 each pickled onions
12 each pimiento stuffed green olives sliced
1/2 pound mushrooms fresh, sliced
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
Directions
Cut rabbit into serving pieces and rub with salt and pepper.

Put into a large bowl; add marinade.

Refrigerate overnight.

Drain rabbit; DO NOT PAT DRY.

Strain reserve marinade.

In a large cast iron frypan over high heat quickly brown all sides of rabbit pieces in hot canola (or vegetable) oil.

When brown, pour in the reserve marinade and simmer over low heat for 1 hour or until tender.

Just before the rabbit is done, saute the onions, olives, and mushrooms in butter.

Add to rabbit mixture.

Serve with boiled potatoes.
 
goodmorningdavi said:
That's pretty gangsta. My friend and I were driving to the beach this summer and got behind a chicken truck and all the chickens looked cramped and sad :( we wanted to set them free.

I've been behind one of those trucks on the interstate before. They leave a trail of escapees at 65 mph...

Very sad...
 
Image said:
I've been behind one of those trucks on the interstate before. They leave a trail of escapees at 65 mph...

Very sad...


and very inhuman.
 
Cycle of life 'an fate.

That's what I say.

Wft would the crows/ravens eat?
 
goodmorningdavi said:
That's pretty gangsta. My friend and I were driving to the beach this summer and got behind a chicken truck and all the chickens looked cramped and sad :( we wanted to set them free.
I don't think I've ever seen a chicken truck. We have lots of cattle trucks here though.
 
Flyin_Free said:
I don't think I've ever seen a chicken truck. We have lots of cattle trucks here though.

They have a few hundred cages on the back of the truck and each little cage isn't even tall enough for the chickens to stand up straight in and stretch.
 
Image said:
I feel your pain...

I hit a chicken on my way to work yesterday. It was just standing there in the left hand lane when another of it's flock jumped out and scared him, right into my left front tire!

Feathers flew!

We were driving to Edmonton last year and it was my turn to drive. I hadn't been behind the wheel for any longer than about two minutes when out of the blue a bird committed suicide by flying straight into the front windshield. Considering that I was travelling at about 100km, it was a very fast demise for the bird.
 
Mia62 said:
We were driving to Edmonton last year and it was my turn to drive. I hadn't been behind the wheel for any longer than about two minutes when out of the blue a bird committed suicide by flying straight into the front windshield. Considering that I was travelling at about 100km, it was a very fast demise for the bird.

Some big-ass turkey flew into my dad's windshield once and destroyed it, it was crazy.
 
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