Food For Thought: Taking responsibility (vignettes of an amateur hunter and butcher)


My first foray into butchering involved an animal that was already dead when I found it. It was 1985. I was doing an internship in a small town in Appalachia, and I was determined to learn how to treat a hide to use for clothing or shelter. It was deer season, and as I sat on my bed of dry leaves under a rock ledge where I slept, I set my intention and prayed that some local hunter would have an unwanted skin. About a week later, a pack of six stray dogs was wandering down our dirt road and paused half a day in front of our building. Late that afternoon five of them wandered away, leaving the skinniest one dead on the ground. The sign was obvious to me, and I spent many hours that night carefully and intensely removing the hide by kerosene lamplight. When I was finished, I had a hide on one side of me, and this naked dog on the other. I was occupied the next two days scraping, tanning, stretching, smoking this little skin. My fellow interns remarked on my dog smell whenever I went indoors for a food break. This solemn, ritual event was a marker in my life. I was learning how to provide my basic necessities in a direct relationship with nature.
A couple years ago, my stepdaughter adopted and rehabilitated a very old horse. As he emerged from his stupor of years of neglect, he regained a little too much of his stallion spunk, and we found it necessary to neuter him. Our vet wouldn't do it, for medical reasons, nor would anybody else, and eventually I realized that all eyes were on me. Since I have applied the knife to so many beasts over the past decade, my family thought I would be best qualified. Well, to make a mid length story short, our ex-stallion emerged from the process on all fours, after some panicky scurrying around by our homegrown medical crew, wielding ice packs, zip ties, and gauze. After the operation was deemed a success, I remarked," That's the first time I touched a knife to an animal with the intention of it surviving."
It reminds me of earlier this week: One of our interns was cleaning out some frames from our beehives. I went at it with my pocket knife, eating bits of leftover pollen, old comb with bits of dark, dark honey, some clear honey, and a whole section of still-living larvae. The flavor of the larvae was very pleasant and satisfying, but the thought of it was very difficult. I had trouble with the thought of it.

Scott Middlekauf lives with his wife Karin Payne on their 22 acre sustainable farmstead in Kapoho. You can read their fascinating blog at EveningRainFarm.com.