i grew up in the country, but there still weren't farm animals kept in my school. basically, wild turkey: farm turkey:
They didn't keep farm animals in my school, but my freshman year the last senior prank I know of got pulled with farm animals. A group of seniors got access to the school in the middle of the night (there was no damage done to any entryway to indicate a break-in), and pulled all the contents of the underclassmen's lockers on the floor and let goats and chickens loose in the hallway. I happened to have a senior approach me earlier that year to trade lockers, so I did because the senior hallway was in the middle of every class I had, so my stuff was untouched. :sunny:
Agriculture is just about the only elective my school kept once the school started losing money. The art classes are about to be taken away, but they gotta keep their cows! Even though, it seems, just about everyone in Ag lives has farm animals at home...
oh we had ag, one of the most popular series of classes. there was a nice ag shop, multiple field trips each year, and the ffa was a statewide power, but we didn't keep animals at the school.
My grandparents keep turkeys on their land, and during the day they roam up to the house.... Meanest little fuckers I ever knew! delicious too
i grew up out in the country, but it was in a forest on a mountain, not a farm or farming country. never eat anything bigger then your head probably means in one bite. unless you're a snake who can unhinge your jaw, you might choke to death on it. i'm not sure how snakes breathe when they're eating, but i guess they do somehow. talk about poor quality engineering, having the breathing passage and the eating passage pass through each other. what i find interesting is how much smaller most predators are then most people imagine and depict them as. not all of course. but seriously most. size doesn't have that much to do with being able to tear something else up.