Rough night:
10:15 pm - check sheep. One is due to lamb and likely to have issues. Then read to youngest child and fall asleep in her bed.
1:00 am - move to my bed
3:00 am - check sheep. In the rain.
5:00 am - neighbor calls. Sheriff thinks my cattle are out on Renner Rd. Wake up the whole family. Drive to farm behind ours. Yep, that's our cattle.
5:15 am - Drive cattle into the dark, fog and rain where they immediately become invisible except for their glowing eyes when they turn to look at us and the fortuitously white backside of one of them.
5:30 am - My expectation that the cattle know the way home seems false as they appear to be wandering in circles in the giant mud flat that used to be our neighbors' corn field. I'm so grateful that my kids have experience herding cattle and are comfortable spreading out in the dark and containing the milling cattle off the road. Rain picks up and we can barely see anything. We speculate that we may have to wait with them until daylight in order to find the crossing through the strip of woods to our back gate, which we presume they broke down and exited through.
5:40 am - I manage to get up next to the woods without scaring the cattle off and recognize from the profile of the plants against the sky that we are not in the right part of the mud flat. We head them back toward the west and the lead cows find the crossing! With a great crunching of branches they pass through. Almost done!
5:45 am - Gah! The four little heifers I bought in the fall decide that the greenery is too big a barrier and reverse into the mud flats, galloping around us. Fortunately, they have one of our calves with them and the mother is bellowing for it, so they know where the herd is. They want the protection of the herd so go back to the woods after a bit. With some pressure from us in a semicircle around them, they brave the branches. Phew! They are funneled onto our property now by the neighbors fences.
5:50 am - Could they all be back in the pasture? No! Some of them didn't want to cross the gate that had been knocked to the ground during their escape and had veered off into a neighboring field. I jerry-rig a barrier to keep them from heading back out into the mud flat, Owen and Davin go back to get the car and take it home, and Hope and I make a big circle around the cattle to get behind them and funnel them back into the pasture.
6:00 am - Success! All cattle accounted for. Sky is getting lighter and rain and fog has lessened, so we are pretty sure we can see them all. I've scavenged twine and wire from around the area to reinforce the gate until I can get up there in full daylight with some better supplies. We walk home across the farm with Hope excitedly telling me how fun that was and how she would have been mad if we hadn't included her. I see a real future farmer inside there. Davin has the opposite reaction. He's a Never Farmer .
6:15 am - check again. No labor yet.
This pic is for humor. I did not stop for a photo up during our pre-dawn cattle drive. Also, that is not a cow. ;O)
So, last night Hope (11) and I slept up in the barn to keep an eye on Dimples, our ewe who is due to lamb any time now. We watch her extra closely because she has a medical problem where her insides poke out of her rear orifices late in pregnancy. Sometimes they reach the size of a cantaloupe. It's rather horrifying. We aren't going to breed her again as a result, but for now we have to get through to the birth. It's intermittent, mostly when she's been laying down. She starts straining and groaning, presumably because her body tells her it's a lamb sticking out. This is not good for her so she has to wear a special harness with a device that keeps her insides where they belong.
The problem with this is that when she really does go into labor, if we aren't there to remove it, she and her lambs will likely die. We don't want this, obviously, so we have to check on her often. We removed the prolapse harness yesterday evening because it looked like she might lamb. In the night I got up every time I heard birthing type sounds. It's amazing how many grunty-groany noises a barn full of pregnant sheep can make just laying down resting. At 2 am the racket really kicked up to definite labor levels. I got out of my warm sleeping bag, put on my outer layer of clothes and checked on Dimples again.
No lambs, just another giant bout of prolapse. I tied her up and grabbed a bucket of water to splash onto her protruding innards while rubbing them with my hand to remove the worst of the manure and bedding she had been lying in. Using both hands, because that much of her vagina had emerged, I attempted to push it back inside. The increased pressure caused her to feel the need to bear down, so she strained mightily to push it right back out. As a result, an additional handful of her colon squeezed out. Gah! I attempted numerous times to return it all to its rightful place, but without success. After a bit I took a break. On my return she had settled a little and I was able to funnel her vagina back inside using both hands and hold it with one while putting her colon back inside with the other. Then I attempted to hold them both in with one hand while I placed the plastic retainer inside her.
Unfortunately, it will pop right back out if not fully strapped in. Somehow I managed to hold it in with one hand and a knee, while holding her against the wall with the other knee while applying the harness with the other hand and possibly my teeth. I'm not sure. Anyway, I got the contraption on her and buckled tight and turned her loose. Unfortunately I didn't notice until afterward that my injured shoulder which I'm in the middle of "resting" no longer felt very rested. Apparently lambing time is just not a good time for giving up the use of my dominant arm for weeks on end.
Heading back to my sleeping bag I noticed that my hands were very sticky and odoriferous. Washing them in plain cold water, which is the only kind I have in my barn, I realized that as a farmer, I frequently practice not touching my face. Useful skill in a pandemic. Since my daughter wouldn't appreciate waking up in the dark barn alone, going to the house was not a great option, especially since I knew I might have to wake up in another couple of hours to do it all again if Dimples managed to scrape the harness off. She didn't so I got to sleep until the rooster started in at 4 am and maybe even a little more between "songs."
I woke up to my daughter, who slept like a baby through all of it, telling me how fun this was and how she can't wait to do it again tonight and maybe every night. I did very much enjoy the part I spent with her. I like midwifing the sheep too, but I could do without the gynecology / proctology sessions.
I found Starburst’s son Dandy laid out sick and unable to get up during my morning barn chores. I dosed him right away with the herbs, the homeopathics, and the antibiotic. After
consulting with Hope, whose lamb he is, we called the vet and set up an appointment. Turns out she could give him fluids, vitamins, more antibiotics and fever reducer, but can’t really do much for what she believes is
a viral pneumonia. When I walked into the office with the lamb I told her I thought he had Covid. Kidding of course, and maybe not funny, but a weird parallel given that we’ve never had any such thing in our sheep before.
We’ve got him back in the barn with his mom and sister, grateful for the warmth in the weather now, with frequent doses of medicine. This is where I’m so happy to have herbs and homeopathics, which can indeed treat
viruses, since they are mostly supporting the immune system anyway. Just have to see if it will be enough with this particular bug. We also decided to go ahead and dose all the other lambs twice a day. We can hear some of
them starting to get a bit gurgly and a few have been punky, but they’ve kind of rotated through that. I’m dipping the dosing syringe in disinfectant between animals to try to cut down on the viral load any of
them are picking up. I’m also syringing milk into any that look like they might be too weak to nurse.
July 1st 2020
Update: Many of the lambs showed signs of the bug that caused this illness. We will vaccinate the ewes for it and hopefully that will prevent a re-occurance next spring. Live and learn. It's always something new on the farm. With the help of the natural medicines we were able to save all who were ill except the one who got soaked in the cold rain and one whose mother developed mastitis that stopped milk in one of her teats. We tube fed the little girl but she had gone hungry too long before we discovered the issue and that combined with the pnuemonia was too much for her. Dandy made a full recovery.
May 5th 2020
In the morning we noticed that “Dandy” the little black lamb was trying frantically to nurse on us and not able to move around very well. At first we thought he might have an injured leg, which can happen when you have to help them during birth. It turned out that he was just having trouble figuring out how to nurse. We got him latched on and he suckled well. Later that day we had to repeat the process. Maybe he had some oxygen deprivation in the womb. Seems a little slow on the uptake. Cute though, and now getting stronger. His sister “Daffy” has been vigorous from the beginning. Dandelion and Daffodil. These lambs hardly touch the ground before Hope is trying to figure out what to name them. It drives her absolutely crazy that Kelsi and I will sometimes wait days until a name comes to us.
May 6th 2020
Last night I went to check on the sheep at 3 am. We had put a brown ewe of Hope’s named Doodle into a lambing stall yesterday evening when she had left the herd and begun hanging out alone. At bedtime and midnight there were neither lambs nor visible labor. On my way up the hill behind my house, with the moon low in the sky, I heard an unbelievable ruckus in the barn and envisioned a lamb stuck in a water bucket or impaled on something sharp. I was greatly relieved to find that no such disaster had occurred and instead, Doodle had two beautiful little girls, wet and freshly birthed. One was all reddish brown, just like her mother and the other had large splotches of white on a backdrop of red, much like a Guernsey cow. The mother was in a tizzy about something, baaing frantically at her newer lamb, who was right there with her, while it baa-d back. Apparently the screaming of each was upsetting the other and they were just winding each other up. Seeing everyone safe, I went back to bed.
This morning we saw that both of the new little ones were a bit cold and shaky on their feet. They really should have been a little stronger by now so I checked the mom’s udder. I couldn’t get even a drop of milk out of either side. Uh oh. I gave her a homeopathic remedy for anxiety, because that can keep their milk from letting down and we mixed up some powdered colostrum to get the lambs started on. We couldn’t get them to latch on to bottles so we resorted to syringing the formula into their mouths. Starving lambs often act as if they are being murdered when we try to feed them. We have to pin them down in our laps and force the tip into their mouths and dispense about a quarter teaspoon at a time. If they truly are in need of sustenance, they look thrilled at this spontaneous arrival of nourishment but then fight like the dickens each and every time we try to deliver another installment. Not the sharpest knives. They sometimes learn to appreciate the food, and sometimes not.
We used to find that roasts piled up in our freezer. We might enjoy them fresh from the oven or crock pot the first night, but leftovers tended to linger. No longer! Ever since we discovered this recipe, we have been going through the roasts faster than the other cuts of beef.
After thawing the roast, sometimes two if they are smaller, I cook it in the crock pot with just water. Sometimes I put it in frozen. When it is soft I use the liquid for cooking beans or rice or making soup. I "shred" the meat up with my fingers into small pieces and put it in the fridge. At dinner time, I warm up the amount of shredded beef I think we will need for dinner in a hot skillet with coconut oil. It gets a crispy, juicy taste that is amazing in just a couple of minutes. For the kids I butter some gluten-free buns (the butter adds nutrients and sends the flavor through the roof), add a mound of the crispy beef, and top with a high quality BBQ sauce like Annie's Naturals Hot Chipotle (my favorite and my son's) or Maple Original (My daughter's favorite). Voila! Fast, kid-friendly dinner full of awesome fat-soluble vitamins from the beef, butter, and coconut oil. My low-carb husband usually eats the beef on a salad and I will either join him or the kids. Yum!
Two days ago Hope and I were sitting in the barn after morning chores, mightily enjoying the scampering lambs when one of the pregnant ewes’ water broke. By the time I got her into a lambing stall (not something she was a fan of, apparently), another ewe began straining and passed a bag of fluid as well. The second ewe was Nieve, who is the founding member of our flock and my special pet. I raised her on a bottle after buying her from a breeder who had some orphans. She’s been suffering from a medical problem called a prolapse and had been wearing a special harness to keep everything in place. Several times I had believed her to be laboring when really it was just a relapse of the prolapse ;0). Her condition mandated sleeping in the barn or multiple nightly checks, neither of which is conducive to a full night’s rest, so I was especially thrilled to have our watch coming to an end. We sat in the barn with the ewes as they laid and stood, strained and rested, and lost more fluids. Sitting with a birthing animal is a beautiful and mysterious experience. Sometimes the babies come quickly and sometimes they don’t and going to the house for even a few minutes usually means missing the birth. I positively adore being present for the births. A whole new being is entering the world and it fills me with joy.
We sat with Nieve and Starburst, a second time mom who is black with a little white and belongs to Hope. We like colors in our flock, a nice variety of white, brown and black, preferably with spots or patches of contrasting colors. Starburst was the first of our black ewes to go into labor, and we had not yet had any black lambs this year, so we were eager to see what she produced. After two hours of waiting, the ewes had not progressed much. I had to run an errand so Kelsi stayed with the ewes – one of the many good reasons to have a co-farmer. :0) While I was away, Kelsi live-texted me updates as she decided Nieve was struggling too hard and unproductively and gave her a hand by reaching in and applying a little traction to the front hooves of the lamb. Shortly afterward, Nieve birthed a pure white male lamb that matches her color. Before I returned she also birthed a second that was stillborn. This is the first stillborn lamb we’ve had, though there have been a number of calves over the years. It’s always sad. He was small and thin compared to the living one, leading me to suspect some ongoing difficulty in the womb.
When I returned from my errand, Starburst was actively pushing and lambing seemed imminent. However, another hour passed with no visible progress. I attempted to feel for the lamb to see if the positioning was right, but my hands are pretty large and she was small inside. Kelsi Small-hands to the rescue! The poor lamb was not positioned well. Instead of two front hooves and then a head, it was front hooves only and then, much further back than it should have been, a head and two more hooves. Poor mama! No wonder this little one was stuck. After many attempts, Kelsi managed to get the lamb into the correct position and the legs coming out into the world. Pretty soon a little black male lamb with some white on his head was born. As mom was cleaning him off, I went to do other chores and when I returned I found he had a little sister, white with brown spots on her shoulder and neck. It wasn’t even dark yet, and everyone seemed to be all set. Finally, I was able to get a good night’s sleep.
May 2nd 2020
My eleven year old daughter Hope's little white lamb, Freckles, was four days old when she noticed him shivering. It was early in the morning and a little chilly so we didn't think much about it. A few hours later the barn was quite warm and he began to shiver again while huddled in a corner. By this point his twin sister and his cousins were all up and scampering about happily. Examining his little white body with a tiny black V on his nose and black rims on his ears, I saw no external signs of infection but he was definitely too warm and somewhat lethargic. I mixed some of the herbal garlic-echinacea-eleuthero-cayenne tincture I make for infections with a little water and homeopathic Hepar Sulph and gave it to him by mouth. I wanted to take his temperature but discovered that both our barn and house thermometers had died. A couple of calls confirmed my suspicion that neither pharmacies nor feed stores had them in stock (thank you pandemic). I called the vet just in case we decided to go that route.
An hour later was limp when I checked on him. I gave him another dose of the homeopathic, but looking at his utterly pathetic tiny head motionless in my hand, ears all a-droop, I thought we were going to lose him. When the vet then called from right down the street, my daughter and I decided to buy antibiotics in a last ditch effort to save the little guy's life. We met the vet in the parking lot, received the instructions and the pre-filled syringes, and headed home. When we got to Freckles' stall we were surprised to see two little white lambs looking healthy. His fever seemed to be down too. We held off on giving him the antibiotic, as that's not something I want to use unless absolutely necessary. That was four days ago. I continue to give him the remedies and he continues to improve.
May 3rd 2020
Three days ago I got to the barn in the morning only to find one of the pregnant ewes on her side against a wall with her legs stuck stiffly out in an unnatural manner and a sack with fluids hanging out of her. Clearly she had gotten stuck when she laid down on the tiny incline the chickens make when they scratch for bugs up against the walls, and couldn’t get up. I had checked the ewes in the middle of the night so I knew she hadn’t been in that position more than a few hours. Good thing, too, because I once had a cow that died from this same situation when I didn’t find her in time. They are super ungainly at the end of pregnancy and can be carrying more than twenty pounds of baby when they only weigh 100-150 lbs themselves! I called my co-farmer, Kelsi, whose ewe it was. With a little help she was on her feet and moving normally. The good thing about the wooly fur they have at this time of year is that it makes a good handle for getting a grip on a stuck sheep to roll them on to their feet. So much for resting my hurt shoulder. Oh well.
I went back to the house to get Hope and by the time I got back the ewe had two lambs. That was fast! Good thing they didn’t come out in the middle of the night while she was stuck, since she wouldn’t have been able to clean them off or nurse them and we might have lost them. A boy and a girl, both strong and up on their feet and nursing right away. Numbers seven and eight born this spring into our flock. The female is all white and the male has some brown spots on top of the white.