Tag Archives: barnyard

Leaps and bounds…

yes… the lambs are growing by LEAPs and BOUNDs!  My small flock of Shetland lambs range in age now from 4-weeks to the ‘youngest’ at almost 3-weeks old. My ewe Reese’s Pieces was the last to lamb on cinco de mayo! Thankfully, after Katie and I returned home from Wolcott Farm’s Sheep Shearing Saturday.

Several weeks later, the lambs are rambunctious, becoming more independent and confident… to leave mama’s side…and enjoying some serious playtime, particularly in the early evening hours.

Several years ago, we dismantled our children’s play-fort and re-used/recycled the lumber to construct a playhouse for our goats AND this play ramp/platform for the sheepies. (I actually want to add a roof, kinda like a wood-covered bridge.) Big D just grins and rolls his eyes with all the ‘projects’ I dream-up!!!!

Group hug… (missing a few more lambs from the pic).

The challenge…

Hey…no fair! Two against one!

Hi-Ho Silver!!! Um…I think you better use the ramp!

Too much fun…building strong bodies!

The lambs and goat kids provide hours of cheap/free entertainment!

Besides playing with babies, I’ve been making cheese nearly daily to share with family and friends. I get the 6 a.m. morning milk, then the kids have mama ALL day. By 6 p.m., my does are mostly all milked-off by hungry boys!

…got goat milk??? I have yet to make any yogurt this spring and I would like to purchase some grains to make kefir, a first for me!

AND, still working working working in the veggie garden…amending the last of the beds with compost for the tomato, green pepper plants, potatoes and basil that will go in this weekend for sure!

Also, last summer’s back porch project has been resurrected…our self-made screens have been installed (YAY) and we purchased a ceiling fan to replace the wall-mounted light. I’m refinishing a table that I purchased at a barn sale last summer for the back porch too. Still undecided on additional seating…but, I’m on the look-out for potential candidates! Perhaps we’ll be able to enjoy the holiday weekend with el fresco dining!

My fiber art and so many other projects have taken a back-seat during the past few weeks (as I’ve been pre-occupied w/kidding, lambing and gardening!), but I hope to be posting some creative results with you in the very near future! Thanks for your patience!

Hope you enjoy a lovely Memorial Day weekend with family and friends! Play safe!

Rams: A Lesson in Tough Love

Why do you suppose a ram, a male sheep, is called a ram?

ram  (rm) n.

1. A male sheep.
2. Any of several devices used to drive, batter, or crush by forceful impact, especially:

a. A battering ram.
b. The weight that drops in a pile driver or steam hammer.
c. The plunger or piston of a force pump or hydraulic press.
3. A hydraulic ram.
They say a picture paints a thousand words…
 
The good news…neither bad boy has ever ‘rammed’ me! The shed roof is almost  5-feet above the ground. I have springy sheep! Grrrrrrr….
This is my lovely ram’s shed, a snap-shot of recent rams’ destructive PLAY… a display perhaps of boredom?  What else do rams have to do??? In spite of the best of care, their antics never cease to aMu$e me (and my pocketbook). You see, I have two Shetland rams: senior 3-year-old and junior yearling). I love my small flock of Shetland sheep and my rams are no exception. I’m guilty of ALL the sheepy pleasures of ‘things’ that are TABOO and ought NOT be done with rams… even those sweet little ram lambs! I straddle and bounce the lambs across my lap, holding, petting, playing, laying down in the meadow - to encourage trust and ‘friendship’. I know, I’m nutz! (but, I NEVER EVER turn my back on ANY ram).
Handling rams is a potentially dangerous business and it’s best to be prepared and knowledgeable before you engage in such an endeavor. Experience is a great teacher (after you’ve been ‘rammed’ a few times…and live to talk about it), but it also helps to heed the wisdom of professionals and educate yourself beforehand!
An excellent article on the subject of managing rams by Brook & Lois Moore, Stonehaven Farm Shetlands, may be found in the NASSA News (a quarterly newsletter dated Fall, 2011) and provided a few simple RULES of engagement:
  1. Rams, including lambs, must never butt or paw for attention or press their heads against you or push another sheep out of the way for your attention.
  2. A ram must never approach you with his head down, or ‘bob’ his head or back-up to feint a charge.
  3. Jumping up on people is forbidden, no matter how cute and little a ram lamb may be! YIKES!!!
  4. A ram should always move away from you when asked to do so.
  5. Ideally, a ram should not enter the shepherd’s comfort zone unless ‘invited’.
  6. Never pet a ram on the top of his head.
Also, another EXPERT close to home (and my heart) here in Michigan is Letty Klein, owner of Pine Lane Farm Karakuls and co-author of The Shepherd’s Rug. I had the priveledge of meeting Letty (along with co-author, Ann Brown) during a fiber festival in Charlevoix, Michigan during 2006. Letty was kind enough to allow me to  re-print her thoughts about the safe handling of rams here:

Raising Respectful Rams

Originally published in The Shepherd, Vol. 46, No. 2, Feb. 2001, pp 14-15.

Tragically the headline in The Charlotte Observer on November 7, 2000 read, “2 dead after ram attack”. Carl Beaver, 84 years old, and his wife Mary, 80, of China Grove, North Carolina were found 100 feet from the gate inside the pasture. Mary was dead and Carl died the next morning.

The Beavers died after the ram apparently turned on them while they were checking the flock in the pasture. The new 250 pound Suffolk ram was tame enough not to be afraid of people, but became very protective of his dozen ewes during the breeding season. The Beavers were taken by surprise. A neighbor said, “It’s hard to imagine that you can’t defend yourself against a sheep.”

But we all know better, don’t we? After all how many times have we heard, “Never turn your back on a ram”? That big ram that we have shown all summer is now turned in with some ewes to work his magic on our breeding program. His attitude changes, he has a new sense of purpose, an incensed possessiveness. He is not the same animal and we are no longer the friendly pat or handful of feed, but we have become the adversary. You can see it in his eyes and mannerisms. Being tame means he has no fear at all. Whether he’s a massive 400 pound Columbia or a 100 pound tail-wagging Shetland we should be ready, and be on guard. Never, ever trust a ram.

Looking back over the last twenty years of raising a horned breed of sheep, I realize the many mistakes, as well as the successes, we have made in our dealings with rams. Presently we have 7 adult horned rams, all of different, some very rare, bloodlines. Since we sell many replacement breeding rams, we often get the comment “Your rams aren’t very friendly.” My reply is “Good! That’s the way they’re trained.” When I enter the pen with the rams, I want to see their rear-ends walking away from me, not their faces coming toward me. Let’s talk about how best to raise a respectful ram.

Rams need two basic requirements:

  1. Lots of room
  2. Companionship

A ram can do a lot of damage if confined all alone in a small pen. With our very first ram, ‘Red Ram Oliver’ we made that mistake. His home was a small pen with a small adjacent outside lot; he was in sort of a solitary confinement. Red smashed everything. We even gave him an ‘enrichment toy’, a rubber tire suspended from the limb of an overhanging tree. He would hit that tire so hard that it would fly in a big arc, coming around hitting him unceremoniously in the rump. This infuriated him to no end, you could almost see the steam coming from his ears and his eyes flash red. His carcass was finally donated to an ethnic group.

For ten years we had a very large wethered Alpine goat, I called him my ‘ram humblizer’. While being very tame and gentle with us, this old goat was definitely the boss as far as the rams were concerned. He finally met his demise when one of the horned rams got a horn caught in the goat’s collar, choking him to death… another lesson learned.

Raising rams from lambs

Overly assertive or bold ram lambs are identified early and a well placed surprise pail of water in the face will usually do the trick. A firm pinch of the nostrils while roughly lifting his front legs off the ground will thwart the boldness of the young ram who is feeling his oats. We must teach visitors not to touch the young ram’s head, or knock him in the head for “play”, explaining that this teasing can be a trigger for aggression.

Our rams are haltered and lead-broke shortly after weaning. To work rams we run them into a small pen where they can be caught, haltered and tied to a fence for vaccinations, treatments such as de-worming, and to have their feet trimmed. They are not petted or babied. Remember the head rubbing or nibbling at your pant leg are the first signs of burgeoning aggression in the developing ram lamb – not affection. What is cute in a 40 pound lamb is totally dangerous in a 150 pound ram. Those lambs remaining with unacceptable temperaments are sold for meat.

Breeding groups

When the rams are in their breeding groups, fence line feeders are used for feeding, so we never have to enter the pastures. At least one empty pasture separates breeding groups. Or if need be, the separating fence line is covered with a couple of layers of plastic snow fence to reduce visibility between rams. If we need to catch the ram or a member of the group, they are all run into a small pen so we can safely separate the individual.

Co-mingling rams

Come time to remove rams from breeding groups, they are first shorn, then we bring all the rams into a fresh small tight standing-room-only pen for at least 24 hours. Expect much growling, grunting, pushing and shoving. Rams are territorial so these mingling areas should be ones not recently used by any of the rams. Then they are released into a larger area with some nice hay or grass. They will fight until they have reestablished their hierarchy, nothing seems to stop this process. After the period of male bonding they become good buddies again. Our ram pasture has plenty of shade, grass, trees to rub heads on or polish horns and a lean-to shed. Their feeders are close to the fence-line so hay can be tossed easily into the bunk from the outside the fence. I don’t normally grain adult rams, it seems to make them very pushy, or as someone wisely suggested, “Grain feeds testosterone”. Sex and grain can be triggers for aggression. The rams may need some supplementation by the end of a rough winter, a fence-line trough fills the bill. They always have access to fresh loose salt and unfrozen water. Never pen a ram in solitary confinement for punishment – his bad behavior will only get worse.

Here is a delightful story about the Integration of Rams as told by Margaret McEwen-King of Middletown Farm,Scotland, reproduced here with her kind permission.

Several years ago I put our rams back together on New Year’s Day in a small area and to my great distress our best white Shetland ram (lamb) had a coming together with a moorit one and the white one lost a horn. Chatting about this at crook-making class to a retired shepherd (Jim Ballantyne – now sadly deceased) who had spent all his herding days high in the Trossachs of Scotland near Callander, I was told “you didn’t pen them up tight enough”. “But I did. They were so tight they couldn’t take a run at each other – even just a few steps.” Again he responded ” You didn’t pen them tight enough”. A Scottish hill shepherd seldom minces or wastes words. “So how tight do they have to be?” I won’t print his reply verbatim, but it was to the effect that if they could stand up, then they could lie down, and the important thing was that they got each others urine, sweat and everything else intermingled so they all ended up smelling the same. This process was likely to take a couple of days. “Isn’t it a bit cruel?” I got a withering look. “They’ll all be alive and uninjured. It’s cruel if one or more get killed.”

Our pen is about 7 foot 6 inches square and accommodates fifteen to twenty rams, from the smallest Shetland to the big Texels and the giant shambling Polwarth. Two walls, a post and rail fence and lashed hurdles to make up the fourth side. Two buckets of water are placed kitty corner and replenished several times a day. Hay is put in several areas. The smell is awful after a day and a half. We let them out into a bigger enclosed area after about 48 hours to feed at the trough. If anyone starts backing up for a run, back they all go back in the pen. It doesn’t take that long and they’ve sorted themselves out.

Another important point is to integrate all the rams at once. We once made the mistake of bringing back a ram lamb which had been out on loan about a fortnight after the rest had been integrated. Said lamb was quite determined he was number 14 and not 15 in the pecking order and we had to more or less go through the whole thing again.

Seems that the vital thing is that they smell ‘communal’.

Once ‘communalized’, rams truly seem to enjoy being in the company of other rams. Seems like a period of male-bonding is necessary for mental contentment. But alas, this comradery is short-lived and the communalization step must be repeated every time a member is removed and returned.

A ram’s instincts run strong, respect him for that; but never, ever trust a ram.

A new banner pic for my facebook page…

UGH!!! Burlap! It’s so very popular right now…and expensive! I mean, really??? It’s just burlap! Folks are using it for so many crafts: scrapbooking projects, upholstery make-overs, pillows and banners/pennants!

I love the ‘lOOk’ of natural burlap, but let me tell ‘ya, I hate sewing with it! It’s not easy to work with and frays way too easily!

But, in spite of my objections, I quickly made-up the little ‘handmade’ pennant banner yesterday morning before I headed out for the day.

HOW-TO:

I drew a pennant template as my pattern and cut-out eight pennants (to spell the word ‘handmade’). Next, I applied a fine bead of ‘fray-check’ to two sides of each pennant to minimize any fraying! You could sew the raw edges as another option. I cut a length of jute garden twine and used fabric glue to attach each pennant to the twine.

With my cheap-o foam stamp letters, I applied a small amount of black acrylic paint to each letter with a paint brush, and one-by-one, stamped each letter to the burlap pennant. You could use an ink-stamp pad instead of paint or simply paint letters by hand.

You could ‘dress-up’ the banner with glitter, buttons and more. I was going for simple, more-is-less. I wanted my felted sheepies to be the main attraction, so to speak.

Hanging banners side-by-side, I thought this might be a sweet ewe-nique banner/header for my Sheepy Hollow page on Facebook. Just like the one-of-a-kind folk art I have the pleasure of creating!

Happy day! Happy Spring!

What’s on my workbench?

… or more accurately, my kitchen counter?

Check it out: a bleached ART sheepy project.

I got the idea from here :

photo via show tell share

…and thought it would be a fun project for my 4H kids???

Naturally, I had to try it for myself FIRST – and it had to be sheepy!!!

This is the reverse side, before rinsing.

And this is the final rinsed project.

Here’s a close-up.

How-To:

I followed the directions from Show Tell Share. You’ll need a Clorox Bleach Gel Pen for WHITES and fabric. I found mine in the laundry detergents aisle at Meijer. I used an inexpensive 60/40 cotton polyester blend (black) to ‘experiment’, but – Show Tell Share – recommends a cotton jersey (she also used a linen fabric for her table runner). I ironed a piece of butcher paper to the back… because I have it readily available in my pantry. Otherwise, place on several sheets of newspaper to protect your work surface. I free-handed a sheep with the fine point end of the bleach gel pen… but you can draw any ‘simple’ design. Too much detail and you’ll lose some of it in the final results… the bleach does absorb/spread/blur a little bit.

Let the bleach sit about 20-minutes. Peel the paper backing and rinse in cool water. You may run through a cycle in the washing machine. There you go. You can customize a table runner, place mat… or kids’ DIY T-Shirts?

I thought it would make a nice ‘banner’ or table skirt for a craft show display or Ag fair…

The sky’s the limit! I’m gonna try a dairy goat next… hope her udder turns out!!!

And here’s the dairy goats!

I love ‘em both!

Where’s my bleach gel pen??? I think I’ll pencil-in: “Dairy goats – the other white milk”!

Farm chores.

During the past few months, the weather has certainly been newsworthy, affecting so many lives. Mother Nature has a huge influence on how we go about our day. She not only provides a positive influence ~ hopefully, most of the time ~ but, She is also able to devastate and kill…there is no taming of Her! My heart goes out to all those who are experiencing a loss!

And so we try to work in cooperation with the weather…between the raindrops and swings in temperatures, hot & cold, in an attempt to catch-up with our daily tasks!

 

 I’ve been ’pruning’ more lavender (see!!!) in an attempt to rejuvenate old, woody plants. I’m willing to sacrifice bloom this year, for healthier, more productive plants next year. We’ve applied more mulch between the rows to minimize weeds.

Oh, my poor ache hands!

The veggie garden is almost planted. The tomato plants and peppers were last to go in the ground for fear of a late frost. Hubby prefers his own stick trellis to tomato cages. 

I’ve been amending my herb garden raised beds with lots of ’organic’ compost before planting annual herbs, such as basil, parsley and dill. It will provide nutrients and aerate the soil a bit too.

Next, hubby finally finished building ‘Orthanc’ ~~ our little sheep play platform ~~ which the lambs are particularly enjoying! It’s quite entertaining to watch them frolic in the evenings, or tower over ‘mom’ laying below!

I’d love to add a little ‘dog house’ up top some day, like a little covered bridge…when we’ve accumulated more lumber to salvage/re-purpose?

Hubby also hard-wired the electric fence for the sheep/goats. Yeah! “Look Ma-a-a-a-a-a! No more extension cord!”

…and re-inforced/re-built the rams’ breeding pen(s ) for this Fall…with a real working gate too! Last year we temporarily separated the ram pen ~~ into smaller breeding pens ~~ with a hog panel and T-posts and 2-strands of electric wire between adjoining pens. That’s how we managed our 2 rams. I normally only breed a few ewes. Otherwise you end up with a lot of cute sheep and an overflowing wool room in no time! I like this new pen!

Ram’s can be very destructive (see the corner of the pole barn?)…but, I think this new fencing will hold them? Why is it that the ‘grass’ or perhaps the ewe on the other side of the fence is always ‘more appealing’? Or, we want what we can’t have? Two is better than one? The more the merrier? Crazy rams!

The baby sheep and goats are growing by leaps and bounds! They’re getting fat on grass and ma ma’s milk! I’m sharing goat milk with the kids now and making cheese regularly. Two Alpine bucklings have left the farm, another OBE buckling is sold/reserved. I have another Oberhasli buckling I’d love to sell as a herd sire…somewhere? And, yesterday/Saturday we castrated the two Alpine bucklings (who are now called wethers) - I hope we find them a home where they’ll make a very nice pet or 4H project…rather than meat in someone’s freezer. My sweet little goaties! It’s the part of ‘raising milk goats’ that I do NOT like!

As for my sheepies, two of my ewe lambs are reserved/sold, but won’t leave the farm ’til they’re at least eight weeks old. I have another black ewe lamb for sale; I’m evaluating the two ram lambs and considering selling perhaps a black yearling ewe? I’d like to keep ‘em all, but hubby gives me the eeeee-vil eye every time I’m hugging & playing with the little wooly fur balls…UGH!

I’ve been doing a few ‘projects’ too, but I’ll save that for another post!

Happy Day! ♥

‘City’ Goats?

I  ♥ L-O-V-E  ♥ this article which was posted by my blogland friend, Anna (at http://www.asthegoatworldturns.com/ ) .

Can you imagine g-o-a-t-s as neighbors…in the City! Why not?? I often find myself offering a few of my goat kids to city folk who are visiting the farm. Their reply…”Oh, I wish I could!” What’s not to like about an adorable productive goat? How forward thinking is your City government? Perhaps it’s worthy of a discussion at your next City Council meeting?? Charlottesville, Virginia has already paved the way…

Horning in

Goats move to Woolen Mills, clean up Pen Park
BY CHIARA CANZI
Zinnia and her half-sister, Ella—short for Ellamenope—ran to the fence and wagged their short tails when called. They enthusiastically hopped and bleated while Woolen Mills resident Laura Covert uncovered two baby bottles filled with milk. Three times a day, Covert and her husband cross their 1.5-acre garden to feed two of the first miniature dairy goats permitted in city backyards.

Ella (pictured), along with her half-sister Zinnia, now calls Woolen Mills her home. Owner Laura Covert says her two goats will begin to produce milk in a year.

“I didn’t expect them to be so social. That was something that totally took me by surprise,” says Covert while Zinnia chews a button off Covert’s beige pants. Ella, not to be outdone by her one-week older sister, curls up in Covert’s lap.

Last September, City Council passed an ordinance that allowed city residents to own up to three miniature goats—dehorned, weighing less than 100 pounds and, if males, neutered. The goats must remain on their owner’s property at all times. Covert says she thought about raising dairy goats before the ordinance passed, both for the milk and to provide her family’s 10 ducks with a few friends.

“I was surprised that it went through so easily,” says Covert about the ordinance. “I know there is a big community in Charlottesville that’s interested in local food. If you are going to have a pet, it might as well be a productive one, right?”

Zinnia and Ella are Nigerian dwarf goats, a popular dairy breed, and will begin producing milk in a year. Heidi Passino, who runs Dragon Hill Farm and sold the goats to Covert, says Nigerian dwarf goats are unique because “they are the smallest of the dairy breed, so they don’t produce as much milk as the larger breeds.” Their milk has lots of butter fat, according to Passino. “It makes the milk rich and creamy, and it’s ideal for cheese making or yogurt,” she says.

While owning a goat is not rocket science, says Passino, goats are dependent upon humans for their survival. “Do your research. Look at the breed carefully,” she says. “Just be clear that you are prepared to go out in the freezing rain and take care of your animals.” Nigerian dwarf goats are priced anywhere from $50 to $300.

And if you take care of your goats, they may also take care of you. The City of Charlottesville recently contracted Goat Busters of Afton for three weeks of invasive plant management in Pen Park. The animals will help tame privet, honeysuckle and kudzu in the park. City landscape manager John Mann calls the goats “very cost-effective.”

“Prior to this, all we were able to do was to try to keep the vines out of the trees so the trees will survive,” says Mann. He adds that because most city parks are located in wetland areas, chemical use is a significant concern.

“Some chemicals are used as a follow-up, but you can imagine the goats have taken care of the majority of it,” says Mann. “So if there is any use of chemicals, it’s very limited.” 

Article Credit: C-Ville:Government

Room for improvement…

They say necessity is the mother of invention. Or, perhaps it has more to do with work smarter, not harder?

It seems all I’ve been doing is shuffling does and ewes, kids and lambs between barns, stalls and pastures. I’ve been cleaning a lot of stalls. I’m tired of cleaning stalls!

Finally, the ewes and lambs have all re-united with the rest of the flock. There’s been a few power plays.  We have re-established a hierarchy and all is well.

Normally, by this time of year my stalls have been mucked-out and the sheep and goats are ’dry’ bedded. They seem to prefer the bare, cool earth floor during summer. Bedding retains moisture (ie urine!)! I won’t bed with straw again ’til winter arrives, but the cold wet spring has resulted in greater use of bedding, both straw and wood shavings. Cha…ching, not to mention the growing compost pile!

I also began to separate the Alpine bucklings from mom at night…we’re sharing some of mom’s milk.

I use this ‘portable’ pen; two sides rigged into a corner of their stall. The kids are in plain view of mom and vise versa! No undue stress. But, tonight we’re trying something different. All the goats will be back in the loafing stall, free-access to pasture, and all six of the bucklings in one stall – in plain view – of all the mom’s.

We fitted a stall – adjacent to the goat’s loafing stall – with a make-do, visible, see-through reused horse hay feeder – door to the ‘new’ kid stall. We had to buy hinges at the hardware store. We already had a section of hog panel attached to minimize hay waste. Now, the moms will get a good night sleep, I’ll get some milk, kids will all be housed together in plain view of their mom’s. A brilliant idea. ..and one less stall to clean!

 

Hmmm…really?

Sheep play too!

Fair is fair. Hubby built the goats a split level ‘play’ fort a while ago. We dismantled our grown kids fort and reused/recycled the lumber for the goats’ playhouse. They have fun, exercise and endless hours of playtime. So, it seems only fair that the sheep also have a sort of play platform too!

A work in-progress, so far, we recycled wood from another project (the decking from an old hay wagon) to build a ramp and deck/platform for the sheep. We’re going to add another lower/split level deck – half the height of the existing deck. Later, perhaps we’ll enclose/add a doghouse-type shelter to the top-level?

The lambs race up and down the ramp while ‘mama’ rests in the shade below.

The lambs are growing so fast! Here’s the first ewe lamb grey katmoget…and her sister, my lap lamb! She appears black, but she’s gray/silver.

Dove’s ram lamb has nearly tripled his birth weight.

…and his sibling, a black ewe lamb.

Last, Sara’s little single ram lamb. I’m really fond of this little guy!

He’s ALL legs!

A real cutie.

Is it any wonder that I can’t get any work done cuz I’m either PLAYING with baby goats or baby sheep???

Barnyard Muck…

You can’t miss the arrival of ‘SPRING’ on the farm…melting snow, freezing rain, sunny sky and lots of MUD! The ground is still frozen beneath the surface, particularly in the well-protected shady areas and the shadows of outbuildings. Snow melts and re-freezes…with perhaps a passing shower contributing to the lake-in-my-backyard!

Essential outer-wear on the farm: 1) coveralls and 2) leak-proof(?) barn boots!

This is my lawn…

…and the alley leading to my back-barn.

Here’s a typical barnyard where there’s a lot of ‘traffic’.

But, the critters seek high ground.

 And hate to get their little feet wet!

So, any platform will serve as a deck to sun bathe.

They’re not sure it’s safe to cross-over!

Here’s a look at ‘baby-bumps’.

Sweet Annie, a first freshener, is due April 5. Next is Coriander, another first freshener, is due April 15. ‘Freshened’ in a dairy goat refers to the cycle of breeding, kidding, and coming into milk. Annie & Corie will be two years old this April.

Schaherezade is due to kid April 1 (gestation period is 145 -155 days, with 150 days average.)

The ‘babies’ (DOUBLE TROUBLE) wanted a pic too!

Then Brutus said: “Hey! What about handsome ME?”

Annie can’t seem to figure out what all the fuss is about!???

There’s still plenty of snow on the ground.

But, beneath it all, there’s a hint of spring…snowdrops!

Before I sign-off, here’s a project I worked on yesterday…a goat-y gift tag/ornie.

Do you recognize Schaherezade?

My goat-friend’s daughter’s bridal shower is Saturday. She had once owned/raised Schaherezade and sold her to me a few years ago. Silly, but I had to make a goat-y ornie to commemorate their wedding date. I drew a pic of Schaz on muslin, cut it out, stitched, painted, sealed and filled with organic lavender. Heavenly scented! On the back of the ornie, the bride & groom’s names and wedding date is hand-written with a black Sharpie. I finished it off with a bit of blue yarn for a ‘hanger’ and a vintage mother of pearl button. I hope it’s not too silly!

My daughter (Katie) said ‘MOM, get a life!” What do ya expect from a teen?

♥blessings!

A new “in” and “out”

Over the weekend, we compromised our pole barn and cut a doorway through the wall for the rams to gain entry into one of the box stalls in the barn. Here’s a view of the new “in”  …

and “out”.

Actually, this additional ’pen’ will allow me to easily isolate one ram from the other when I’m breeding my ewes. Also, you can never have too many pens when you’re juggling newborn lambs and goat kids, don’t ‘ya think? There’s always something going on ~ down on the farm!