{ thoughts on a world of chance from David G. Schwartz }

Twlight of the guinea hens

July 18th, 2005 by Dave

I just found this interesting because a guy I used to work with had an unnatural fascination for guinea hens, so it’s kind of an inside joke. But still, it’s an example of how growth brings unforeseen problems.

From the AC Press:

Paul Affatato sat Friday outside his mobile home, just beyond a tall fence from Norberto Roman’s back yard. A large guinea hen emerged from the brush by the fence and rambled past him.

Roman, a casino worker who has lived in the house on two acres for years, has roosters and chickens who have been sneaking under the fence lately into the densely populated trailer park. Roman said the prior owner kept horses without any complaints.

But Affatato, 82, told the township committee Wednesday that his neighbor’s 11 roosters were running amok and crowing outside his window from 2 a.m. until 8 a.m.. They had robbed him of sleep for months, he said.

Affato’s complaint about his neighbor’s birds and their incessant cock-a-doodle-doos triggered a committee discussion on the future of fowl in the township.

The township is now seeking to silence and cage roosters and other fowl, which abounded in the days before subdivisions replaced the township’s old farms, stables and piggeries.

When residents lived on several acres, they could keep hens to lay eggs and eat bugs, and roosters to crow at intruders. Now, with new homes crowded onto lots as small as 5,000 square feet, clucking poultry presents a nuisance and a possible health hazard, Township Administrator Peter Miller said.

Suburban Fowl Ruffle Feather in EHT

The article also has one of the most interesting words I’ve seen in a while:


“If you have more than one acre, you can have a horse,” Miller said. “You can’t keep a pig unless you have a piggery, but when it comes to other animals - possums, porcupines, rabbits, guinea hens, chickens, roosters - we really don’t regulate them.”

I have never heard the word piggery before…it sounds vaguely dirty, though. Yeah, don’t tell me…it’s a place where pigs live.
That’s EHT for you.

Posted in atlantic city

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David G. Schwartz

the die is cast

is the online home of David G. Schwartz, who writes extensively about Las Vegas, gambling, and history.

He's the Director of the Center for Gaming Research at UNLV and has a Ph.D. in United States history from UCLA. He's also taught a range of subjects, running the gamut from hospitality security to gambling history to writing creative non-fiction.

You can learn more about him on the about page.