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Looking to borrow a chicken plucker

June 30, 2011
Bonners Ferry is a rural community, and through the years our methods of communicating have changed. Somehow, word has always spread when a person or a family needed something ... until not too long ago by word of mouth.

We've had the Bonners Ferry Herald since before the turn of the century ... the oldest business in Boundary County and by far the most consistent source of local news. But it only came out once a week.

In the late 1970s, we got our own radio station, AM 1450, KBFI, thanks to a group of community leaders, and the time it took to get word out ... almost always a neighbor calling on behalf of another as we've always been too proud to call for ourselves, got shorter.

Amazingly, even though it once took a six-hour buggy ride to get to town, response time is very little changed. When a family needs help, help is usually there even before they know to ask. You can get an officer, a fire truck or an ambulance to your door quite a bit sooner ... but in most cases there's going to be a neighbor pointing the way.

And typically, when they arrive, there's going to be a table full of food there.

The internet has stepped the response time up even more. Even when no one knows why, when a call for help goes out, people are there. Then there's this thing called "Bonners Ferry Free Cycle."

I'm a member, but I don't remember how I joined. It's a Yahoo news group that allows its members to tell other members, with the click of a mouse, that I have too much rhubarb this year and I'm looking to find a good home for it or the clutch went out on my car and I'm wondering if anyone has a spare clutch plate for a '57 Chevy laying out in the garage?

Occasionally you come to realize that some people in Boundary County are catching on to the new media ... others aren't yet quite used to what answers they might find.

What Bonners Ferry chicken pluckers might look like.
On Tuesday, this email came to all members, "Searching to borrow a chicken plucker in August. E-mail with pictures, price, info to ttaliomali@yahoo.com.

I thought about responding, but I don't know what I'm going to be doing in August and I'm not that crazy about plucking chickens. It's an onerous job.

And if I did want to rent myself out as a chicken plucker, I'd have no clue what to charge.

I've seen it done where all you do is invite the neighbors over, start with a stump and an axde at one end, tables and pots of hot water going in the other, and before you even realize what's happening, a roost full of old cacklers come to resemble the poultry aisle at Aikens Harvest Foods.

With a pile of plucked feathers in the middle.

Somehow, I don't think this is what Tali O'Mali is looking for, but I'd not be surprised if it's not what she gets. I've a feeling she's more tech-savvy than most of us, and knows that someone up here will have one of those rubber-fingered machines you plug in that can, in a minute, take away all the joy of a people plucking a chicken.

It's purportedly faster, more sanitary, and plucks even the most tiny pin feather. The inventor obviously didn't know Mom.

When I looked, there were no responses yet to Tali O'Mali's request. If she said she needed help tomorrow, I'm sure Boundary County chicken pluckers would have flocked to help. In August? With the fair going?

We might be busy.
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