Tag Archives: posted by Caroline

A Walk Around the Pastures

Dora

Perseus

Lindbergh and Alexander

Sagitta & Boötes, two of the newest members of the colored flock

Perseus tries a leaf

Cini

Wren

Sagitta

Look What Sicily Made!

Around 10 pm, in the middle of a post-thunderstorm power outage, Sicily finally went in to labor. Zac and I hunkered down in the stall with our flashlights and waited for Sicily to deliver her beautiful 12-lb ewe lamb (name forthcoming).

Doesn’t she look great?

Right on her heels was another whopper– a handsome ram lamb, also 12 lbs.

They’re both standing, drinking, and having a grand old time.

Let’s hear it for Sicily, you guys!

This Morning in Pictures: Out to Pasture

There’s not really any better feeling than moving sheep to a new pasture in the springtime.

Nor is there any better feeling than letting out the lambs for the first time.

Put them together, and you have the most wonderful Saturday morning in April.

 

Capri, Diane, and Cordelia

 

Darcy and Dora

Diane and Cordelia practice grazing

Little Charles Lindbergh

 

Lyra and Perseus take a snooze together

 

Practice makes perfect.

 

Meet Diane and Cordelia!

If there’s one thing I can say about the lambs we’ve been having this year, it’s that they all have the most impeccable timing. Right after finishing up evening chores, I noticed that Capri was in labor. Capri, mind you, is the ewe who’s been giving us all the false alarms by pretending to be in labor for the past 3 days. This time, though, there was half a lamb sticking out of her– there was no faking this one.

Around 7:15 pm she delivered Cordelia, a strong, beautiful, 10 and 1/2 lb ewe lamb.

We got her all cleaned up and taken care of, and then went inside to have dinner. Since Capri wasn’t a first-time mama, we had a feeling that she might deliver twins– but, on the other hand, a 10 and 1/2 pound lamb is a pretty big lamb, and I was willing to believe that Cordelia was a single lamb.

Of course, I should have known better. In the middle of dinner, one of our farmstay guest children (can you imagine how lucky it is to be able to see this all, first-hand?) came in and said, “There’s another lamb!”

Capri had had that twin!

Diane is a 9-pound ewe lamb, equally gorgeous and equally vigorous.

They’re both so sturdy that I don’t even begrudge Capri all those times she faked us out– it was all worth it in the end, having these two sturdy ewe lambs.

You can watch ‘em (and baby Perseus) all night on Lambcam3, if your heart desires.

ETA: For those who’ve asked, Darcy’s single ewe lamb is named Dora.

Hello, Alexander!

Because Alexander is a conscientious lamb, he waited until the middle of breakfast to be born. We were talking and laughing over coffee when Zac, who was watching the lambcam, ran in and shouted, “Someone’s in labor!”

We dropped our mugs, grabbed cameras and the lambing kit, and ran.

Bingley, one of our first-time mamas, was making a heck of a fuss, and her water had broken.

As you can see, she was one of our green-nosed girls, so our system didn’t quite work. However, since Bingley is a first-time mom, she didn’t quite exhibit the udder development that’s characteristic of impending labor.

I’m so happy that our shepherding-camp attendees got to watch the whole delivery!

Here are his front hooves and little nose (it’s super-wrinkly, just like his dad’s!).

Bingley had been laboring for quite a while, and hadn’t been able to get past her lamb’s forehead.

So Susan reached in, pulled out his front legs, and got him out.

He was a giant single ram lamb– 10 and 1/2 pounds, sturdy, and healthy. We haven’t quite decided yet, but Alexander (the Great) might get to be our ram in the future. We’ll keep you posted.

Bingley turned right around and licked him all over.

We were a little nervous that she might not understand what had happened– that she’d reject him. First-time moms sometimes don’t understand what’s happening to them, and don’t understand what their lamb is (“This thing wants to nurse from me?” or, “But I’m a lamb!” Etc.).

We’re lucky, because, when it came to Bingley and Alexander, we had nothing to worry about.

I could just watch this all day long.

We’re absolutely smitten with him already.

Here’s hoping we have a few more lambs this afternoon– stay tuned!

Sheep of the Week: Wren

As we all sit and wait for the lambing season to really get underway, my mind’s been turning to this time last year– the very first lambs and kids to be born, and the sleepless wait for the inevitable (the fact that it’s inevitable somehow makes it worse: you just want to tell the ewes, Come ON already! Let’s get it over with! I wanna see lambs when I come check back on you in an hour!)

Piper was our first lamb born last season, but Wren was her close-behind younger sister.

She checked out all their little siblings as they were born last April (this is one of my favorite pictures of all time, and, to me, summarizes what uneasy big-sister-hood is all about):

The most distinctive thing about Wren is her voice– her baa is sort of flat, muted, and whiny. Once you’ve heard it, there’s no way you can her hear baa and not recognize her. I can’t distinguish the voices of the other sheep– they’re too similar, for the most part– but one of the most impressive bits of shepherding show-off I engage in is, Oh, her? Baa-ing way in that other pasture? That’s Wren.

Since Wren was supplementally bottle-fed (her mama had had udder problems in previous seasons), I got to know her voice intimately.

This past year, she’s grown into a fine, lovely yearling ewe:

She’s sweet, even-tempered, and neither too skittish nor overly familiar. She’s our friend Amy’s special favorite, and I really don’t think she could have picked a better sheep to dote on!

Now, of course, Blanca & Fresca and Camembert have Wren and Piper’s old job of older-siblings-in-charge. As soon as we can get this show on the road (any ewes out there listening?), they’ll be running circles around their new friends.

NEXT WEEK on SotW: I’m going to introduce you to my favorite goat!

NEXT NEXT WEEK on SotW: Check in on one of last year’s angora kids!

How to Shear a Sheep in Five Steps

If you’ve ever met Emily Chamelin, our shearer, you’re probably as much in love with her as I am. Every single time I watch her shear, I’m astonished by her strength, skill, and conscientious respect of the animal she’s working with. I sort of can’t decide whether I want her to be my older sister, or whether I’d just like to be her when I grow up. Suffice it to say that, if I can ever become as much of a badass as Emily, I’ll have accomplished something to be proud of (I asked Zac if this was even possible, and he said, “Well, you’ll have to work really hard.”)

Therefore, when Emily kept asking if I was going to come to Shearing School, and Susan said she’d pay to send me, I was over the moon!

Former Farm Manager Erin was also planning on going, so we decided to go together. Erin is another woman I admire to no end, not only because she’s a good friend who also happens to be way smarter and tougher than I am, but also because ever since I started working at the farm, my job has literally been, “Try and be as good as Erin.” Let me tell you, she’s a lot to live up to!

So, back in January, we sent in our checks and, in turn, received a page of information about what we’d be learning. Our Shearing School is put on every year by the Maryland and Delaware Cooperative Extensions, and is designed both to teach the shepherd how to take the fleece off a sheep, and also to serve as a source of continuing education for shearers.

As the time wore on, though, I became more and more worried about one bullet point– under “Items to Bring,” was listed “A body with the strength and willingness to learn to shear sheep.” Willingness, I could handle, but I wasn’t so sure about strength. Our classmates, whether farmers or not, would all be bigger and stronger than me– most people are, statistically speaking. Erin had been working out with shearing specifically in mind. I’d spent the three months since January joking about needing to start, but, of course, never did.

In the morning, when Erin and I walked up to the pre-class circle of would-be-shearers, our instructor was saying something about how, used to be, they advised you take the class only if you could bench-press 120 lbs. I assuaged my horrible sense of dread by thinking of when Emily learned to shear (never mind that she was 15 then, and I’m 23), thinking of everyone’s encouraging tweets and emails, and swearing that, if I made it through without serious embarrassment (cutting off an ear, or something even worse? being unable to even control my sheep?), I’d start running every day (which, of course, has yet to happen).

After a few shearing demonstrations and a rehearsal of the 5 positions of shearing, there really was nothing left to do but try it ourselves. “It’s just like learning to swim,” they told us, “You’ve gotta jump in!”. We all split up into groups of four, grabbed a sheep and a pair of clippers, and got to work.

Would you like to see how to shear a sheep?

Erin was braver than everybody else, and so went first.

To begin with, you sit the sheep up in front of you– this is first position. Starting at the breastbone (we called it the brisket!), start shearing off the belly wool.

Since this is the wool that’s dirtiest, it helps to go ahead and get it out of the way. It’s important to shear wide enough to make sure  that you’re well-set-up for farther down the road.

After you take off the belly wool, you lean over further and take the wool off the legs and crotch, sort of scooping the clippers up the right leg, across, and down the left leg. The big danger here is accidentally shearing off a ewe’s teats, so you’re supposed to cover them up with your left hand (“you sure won’t shear ‘em off now!”).

Emily helps me navigate a tricky spot.

Once the belly, crotch, and legs are clean, you rotate about 90 degrees, change into second position, and start shearing her left hind leg (I’m using the feminine pronoun because, well, most sheep are ewes). It’s also in this second step that you clear the wool off from the tail area, and, since her head is easily accessible, shear off the topknot of fleece from the top of her head.

I love how much Erin’s smiling in this picture. Shearing is fun!

After than, you swing your legs around your sheep and into third position. You’re going to move your clippers up from the brisket along the neck, and end your stroke (or “blow,” as they’re called) under the left side of her chin. This is, in my opinion, the most thrilling– I mean that in both senses– part of shearing. You’re “unzipping” the fleece along the underside of the neck, and it definitely looks and feels the coolest, but it’s also terrifying.

Because (obviously) the sheep is covered in wool, you can’t tell where the wool ends and the sheep begins unless you have a very exact knowledge of her specific anatomy and musculature (more on this later). It’s pretty terrifying to move a pair of clippers into the unknown– rather, unknown, except for the knowledge that, if you make a mistake, you could cut your sheep’s neck pretty badly.

If one end of the error spectrum are nicks and cuts, then the other end of the spectrum is second cuts, which are short pieces of fleece that weren’t taken off with the first pass of the clippers. Second cuts cause all sorts of problems– if incorporated into yarn, they make it weaker, and cause it to pill more quickly– and so it’s important to keep them to a minimum. In fact, our instructors told us that we must not be so afraid of cutting the sheep, because, otherwise, all we’d do is make second cuts. I wasn’t so good at not being afraid (but, still, I nicked a few sheep).

After you’ve opened up the fleece along the neck, you keep making parallel passes with your shears– up from the chest, along the left side of the neck, ending right under the eye; up the chest, along the neck, end under the ear. This is the part when it’s easiest to take off an ear, so, just like with the teats, you’re supposed to find it, get hold of it, and make sure to keep it out of harm’s way.

Once the left side of the neck is clear, you start working on the left shoulder. Emily showed Erin and I a bit of weight-shifting footwork that helps get the sheep’s shoulder in a better position to shear.

The more you know about your sheep, the easier she’ll be for you to shear– and since she’s covered in wool, it can sometimes be hard to tell. If you know she’s fat, it’ll be, as Emily says, “Easy, like shearing a beach ball.” If she’s skinny, you’re going to have to work a little harder to navigate around the bony hips, shoulders, and spinal processes. Does she have two teats, or are there four (ewes sometimes have an extra vestigial set) to watch out for? If she’s a finewool sheep with Merino heritage (hello, Cormo), she’s going to be covered in the wrinkles and extra skin that those breeds were bred to have (more skin = more hair follicles = more wool per sheep), and you’re going to have to make sure not to nick those. If she’s in good health, she should shear easily. If she’s doing poorly, though, the lanolin (which usually melts a bit, and helps to lubricate the clippers) won’t flow so freely, and instead stays thick, like wax, and gums up your clippers.

I was continually amazed at the intimacy of it, and humbled by the amount of strength and knowledge required– I don’t think I’ve experienced anything like it in my past year of shepherding. It’s quite a thing to know there where, why, and how of every single inch of every single sheep, and then use that knowledge to navigate a potentially dangerous situation (those clippers are sharp), and end up with a valuable product (7 or 8 lbs of wool per sheep).

That said, it’s also hot, sweaty, greasy, difficult, dirty, exhausting, poopy, smelly, frustrating, and sometimes bloody. Dragging ourselves back to the hotel after the first day, I told Erin, “If anyone ever tells me shearing’s like a beautiful, graceful, athletic dance between the shearer and the sheep, I’m gonna punch ‘em in the face,” and there were plenty of jokes about, “Any job where your read end’s gotta be higher than your head– that’s not a good job!”

So, back to business.

Once the whole left side is clear, you slide the sheep down your shin and into fourth position. A big part of learning the positions is making sure the sheep is comfortable– the more comfortable she is, the less she’ll struggle and fight, and the easier it is for the both of you.

It’s time for what’s called the long blows, which are some of the easiest parts of shearing to learn (but hardest to master). They also look really cool. You move your clippers right across the body, tail to head. You keep making blows along the back, making sure to keep the comb of your clippers right along the curve of her back, until you’re one blow past her spine.

After that comes fifth position: swing your right leg around, pick up your sheep, and, holding her nose between your knees, start shearing down the right side– head, neck, and shoulder– rolling the sheep up towards you as you move down her body.

Once you’re past the shoulder, you start making diagonal passes down the right side– you’re almost done!

After making those diagonal passes down the sheep’s right side, all there is left to do is clear off the right leg and hindquarter.

See how Erin is using her left hand to put all her weight into the sheep’s right flank? That serves two purposes– 1) it straightens out the right leg, so that it’s easier to shear, and 2) it tightens up the skin, so that there’s less risk of it getting caught in the clippers. Honestly, there’s so much skin-tightening, head-holding, ear-grabbing, leg-straightening, and teat-saving done with the non-clipper-holding-hand, you might as well say that it did all the work! Nevertheless, both Erin and I had pretty sore right arms from holding on to those clippers! Not only are they pretty heavy, but they also 1) vibrate and 2) are dripping with motor oil and lanolin. It’s not easy.

But, once you’ve cleaned off that last leg, you’re done!

Emily actually took videos of both Erin and me finishing our sheep– they’re up on Facebook, if you’d like to see more.

And so, here I am after my first-ever sheep, grinning like a goofball.

She looks like a carpet after it’s been vacuumed!

But the job’s not over once the sheep’s shorn! In their varying levels of wholeness– ranging from the gorgeous waterfalls of wool produced by some of the experienced shearers to the utterly destroyed scraggles produced by all of us beginners– the fleeces were taken to the skirting table and sorted. As someone who erred on the side of second cuts, I felt a little guilty!

Erin and I came away from the weekend physically exhausted, but otherwise wildly enthused about shearing– not only are we planning on tagging along with Emily when she’s in Virginia next, but we’re also thinking of going up to Maryland for the wool pool (can you imagine seeing a whole state worth of wool, all in one place!?), and we definitely want to go to Maryland Sheep & Wool, too (anyone have a couch or a spare bedroom for us?).

All in all, I found that my favorite thing about shearing is the intense focus and drive that it gives you– as soon as you turn on the clippers, the world contracts to you, your sheep, and the noise of your machine (this is a bit of a lie. I had Emily coaching me– literally holding my hand in some parts– through my whole first sheep, which was the only reason my sheep looked so good.). The only important thing is getting the fleece off the sheep, and making sure they’re both in good condition by the end. No matter what happens– you cut your sheep? you feel tired? your sheep escaped from you? you seriously don’t think you can do it? It started raining and the barn roof started leaking onto your head?– you cannot and must not give up. You can do it because you must (does anyone remember the end of Bambi, where he’s been shot by a hunter, but there’s a forest fire, and the Great Prince of the Forest comes up and says, “Bambi! You must get up!”? It’s like that.), and I haven’t had that feeling since I got to help Susan pull a stuck lamb last spring.

It’s definitely a heck of a rush (although maybe that’s just from spending 30 minutes with all the blood going to my head!), and I can’t wait for the chance to do it again!

Growing Mushrooms: Oysters and Shiitakes

Don’t laugh, but back in the fall, Zac and I went to a bonfire potluck, and had some mushrooms and a bit of a conversion experience. Amid the cider, butternut squash soup, and piles of apples (everything homegrown and homebrew, of course), there was one dish that outshone them all– oyster mushrooms, sauteed with garlic.

“I grew them myself,” she said, “it was so easy. Actually, it had taken so long for me to get a harvest, I’d given up on them and forgotten about them, until, all of a sudden, the logs fruited, and, mushrooms!”

Sold!

So, this spring, we picked out a few packs of spores from Fungi Perfecti. We decided to start with the easiest varieties: Oyster and Shiitake.

These two require deciduous hardwoods, and do best on logs that are cut in the early springtime, since that’s when they’re full of sap and moisture. So, last we spoke, Zac was headed out into the woods to find an oak tree.

He got one:

After that, he cut the tree into six 4-foot lengths, and drilled holes all over the length of the logs.

  The mushroom spores (sold under the horrifying name of “plug spawn”) come on short little lengths of dowel rods– you fit the dowels into the holes, like this:

 And then hammer them flush with the surface of the wood:

 After that, to prevent some other type of fungus from getting in, and to seal your mushrooms spores in, you paint over any openings with wax. This includes the drilled holes:

 and the sawed-off end of the log:

After that, you stack them in a rick in a dark, damp place, so that the logs can stay moist.  We’re going to keep them underneath the porch.

This gives the mushroom spores time to colonize the whole of the log. After about a year, you can force the mushroom-inoculated log to fruit, which just amazes me– those tiny little dowels are going to turn these logs into food. I don’t really think I’ll believe it until I see it.

Which will be in March 2013! I think it’s best that I forget these guys are even under here, because I don’t think I could have the patience, otherwise. Stay tuned!

Monday Morning in Pictures

Jack

Callum

Peregrine and Jekyll

Elwyn and her nest

Geese of the Week!

I think it’s time to give our geese a round of applause.

They’ve had a pretty hard time finding their place on the farm, but I think now, finally, they’ve got it, and I couldn’t be happier about it.

Let’s start the story from the beginning.

Elwyn, Brooks, and White came to the farm as beautiful, soft, lovely noise-and-troublemakers. As much as they are as close to dream-geese as they come– soft and satisfyingly heavy, gorgeously grey and very intelligent– they also made a mess, and politely ignored our repeated suggestion that they live in the yard.

No, thank you– we know you’ve set out a bathing trough for us, built us a goose-house, and bring us a pan of feed every day, but we’d much prefer you let us live in the sheep’s pasture. Eat their food, sleep in their barn, and, without exception, bathe in their water troughs every single time you clean them. Thanks!

It really was the water-tank thing that got to us– poop and feathers in the sheep’s water meant that the whole just-cleaned thing needed to be poured out. Combining that with the normal level of late-winter muddiness, and we had quite a mess.

Then, in February, Elwyn and Brooks started laying eggs in the back corner of the run-in, and, like a good gander, White started defending them. Unfortunately, that meant that he’d go after any animal who came close to the nest– even those who’d never harm it.

Like sheep.

After we saw him biting poor Catalina, we scooped up all three geese and plunked them, their house, and their water down in a copse at the other end of the farm, in a small enclosure built of moveable panels.

They weren’t exactly happy about being there. It rained and snowed, and they churned the whole enclosure to mud as deep as their undersides, and laid sad, forgotten mud-eggs.

We knew we had to move them, and to somewhere 1) where they could be by themselves, 2) big enough that they couldn’t do it damage, and 3) from which they could (or would) not escape?

But where was that? And what can you do with a bunch of mean, territorial, sheep-biting geese?

Geese can be malicious.

And then Zac had a flash of brilliance, and decided that they needed a job. He moved them to the garden, after fencing off the garlic bed, for fear they’d destroy the crop, and put our luckless trio to work.

And work they did! They ate the whole thing down to the ground in just a few weeks, weeds and all!

When we were ready to plant our earliest crops, we fenced off the new garden and put them in there– they’re working on cleaning that up as we speak. They’ve built themselves a new nest, and filled it with ten eggs (not counting the ones we’ve eaten!). No word yet on goslings, but we’ve got our fingers crossed.

Once the plants in the garden reach an unappetizing size, the geese should leave them alone, and will (in theory), aim for the smaller, weaker weeds (hence, “weeder geese”). Between us and the geese, I think we’ve got a fighting chance.

The moral of the story is this: that a farm is the sum of its parts, and every part has a role to play. It can be difficult to find one’s place, and, sometimes, it takes several attempts before one fits in. I’m glad we figured out what to do with our nightmare geese– now, instead of two widely different problems (mean geese, lots of weeds), we have an elegant solution. And there’s nothing more pleasing than that.