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Date: | Wed, 15 Jan 2003 10:54:30 -0600 |
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Girls of the evening!? Now that's an interesting turn of phrase!
-jc
On Wednesday, January 15, 2003, at 07:21 AM, Rudy Christian wrote:
> Okay, I guess I will wade in here and expose myself too.
>
>
>
> In the 1970’s we lived in Akron (OH) and I worked as a plant engineer
> inBarberton. It actually was a histoinspirational job involving
> remodeling and updating an early 20th century vitreous tile factory
> into a modern electronics manufacturing facility with slicky offices,
> but that’s not my cow story.
>
>
>
> Being a plant engineer, and in my twenties, meant many evenings and
> weekends were spend decompressing with friends who mutually enjoyed
> various forms of recreation. One friend was also one of my PE
> department employees and lived in an old stone farmhouse owned by the
> Himmelwright family. They were hardcore dairy farmers that pastured
> several farms they had bought up when milk prices were down and
> insurance was up. The farmhouse Kenny lived in was the original
> farmstead, but the old stone farmhouse was never updated beyond some
> rudimentary knob and tube and the typical back porch kitchen retrofit.
> It was a great place to hang out and party with plenty of bedrooms and
> a huge fireplace in a living room with a world class sag in the floor.
> Bliss, to say the least.
>
>
>
> Unfortunately the Himmelwrights weren’t too big on keeping their
> fences and gates mended. When the sun set the girls (mostlyHolsteins)
> would find their way down the barn lane and into the farmhouse yard.
> Usually this wasn’t much of a problem, if it was warm weather. They
> would just mow the yard and peruse the orchard and generally cause no
> harm other than scaring the begeebies out of young girls on their way
> back from the outhouse. In winter it was a little bit more
> problematic. When it was time to head home, the uneducated (in
> wandering cow antics) guests would get to their cars to find the side
> door mirrors all wacked out of position. It was only when they found
> their hands covered with great globs of cow slobber that they realized
> the girls had found the road salt irresistible. But that’s not really
> my cow story.
>
>
>
> One evening Kenny brought his brand new (nice condition used) Harley
> Davidson out to the farm. Realizing it was an easy target for the
> bovine marauders, he decided to put the bike in the old carriage shed.
> Kenny had decided he was smarter than the girls of the evening. Much
> was his sorrow and surprise (and great was our difficulty to not laugh
> hysterically) when he found in the morning that the cows had decided
> to nudge the door open (obviously old hat to them) and spend the night
> in the carriage house….….on top of Kenny’s now very distorted and cow
> flop covered Harley. So much for trying to out smart a cow.
>
>
>
> Rudy
>
>
>
>
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