Red Barn Reflections

I was in the right place at the right time for these shots. I can't decide which I like best. Well, I think I have it narrowed to three or four...or six. I haven't edited much other than straightening and a little cropping. I could do a lot with the color, but I hesitate to change things to what doesn't look as natural to me. I'd love to hear what you think. Do you have a favorite? DSC_8677-2DSC_8685-2DSC_8719-2DSC_8720-2DSC_8732-2DSC_8734-2DSC_8737-218068-2-2DSC_8894-2DSC_8902-2

I could have also titled this "One of these things is not like the other." Did you see it?

I'll be working with these photos more and will do some editing to see how that goes.

People at the Farm and Tiny Lambs

Every year  I offer a Sheep Handling and Management class that occurs sometime during lambing season. This year the timing was lucky! We had twins born in the morning before the class started and a ewe started lambing during class.IMG_5679               During the discussion about other aspects of raising sheep we kept an eye on Zinnia, the ewe who was lambing. When she got more serious we watched.Zinnia lambing-14                 One thing of note was the presence of two bags, each a different color. A lot of time I just see membranes that have broken so I wouldn't know if it were one or two, but it seemed unusual to see two distinct bags. I saw a bit of a small foot emerging but the whole thing seemed to be taking awhile so I thought I'd check.  There was one foot and a head. Not very far back was another head. Both lambs were coming at the same time, and it was obvious from the two sacs that one had meconium staining, a sign of fetal distress. I pushed the second lamb back and was able to pull the first lamb with just the head and one foot. I could tell that it was very small.  Usually it takes a little while for the second to come, but it was right there too. Weighing these later, they were 4.8 and 4.2 pounds. Zinnia lambing-16

Both lambs were alive. The second lamb acted unusual. Most lambs start trying to get up within minutes of birth but there is a normal sequence that I have a hard time describing. It's just something that I've seen many times. (If you go to my YouTube channel and look at lambing videos you'll see this.) The second lamb was noisy, baaing constantly and sort of scrabbling with it's feet. It seemed frantic as opposed to a more methodical attempt to stand.

IMG_5688                    You can't rush a lamb to be ready to nurse. I didn't know if something was wrong with this one, but I knew that, even if it was normal, it needed a little more time. We went outside and looked at the fences and the pasture. When we came back in the first lamb was doing fine. The second still wasn't able to stand but I could hold it up and get it to nurse.

Zinnia lambing-19              We kept checking back and eventually the second lamb was on it's feet. This photo was taken later in the day.IMG_5694                 Later that afternoon a friend of mine came with another friend to take photos of the lambs. That's Raquel with triplet ram lambs.

 

The three of us spent time in the pasture photographing lambs before we came in to go out to dinner.

IMG_5708           Here is the tiny lamb from the morning.

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IMG_5706              This was getting close to the end of lambing.18075-18074             Here are those two tiny lambs 12 days later and here is their listing on the website.

 

Goats

Amaryllis is our donkey and has chronic laminitis (see this story). Because of that she can't go out on the pasture or even in the back corral while the grass is green back there. She is in her own pen with a wether as a buddy. That is a poor substitute for another equine  and the sheep isn't too thrilled with the plan either. I thought long and hard about getting Amaryllis a friend. It doesn't make sense for us to have another donkey or a mini-horse or any other equine--from the standpoint of space and cost of upkeep. When Stephany was still alive she was Amaryllis' best friend. Stephany was a goat.DSCN3466-1             The last time there were goats here they were Chris' Toggenburgs that he raised for his FFA project. Stephany was the last goat from that era. 1997-11 K & Chenille                                                         Before that I had owned one goat. This is an Angora goat named Chenille in a photo from 1997. Katie was 9 then.

I contacted someone I knew who might have goats for sale and went to her place when she had some ready to go.IMG_5778                 These are two of a set of quads. One was the smallest of the batch and the other was having some trouble drinking from the LambBar bucket with all the others.IMG_5781                  I am not planning to show goats and I am bottle-feeding so those points didn't matter...IMG_5782                    ...and I brought these babies home.IMG_5798                      Oops. A third goat came along--mainly because my friend didn't plan to raise him and I figured that I could find a home for him eventually.IMG_5803                   Te goats are popular with Farm Club friends.IMG_5807

IMG_5907                                                That's Ellie on the left and Amelia on the right.IMG_E5940-2                 Their temporary buddy, Kevin, is in the middle. He's going to a new home tomorrow. Thank goodness. IMG_E5948                      It's sure easier to feed two than three.

IMG_6028                       I have been keeping the kids in the barn  but the weather has turned nice and I wanted to introduce them to Amaryllis. She was definitely interested.IMG_6029                   I hope that they will become her new BFFs. Here is Rusty's version of getting goats.

Lambs #56 and #57

Lambing seems like it was a long time ago now, but this was only 2-1/2 weeks ago. Jade and lambs                    Jade is the biggest pet sheep here. 18056-18057                      She had a ewe and a ram lamb.

Jade and lambs-2                   At that point I had overflow pens set up in the alley of the barn.

Lambing gets exhausting and you have to get your sleep when you can.IMG_5517                      I think I slept some here and then was woken up.IMG_5518

IMG_5520                  It looks as though Sunny is getting sleepy here. But I'm awake.

While we're thinking about getting cozy on the couch...IMG_5530              My son works as an EMT and he is often gone at night. The "puppies", who live next door, get invited in our house if they are barking too much. They have no qualms about cuddling on the couch, something our dogs don't get to do.Jade-18056            Back to Jade. Here she is with one of her lambs at 2-1/2 weeks old.

 

Ears Lambing

Ears is a BFL-Jacob cross--the only crossbred ewe that I have now. She lambed on March 8--that was only two weeks ago but it sure seems like a long time now. Ears                                                             This photo was taken two days prior to the day she lambed. Ears lambing-1                     I now have a different BFL ram here so Ears was bred to Peyton, making her lambs 75% BFL.

Ears lambing-2                           The first lamb was born about 1 in the afternoon.Ears lambing-3                        He was on his feet within 15 minutes.Ears lambing-4                  Even after as many lambs as I've watched just after birth I am always amazed by how quickly they stand and try to nurse.Ears lambing-5

Ears lambing-6            Ears was working on the next lamb but it was an hour after the first had been born and I saw significant meconium staining. That indicates some level of fetal distress, so I pulled this lamb. No wonder it was slow in coming--it was 12.4 pounds!Ears lambing-9                         I checked for another lamb and this one was born in about another five minutes. Ears lambing-10                         This is 31 pounds of lambs!Ears lambing-11                              All were up and trying to nurse in half an hour. IMG_5617                   This is Ears and her triplets the next day.IMG_5618                           So very cute!!!

 

Bronagh Lambing

While I'm working in the barn I often take photos of the lambing process--partly to amuse myself and partly to use as a resource when new sheep raisers ask about the lambing experience. It is useful to know how much time there is between seeing a ewe in labor and when lambs are born, time between deliveries of twins, time it takes for a lamb to start nursing. There are wide variations in these figures, but I like to be able to show a "real-life" scenario. This is a ewe named Windy Acres Bronagh who lambed a week ago.Bronagh lambing-1                   I saw her at about 7 a.m. and knew that she was in labor. The first sign of labor is often just behavior. You have to know what normal behavior looks like to know when something is different. I spend a lot of time looking at my sheep.Bronagh lambing-2                   A more obvious sign is seeing the sac emerge when the ewe has contractions. Bronagh lambing-3                  The first lamb was born about 7:20 and I brought the lamb inside the barn.Bronagh lambing-4                   It sometimes takes much longer before the second lamb is born, but this one was coming within five minutes.Bronagh lambing-7

Bronagh lambing-8                     That's the first lamb getting up within ten minutes of birth.

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Bronagh lambing-10            Both lambs were nursing within a half hour.IMG_5464                 This is the lamb board. These lambs were #49 and 50.

18050-5                       This is one of the lambs one week later.

Lambs, Lambs, Lambs

Are we getting tired of lambing posts? It only happens this time of year. IMG_5308               Do you remember this lamb from a couple of posts back? Trista had a 10+ pound lamb and then almost two hours later a 5 pound lamb. She didn't want the little one and I struggled to get it to nurse. I ended up milking Trista and tube feeding the lamb colostrum. I left the lamb with Trista but she became increasingly less happy to have it around and more hostile.

The lamb wouldn't suck on a bottle and I was getting very frustrated. It's one thing to have to feed a lamb every four hours, but then when it doesn't suck it's maddening. You get the nipple in the mouth, the tongue hangs out the side and the precious colostrum goes everywhere. (This brings back frustration of trying to get Brown Swiss calves on a bottle. The Milking Shorthorns were fine, the Brown Swiss were not.)

A solution presented itself the next day.

IMG_5361                    I saw this in the barn. This lamb was standing hunched up like a lamb does when it doesn't feel good. This view from the top down shows how large it's belly is and it was tight as a drum. From previous experience I suspected intestinal atresia, a malformation of the digestive tract where the intestine is not complete. The lamb eats normally at first and then there is no where for the milk to go and this lamb was already over 24 hours old--it didn't have long to live and was in great discomfort.

When a lamb dies if you put the fresh skin on an orphan lamb sometimes you can trick the mother into thinking that it is her baby.  I went to the house for my new knife (purchased for when I need to necropsy or skin something and the sharpest thing in the house has been a pocket knife). By the time I came back to the barn the lamb was dead.IMG_5310                In addition the lamb had stopped nursing so the ewe was at risk of mastitis as her udder filled, even though there was a remaining twin. One side had started to fill more and become uncomfortable. That starts a vicious cycle where the ewe won't let the lamb nurse and that side of the udder gets worse and worse. This is a photo of milk from Trista, the orphan's mom. I got over two cups of milk from the ewe with the baby who died.

The trick was going to be to get this lamb who had never nursed on her mom to nurse on this mom.

IMG_5364                  I made a little lamb jacket out of the skin by cutting a neck hole and leg holes. It's kind of hard to tell if you don't know that's what you're looking at. IMG_5365-2                 The new lamb was smaller than the one that died so this jacket was a little large. The mom wasn't convinced at first that it was her baby, but she didn't outright reject it. The lamb had eaten (been tube fed) just two hours before so it wasn't hungry. But later that night it was hungry. It was on it's feet and when I held the ewe still it nursed! 18028                  The next day the jacket was beginning to smell. The idea is that at first the mom smells her baby and eventually gets used to the new lamb smell. So our transition was original lamb smell mingled with new lamb smell, new lamb smell mingled with dead smell, all new lamb smell. I had cut a portion of the skin off to get more of the new lamb smell and because I wanted the lamb to be able to adjust to the cold when the second skin came off.  But this skin jacket was so big that at that point it got tangled up and I took it off.

I kept the ewe and the lambs in a pen for several days so that I could watch. The ewe slept with her lamb and not the new one. She would stomp when the lamb tried to nurse but if I went in the pen she resigned herself to it (almost rolling her eyes) and stood there.

Mae-18028              We have success. I haven't had to hold the ewe for a few days while they have been in a group pen. They will go out tomorrow and I'll keep an eye on them. But I think the baby has a new mama.

 

 

More Lambing

I'm going to backtrack chronologically. I thought I had some other photos from lambing but I must be sleep deprived because I forgot that they were still on my phone. As I said in one of the other blog posts, the first lamb was born the day after I got back from Texas. But here is what greeted me in the morning when I went to the barn.Cayenne fighting                  This is Cayenne...Serrano fighting                  ...and this is Serrano. Yearling rams trying to figure out who is boss. I think most of the blood came from a fifth horn that was behind Serrano's lower horn--that horn is gone now.  I'm not sure who won. Neither of them seemed to be feeling very good for a day or two.

This is Jane's lamb that was born on February 22, the first day of lambing.

DSC_8020                The last post  ended with a storm. But the weather changed to cold but sunny. Time to get the sheep out in the field.estelle               Estelle and lambs.

DSC_7968                  Ht Lips and her triplets plus an extra.Hot Lips-18002

Fandango-18035                   Back in the barn lambing has continued at quite a clip. This is Fandango and her BFL-cross lamb.18039-18040                    Vixen's twins.

IMG_5376                                             There are plenty of lambs to cuddle.

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IMG_5387                        Here is the lambing count a week ago. IMG_5405                 My bike set up on a trainer in the house. The only use it is getting right now is as a sock drying rack right.

 

Last Week in the Barn

Lambing is about 2/3 of the way through. Here are some photos from last week. It's hard to imagine the stormy weather that came in on Wednesday and Thursday after yesterday's warm sun. DSC_7920                 Farm Club members have come on some of the days to help with the endless chores. A favorite part of their day is Lamb Cuddling.18001                This is the first lamb born way back on February 22.IMG_5296                  Wednesday was quite a day with five sets of twins born. There was a Fibershed Ag Coop Board meeting at noon, but the representative photo for that would just be Stephany and me on the phone for two hours. But the main event was not lambing or the meeting. Ben Hostetler of Mountain Meadow Wool came to speak to a gathering of Fibershed producers and other interested people and talk about value-added processing and how to figure out cost effectiveness, etc.IMG_5301                   We also looked at fleeces and discussed skirting and cleanliness of fleeces to be sent to the mill. Oh, and do you see that stack of alfalfa in the background of the first photo of Ben and the group? I had made a call to say DO NOT bring hay on Wednesday because there would be a lot of people and a storm is coming. The hay showed up on Wednesday and Dan got about half of it in the barn before people arrived for Ben's talk. IMG_5308             Just before Ben's talk Trista lambed with a large lamb. I kept watching for a twin during the presentation but nothing happened.  I was also watching another ewe and towards the end of his talk decided to check the status of that ewe. She had been in the lambing area all day acting like she was going to lamb. I probably jumped the gun on this one, but it was partly because I wondered if there was a problem and partly because a few of us had planned to go out to dinner with Ben.

IMG_5307                       I ended up pulling twins and all was OK although in hindsight I'm sure that this ewe did not need intervention, just more time. In the meantime while I was dealing with that ewe Trista popped out another lamb. This was almost two hours after the first and it was such a tiny thing that I'm not sure she even noticed. She did not want that lamb--that's the small one in the photo under the heat lamp. By this time it was almost 6:00 and the rain was starting. A few of the people at the talk had stayed around to help. Dan and Ben brought the rest of the hay in under cover. I dealt with the cold, rejected lamb. I ended up tube feeding it colostrum because we could not get it up to suck even when we held Trista still. Ben and Dan helped with chores while Stephany went in to clean up the kitchen and order pizza and pasta to be delivered. That was really the best way to end the day because by then I didn't want to go out anyway.  More about that lamb in a later post.

DSC_7938        Skipping ahead to the next day. Petra was the only ewe to lamb on Thursday.DSC_7942

IMG_5332              Isadora is one of the ewes who had lambed on Wednesday. By the next day I was worried about mastitis. She has a lumpy uneven udder from previous mastitis and it seemed to get hard again. I spent some time massaging and using warm compresses (easy with hot water in a disposable diaper). She didn't developed mastitis so I think it was just the normal engorgement coupled with the hard, scarred areas from before that I was feeling.IMG_5349             Wednesday night through Thursday we had 1.8" of rain after almost no rain in all of February.

IMG_5348            That's all it takes for our place to look like this. IMG_5347

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Dilly-Dally

Dilly is not even a year old. She was born March 11, 2017. Most of the lambs (soon to be yearlings) won't lamb until after most of the mature ewes have lambed. But Dilly didn't waste time last October with the ram and she was the eighth ewe to lamb. I didn't have a breeding date for her and she wasn't even on my radar.Dilly-lamb-1                So I looked over the barn wall where I spy on the ewes and saw this. Yearlings aren't always sure about what to do with a lamb and need a little time to let their instinct kick in. It is important that a young ewe has a chance to figure out that the lamb is hers and that she really does want it. You don't want to interrupt that bonding time. However she can also be bullied or distracted by other ewes who are curious or close to lambing and will start to mother the lamb themselves. Dilly-lamb-2                  I walked around the gate briefly to push the other ewes away and then backed off so that Dilly would approach her lamb again.Dilly-lamb-3                   I gave her some time and then slowly picked up the lamb and got her to follow it into the barn.

Dilly-lamb-5                        This lamb was only 4.6 pounds. The other Jacob lambs are more often 7 to 8 pounds or even more. Dilly-lamb-7                 It was stormy and cold so I put this little lamb coat on it for the night. However the coat was too big and got wet. By morning I took it off.DSC_7897             Dilly's lamb at 2 days old. Farm Club members were here for part of the morning and asked me to name the lamb Dally.

Dilly-dally, from the Oxford Dictionary: Waste time through aimless wandering or indecision.

Dilly-dally, from the Urban Dictionary:  To mess around or waste time. Typically used by the very elderly.

I'll go with definition #1.That part about the very elderly bothers me.

More Lambs

Sheena was one of four ewes to lamb on February 26. Sheena            That is her pawing and looking restless during morning chores.Sheena lambing-1                 When she looked more as though she were in active labor I brought her into the barn. That was about 10:15.

Sheena lambing-4                At about noon the sac was visible.Sheena lambing-3             This view, taken about 2:00 shows how, as labor progresses, the sides are sunken in front of the hips. I had been waiting for Sheena to have her lambs before I went to town, but I finally decided to make a quick trip. When I came back at 3:00 she was lying down and pushing but I saw only the nose, which at that point looked somewhat swollen. When I felt for the lamb position, the feet were at about a 2:00 position instead of below the head and out in front. I pushed the lamb back so that I could make sure that the feet matched up to the right lamb, brought them around to the 6:00 position and then pulled the lamb easily.

Sheena lambing-6                 As soon as the lamb was out Sheena went to work.Sheena lambing-8                      The sac for the next lamb showed within a few minutes.                       Sheena lambing-17           Lamb #1 was on his feet within 8 minutes.

Sheena lambing-12               You can see this ram lamb's horn buds.

Sheena lambing-18             Sheena barely noticed as she pushed out the second lamb about 15 minutes later.Sheena lambing-22                     Lamb #1 is mostly white.

Sheena lambing-24                    Lamb #2 has a lot of color and has lilac markings. Catalyst is the sire.18010                This is the first lamb two days later.18011                  Here is the second lamb.

Details are on the website.

LAMBS!

Lambing started the day after I got back from Texas. I'm sure that Dan was grateful I was back. There was one lamb on the 22nd, nothing the next day, and since then they've been popping out right and left. I haven't had time to do anything with photos until now (although I should probably be sleeping). Shadow Mountain Shelby was the fourth ewe to lamb. She is a lilac (Jacob terminology for markings that are not black but are gray/brown), ewe with beautiful blue eyes. I got to the barn and found her with a lamb.

Shelby lambing-1                    Lamb #1. These aren't usually a pretty side when just born. Slime, dirt, blood. Shelby lambing-4                Jacob ewes are usually very good mothers and the lambs are vigorous. Shelby was cleaning up her baby...Shelby lambing-7             ...even while pawing the ground and having contractions for the second.Shelby lambing-12                    I got them inside the barn and the lamb got to its feet and started looking for milk.Shelby lambing-13                       Lamb #2.

Shelby lambing-15                 The first lamb is nursing while Shelby cleans the second.Shelby lambing-18                   I love the look of this one. These are both lilac ewe lambs sired by Catalyst.18006           Here they are three days later.18007                  These lambs are listed on my website lamb page. I'll be updating the listings with photos as I get time.

 

More with Texas Grandkids

One post just wasn't enough for the grandkid photos.

Kirby has a great egg-collecting apron.

I think the trampoline is one of the best investments Katie and Kurtis have made. The baby is contained and having fun while Kirby can also work off energy with mom. And how nice to walk outside your door and have this without having to take the kids to town.

DSC_0152                   It seems that nightgowns are also good workout attire (see last post).

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IMG_4970           After a strenuous workout it's hard to stay awake for lunch.IMG_4973

IMG_5006        Wearing the unicorn hat she got for Christmas. Yes, there is a unicorn horn and mane on the back of this.

Another day's activities include toenail painting, chasing your brother with a bucket on your head, more trampoline jumping, and the "Baby" dolls that I made for the kids.

IMG_5034            This time Kasen fell asleep before he made it to the high chair.

IMG_5039               When one goes to sleep sometimes its worth going on a walk so that the other will take a nap without an argument.

Sweet dreams, sweet kids!

Texas Grandkids

Lambing has just started and will quickly take over my life for the next few weeks, but first I want to share the photos of the cutest grandkids ever. I spent six days in visiting in Texas. If you come to this blog to see travel photos or farm photos or weaving photos, sorry. This post is all about grandkids.

My daughter went to work Friday morning and the 13-month old went to daycare so that I could do something with Kirby (3-1/2). I let her pick out her outfit and she chose this dress. Later I realized that it was a nightgown "dress" but, oh well, what's wrong with going to the zoo in your nightgown?

IMG_4911             Jacob sheep at the Austin Zoo. This zoo is a rescue/animal sanctuary zoo. All of the animals were seized in animal cruelty cases, retired from other facilities, individual exotic pets that needed rehoming, retired lab research animals, etc. DSC_0082              Kirby didn't want to see the lions or tigers, but I thought that this was a rather intimidating photo (not so much the tiger photo but the little girl in front of the giant tiger).

IMG_4928                                           Building a lego tower with flowers on top.

The next day Katie stayed home and I kept up with Kasen so Katie could work on things outside.

One of those projects was helping Kirby make a "fairy garden" using statues and other "garden art" that her recently deceased great-grandmother wanted her to have. That included outlining the area with rocks, some of which Kirby painted. Note that a nightgown dress is suitable attire for yard work as well as a zoo trip. Just add rubber boots.

DSC_0125          Singing Disney tunes.

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So as to not overwhelm you with too much cuteness in one post I will write another with the next batch of photos!

...From the Redwood Forests... - part 2

Day One of our trip to the redwood forest is here. On the second day we drove north to spend time in the redwood parks that are north of Eureka. They are all managed together as part of the Redwood National and State Parks. IMG_4841            From Wikipedia: "... the four parks, together, protect 45% of all remaining coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) old-growth forests, totaling at least 38,982 acres. These trees are the tallest and one of the most massive tree species on Earth."

Trillium Falls trail                    In 1850 there were 2 million acres of redwood forest along the northern California coast. After years of unrestricted logging the Save-the-Redwood League, created in 1918, was successful in establishing three State Parks in the 1920's. IMG_4817                       Redwood National Park was created in 1968 after 90% of the original redwood trees were gone. Now the State and Federal agencies cooperatively manage the forests and watersheds as a single unit.Shearing-GB-202                    I'll mention here that all these photos were taken with my iPhone because the previous night I dropped my camera (on the carpet in the motel) and the lens popped off. I couldn't get it back on and knew that I wouldn't be able to get it fixed until after I came back from Texas (where I was headed as soon as we returned from this trip).

IMG_4837                      We took a side trip to the spot where the Klamath River flows into the ocean and walked down the steep trail to this overlook. That's Dan looking across the ocean for Meryl (my DIL who is in Australia right now).IMG_4847                 We drove farther north to the Stout Grove in the Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park. Stout Memorial Grove                 Every time we stopped we continued to be impressed with the grandeur of these trees and the forest.Stout Memorial Grove

Stout Memorial Grove             This tree had fallen and then was cut to clear the path.Stout Memorial Grove                   Look at that brilliant color.Stout Memorial Grove

Stout Memorial Grove                 We were surprised that we didn't see more mushrooms and fungus, but this one did catch my eye. Late in the afternoon we headed toward the coast at Crescent City.IMG_4873             Our map book showed two lighthouses so we started with Point St. George. We found that lighthouse (manned from 1891 to 1975 and abandoned in 1995) but it was 6 miles offshore. The Battery Point Lighthouse is accessible at low tide so we were able to walk to it, but we were too late for a tour.IMG_4879

IMG_4885                 We walked along the breakwater (seen in the lighthouse photo) and then out on a pier. This is a view looking back toward Crescent City.

IMG_4890               This is the view looking back toward the breakwater and the setting sun.

We headed home the next morning because I was leaving early the following day for Texas. This was a short trip (time-wise), but well worth it.

...From the Redwood Forests...

...This land was made for you and me... Thank goodness for the people who, decades ago, had the foresight to conserve and preserve some of the most spectacular (and vulnerable to human destruction) ecosystem you can imagine.

We had two days to spend in the old growth redwood forest along the northern California coast. IMG_4770                Mini Road Trip!Shearing-GB-199               From the Central Valley you need to drive through the hills to the west. We turned onto Highway 20 at Williams. You can see a slight tinge of green if you look hard but this time of year they should be emerald green. That green is the grass that began to grow after our early January rain. We have had negligible rainfall since and there has been no more growth. This is the time of year that ranchers in the non-irrigated hills count on abundant forage for livestock. Very scary to think of another year of drought to this degree.

Shearing-GB-200                   This is a view getting closer to the hills. The almond trees are beautiful this time of year but I am disturbed at how many acres of land all over California have been put into almonds now. That's a story for another time however. It seems I didn't take more photos until we got to our first stop.

IMG_4771              From the Humboldt Redwoods State Park website: "In the early 1900s, loggers came to what is now Humboldt Redwoods State Park to cut down lofty ancient redwoods for grape stakes and shingles. The founders of Save the Redwoods League thought that was akin to 'chopping up a grandfather clock for kindling.' From the acquisition of a single grove in 1921, the League has raised millions of dollars to build and expand this park. Today Humboldt Redwoods spans 53,000 acres, an area almost twice the size of San Francisco. About one third, or 17,000 acres, of the park is old-growth redwood forest—the largest expanse of ancient redwoods left on the planet."IMG_4774                                                What is special about an old-growth forest?IMG_4776                  The size of the trees.

IMG_4791                                                 The mix of tree sizes. Unlike a reforested clear cut, there are trees of all ages and sizes and this makes for an open forest instead of a monoculture of trees and brush that you can hardly walk through.

IMG_4787               The ecology. When old trees fall they open up space for light to reach the forest floor and opportunity for new growth of other species.

IMG_4785                                                      The grandeur.IMG_4773

IMG_4780

Shearing-GB-202              We drove through The Avenue of the Giants, stopping along the way to get out and walk on the trails.IMG_4798                  We ended the day at the beach. IMG_4800

Shearing Day

We sheared on February 3, almost exactly a year from shearing in 2017. This is such a fun day. Farm Club members are there to get their fleeces from the year, but they also do all the work! Shearing-GB-198-3                                                  Our fabulous shearer is John Sanchez. We started with the rams. This is Peyton, the new BFL. His fleece sold right away.15078 Catalyst-4                 Next was the 2 year old lilac ram, Catalyst.15078 Catalyst                   Here he is afterwards and...Catalyst fleece-1                ...here is his fleece.Catalyst fleece-2                   A staple of Catalyst's fleece.DSC_7513            Catalyst's son, Cayenne, after shearing. You can see what he looked like before shearing near the end of this post.

Shearing-DS-198-5                    One of the shearing day jobs is weighing and recording fleeces. Kathleen and Lisa did that job.

Shearing-DS-198-4                 We had two skirting tables set up this year. Farm Club members skirted their fleeces and helped others skirt and sort.

Shearing-DS-198-2                                                                   I set up the GoPro for some shearing video. That will be coming later.IMG_4602              Roy and Gina worked in the sheep pen.IMG_4604                   So did Deborah and Shelby. They all made sure that John never ran out of sheep.IMG_4637                Kathleen, Lisa, and Dona. Dona is our "official" Farm Club photographer because I'm always too busy to take photos on our Farm Days. She took some of the photos here.17054-Jolene-Fleece-1                  This is what a fleece looks like when you take the coat off the sheep.

IMG_4683                  Here is that same fleece after shearing.IMG_4687                  Locks from Jolene's fleece.17050-Jillian-fleece                Another beautiful fleece on the table.IMG_4665                 Doris made Jacob sheep cookies for us.IMG_4688

These sheep won't be around long enough to need shearing.

 

Sheep -- Pre-Shearing

In the post I wrote before this one I talked about getting the barn ready for shearing and I showed some fleece photos here. Here are some pre-shearing sheep photos.1056 Hot Lips             Hot Lips. 14014 Janis2                Janis

15031 Honey2               Some of the sheep are coated. This is Honey.16011 Sylvia-2                  Sylvia.

16042 Stacy               Stacy

Shelby-17046-Lavendar             Shelby and her daughter, Lavendar.

17025 Cayenne-2                                                         Almost 1-year old rams, Cayenne and...

.17029 Serrano                                                   ...Serrano.

And these fleeces didn't disappoint.