Lynn went to the doctor to see the results of his MRI. His
hip sockets seem to be ok (he doesn’t need hip surgery) but there was evidence
of old injuries that are causing some pain—an old healed fracture in the
pelvis, and some other problems. We don’t know whether those happened when he
was trying to stay on a horse that was bucking, or when the dirt under the old
bridge caved in on him when he was trying to get some debris out from under
there during high water—and had to pull his leg out from under several hundred
pounds of dirt and mud before he drowned—or when he had a motorcycle accident
coming home from irrigating and met a pickup that was on his side of the road on
a blind corner.
The doctor thinks the old injuries are causing him more pain
now because he has favored the leg and sore back, and has lost some of the
normal motion. She prescribed physical therapy, and also wants another MRI on
his lower back because it is badly out of place.
We brought the 7 young cows down from the field last week,
and put them in the maternity pen and horse pasture where we can watch them
easier, since several of them were looking like they are close to calving. The
next day we moved the older cows across the creek over the bridge and into
heifer hill, where they will be a little closer when the time comes to bring
them down, too.
The calving barn’s dirt floor is pretty wet because of the
big pile of snow behind it that slid off the roof this winter. We should have
shoveled that pile away, because it’s been melting and soaking into the dirt
floor in the barn. We opened all the
doors to help it dry out faster. Even though we’ve had some spring weather, the
occasional blizzard makes us glad we still have a barn for calving cows during
bad weather.
Last Thursday we went to town for the funeral of our
neighbor Bill Sager. He fell and broke his hip a few weeks ago and never
recovered.
The next few days were cold, down to 14 degrees at night. We
started training our heifers to go in the barn, in case it’s cold and stormy
when they calve. We put a little hay along the edges of a couple barn aisles,
with some alfalfa on top of the grass hay. After putting them into the barn the
first time, they eagerly went in every day after that, for several days, to eat
the alfalfa hay. Now if we have to put one in the barn some dark night, it
won’t be a scary experience!
Alfonzo left his gate open on the lower place and almost all
his cows got out and went over the hill to the low range, looking for something
to eat, but the grass hasn’t grown enough yet to provide any feed. He finally
realized the cows were out and rounded them up again.
Michael, Nick and Robbie put tall wood slabs on this end of
our 2nd day pens to create a good windbreak. Now our pens are ready
for calving.
They also put a pole “cover” over the ditch by the culvert
under the driveway, so no calves will fall in the ditch when we are taking them
back and forth across the driveway. The cover will also keep vehicles from
driving into the ditch.
Andrea cleaned out her little travel trailer to loan to
Michael and Carolyn and Michael smoothed out the mud ruts in their driveway so
they could pull it up to their house for Gregory’s sister and her husband to
stay in. They drove down from Canada yesterday and hope to stay a few days.
Michael and Carolyn had their first calf born day before
yesterday morning and another one that afternoon. We put some slough grass
bedding in a couple barn stalls yesterday so we’d be ready when ours start
calving.
Dani’s friend Sequoia stayed overnight with her last night,
and the two little girls came down early this morning to help us feed cows. When
we drove to the field above the house we noticed one cow on heifer hill and she
didn’t come down to the feed truck. We could see she had a baby calf lying
there, so after we fed the cows their alfalfa we drove up there.
It was Buffalulu. She had calved 3 weeks ahead of her due
date—a tiny bull calf. She’d licked him dry and he was several hours old, but
very cold and hadn’t nursed yet. We put him on the back of the feed truck and
Dani and her friend hung onto him while I drove the truck to the next field and
Andrea and Robbie followed the young cow. She was a bit confused because she
wasn’t exactly sure where her calf was, but he bellowed and bawled almost
continually, and she followed his voice. We got her down with the other cows
and through the gate, and drove on down to the barnyard. It was windy and cold,
and he needed some food. She was too nervous to let us help him suckle, so we
put her in the headcatch by the barn and got him started on a teat. After
helping him get as much milk as he could hold, we put the pair in the barn, out
of the wind.
It was windy and snowing off and on all day and the power
went off for a couple hours. By afternoon the little calf had figured out how
to suckle his mom without help. That evening another young cow (Twinkle
Twinkle, a second calver) started calving so we put her in the other barn aisle
and she calved quickly—a nice heifer calf. She was about 10 days ahead of her
due date, but not as tiny as the little guy next door. Dani named him King Cong
Gorilla Boy because he was so tiny he needed a big name, and also because his
face looks a bit like a baby gorilla. The heifer is charcoal color (more gray
than black) so Dani named her Charky.
APRIL 5 – We had more snowstorms and windy weather the last
week in March. We put more of the cows in the maternity pen and horse pasture
where we could see them from the house, and fenced off the deep ditch in the
top corner of the orchard. The cows like to sleep in that corner and we didn’t
want any of them to roll into that dry ditch.
Young heather’s boyfriend Gregory and his sister and
brother-in-law stayed with Michael and Carolyn several days before they had to
drive back to Canada. Carolyn brought Gregory’s sister and husband down here
last week to meet us.
The next day Dani helped Andrea bring some of the loose hay
(stored in the “sick barn” across the creek) around in the little trailer with
the 4-wheeler in several trips to spread as bedding in the pen below the barn. She
had fun riding in the hay.
We put the two young cows and calves down in that big pen
where there are several good windbreaks. Little Gorilla Boy is still very tiny,
but doing great.
Several more cows were getting very ready to calve so we
locked those in the orchard (maternity pen) at night where we can see them from
the house with a spotlight.
Charlie was very sick last Friday, with a high fever, so
Andrea took him to the clinic. The doctor’s aid who looked at him thought it
was a virus and didn’t prescribe an antibiotic, but his fever and cough kept
getting worse. Every night his fever was up to 104 degrees and Andrea had to
give him a lot of ibuprofen to try to keep it down. She couldn’t get another
appointment for him after the weekend (the clinic was booked solid), so she
took him to the ER Monday evening, and the doctor there took a chest x-ray and
diagnosed the problem as pneumonia. He gave Charlie a shot of high-powered
antibiotic and a prescription for follow-up. Charlie was sick all through
spring break but was finally recovering enough to go back to school this week.
We’ve had several more cows calve. The evening that Andrea
took Charlie to the ER, Dani helped me put Magnicate in the barn to calve—since
it was cold and windy. She calved quickly at 8:30 p.m. and the heifer calf was
up and trying to nurse within 30 minutes. But the cow kept having severe cramps
and kept lying down trying to clean, so finally Dani and I intervened. We put a
tub of alfalfa hay in front of the cow to encourage her to stay standing up and
eating, and I helped the calf get onto a teat.
The kids were out of school that week so the girls enjoyed
helping with the cows and calves. Sam helped Andrea take a couple trailer loads
of loose hay up to the calf houses for bedding, and put new bedding in the two
barn stalls.
On Thursday we brought the last 5 cows (the later calving
ones) down from the field to put with the others in the horse pasture because they
are all starting to get udders.
Andrea put up the electric wire around the calf houses
before we started putting pairs up there, so the cows can’t get right next to
those little houses. Then they can’t gang around the houses to eat the bedding
out of them and won’t step on or lie on any calves that sleep in front of the
houses. We put several cows and their calves out there this week.
Andrea started harrowing the fields, now that the snow is
gone and the cows are off them. It may be an early spring and we want to start
irrigating quicker than last year. She harrowed the field next to her house
(where the largest group of cows spent the winter) with her little jeep pulling
the harrow, to scatter the manure and the wasted straw from the big bale feeders.
It all makes good fertilizer. The little jeep is pretty rough and bouncy,
however, so Robbie helped her take the blade off the tractor so she could
finish harrowing with it. Charlie was feeling well enough by the end of the
week to ride around with her in the tractor, and he enjoyed driving it.
Our mud finally dried up enough that we were able to take
the chains off the tractor for harrowing. Andrea has been using the tractor
nearly every day to load alfalfa hay on the feed truck or take big bales of grass
hay out to the heifers’ feeder or oat/barley bales to the cows’ feeders. The
heifers go through a big bale every 3 days.
It’s also not too muddy out on our low hills anymore, so on Sunday Andrea and I rode Breezy and Ed for their first rides this spring. We need to get those horses going and back to their routine so the girls can ride them.
It’s time to start irrigating so we’ve been cleaning
ditches. Robbie burned the grass off one of the ditches, and we hired Allan
Probst to go through several of the worst ones with his little excavator. The
ditch that comes to heifer hill through the Gooch place was silted full in
several places, and in other places the bank was washed away from Alfonzo’s
hap-hazard irrigating. Allan was able to clean out the clogged areas and
rebuild the bank on the places where the ditch was about to wash out. While he
was here, we had him go through the ditch to our lower field across the creek,
since it would be faster and easier for him than for our old backhoe. But just
after he finished and was bringing the little excavator down the hill to come
back from that lower field, one of the tracks picked up a rock and it jammed
and threw the track off. Lynn tried to help him get the track back on, after
jacking it up, but it needed a new part. Allan had to order the part and come
back again the next day (yesterday) to fix it and take it home.
We’ve had a few more snowstorms, so Andrea started spending
part of the night here to help me watch the cows, to put the calving cows into
the barn. As long as we have a good barn we’re not going to have new babies
born outside in a blizzard!
Today was a little nicer, and Andrea started the water in
the newly cleaned ditch to heifer hill. We don’t know how long our irrigation
water will last this year, so we want to get all the fields growing early.
APRIL 14 – Last Thursday Dani stayed here overnight because
she wanted to help watch the cows, and she got to see Cub Cake calve. Dani has
stayed here several nights and I get her up for school; Robbie picks her up on
his way by with the other kids to take them all to the bus. Andrea sleeps in a
little, after spending part of the night watching cows until I get up early to
take over. Later that day Andrea and I rode Breezy and Ed again for their
second ride this year.
The next day I trimmed Dottie’s feet and rode her for her
first ride, and Sam and Dani rode Breezy and Ed for their first ride this year.
Dottie was goofy and obnoxious but the older mares were a
good influence on her. They were nicely mellow for the girls. Just as we were
leaving, Buffalope calved in the horse pasture (so Andrea put the other cows in
the orchard so they wouldn’t interfere with bonding of mama and new baby), and
by the time we came back the calf was up nursing.
Robbie is helping Michael and Nick on fencing projects
around the valley. Word is getting around about the good job they do, and they
have several more jobs lined up. Michael probably won’t have time to rebuild
any more fences for us until next winter.
Dani and Sam have an after school job once a week, cleaning
house for Conrad Vitzthum, our elderly neighbor down at Baker. He lost his wife
a few years ago and needs a bit of help with the house cleaning, so the girls
enjoy doing that for him and earning a little money in the process.
The grass is trying to grow in the fields, so on Saturday we
moved the electric fence in the field below the lane and confined the yearling
heifers to a small area at this end by the gate and the water trough, and moved
their hay feeder to a high spot in that corner. We’ll keep them in this smaller
area and give the rest of the field a chance to grow (so we can cut part of it
for hay and pasture the marshy side of it later). We’ll put them out on pasture
when the grass is taller.
That afternoon Andrea and I rode Breezy and Dottie; we need
to put a few more rides on the horses before our friends from Colorado come to
visit, because Jodi wants to ride a horse. Walter and Jodi have a bed and
breakfast business in Durango, and they’ve been hoping to come visit us. Walter
is like part of our family. He came here in 1980 from Austria, not knowing much
English, and needed a job and a place to stay. We arranged for him to stay in
the little cabin my uncle owned (above our upper place) and he worked for us a
few years, building fences. Later he had some other jobs, sold cars, then went
to California and had a thriving business making billiard tables, then met and
married Jodi. They moved to Durango and have a great bed and breakfast. We’ve
never met Jodi so we’re looking forward to their visit.
Charlie took a test on Saturday for his ham radio operator
license and passed it, so he is really excited. My brother Rocky loaned him a
radio until he can get his own.
On Sunday Michael needed more alfalfa bales, so Andrea
loaded a couple on our feed truck when she was moving more bales around for our
cows, and Lynn drove it up to the upper place, where Michael loaded on a couple
big oat bales for Lynn to bring home for our cows. We’re mixing the oats and
the alfalfa and it’s working very well for the cows.
Andrea also brought a little trailer load of
hay bales around for the cows in pens by the barn.
That afternoon Andrea and I rode Breezy and Dottie again. This
was Dottie’s third ride this spring and she’s starting to behave herself a
little better.
I cooked a big dinner for everyone when Andrea got the kids
home again from Mark that evening. Buffalo Girl (Em’s old pet cow) started
calving so we put her in the barn after supper. She’s a very strange cow and
even though she’s a good mother, the first few hours after she calves are a bit
challenging. It’s as though her hormones are mixed up. She licks and roots her
calf, bellows at it, and knocks it down when it tries to stand up. We have to
be there to intervene, so she won’t hurt it. This is her 11th calf,
and she does this every year. If we can keep her from injuring the calf, get
him on his feet, and help him suckle, then everything is fine from then on. Once
she actually starts nursing her calf, the hormones of motherhood kick in and
she mellows out and behaves like a normal mama.
So Andrea, Dani and I sat in the next barn stall and watched
the progress as she gave birth to her calf. She lay down tight against the back
panel of the stall toward the end and we had to untie the panel and give her
more room, which caused her to get up before the calf was fully born. So we
just pulled him on out, and got him breathing. Buffalo Girl bellowed and
rooted, but wasn’t as aggressive as last year. Andrea had to whop on her last
year to protect the calf, and that old cow remembered. She backed off each time
we had to reprimand her. After the calf got himself organized and was
functional enough to try to stand up, we helped him to his feet. Dani brought
the tub of alfalfa hay to distract and pacify the cow, while Andrea and I
helped him to the udder and got him nursing. The old cow behaved herself and by
the time the calf got full, everything was good and it was safe for us to leave
them be. He’s red (all of her other calves have been black0, and here’s a photo
of him (and a friend) a couple weeks later when he and mom were up in the field
with the other cows and calves.
I continued watching the cows, and saw that Rocket (one of
the first calf heifers) was in early labor, and more obviously calving by 3:30 a.m.
but she didn’t progress. By daylight I put her in the side pen and did my
chores (feeding the horses and heifers). She wasn’t progressing normally but
finally about 8:30 she pushed out a water sac, but there were cotelydons on it
(the red fleshy buttons that attach the placenta to the uterine lining), which
meant the placenta was detaching. So we took her around to the headcatcher by
the barn and Lynn reached in to see what was going on. The front feet were
there, but back a ways, and the calf was a bit sideways. He couldn’t get the
head coming.
Michael and Nick were coming down the creek on their way to
a fencing job (Michael pulling the flatbed trailer loaded with materials, and
Nick in his pickup), so they stopped to help us. Michael was able to push the
calf back and get it coming straighter, and the legs pulled forward (they’d
been hung up at the elbows) and finally got the calf pulled. It was alive—a
little heifer. We got her breathing and took her around the corner into a pen,
then let Rocket out of the headcatcher and gently herded her into the pen, and
she immediately began licking and loving that baby.
Michael was very slimy by then, and Nick took him home to
change clothes. I went to finish my morning chores, and Lynn went back around
to the pen to check on the new baby. Rocket was lying down again, licking the
calf lying down, and straining hard. It looked like she might be trying to have
another calf. I went quietly into the pen, crept up behind her, and reached my
hand in—and felt a big furry rump and a little tail. She was having another
calf, but it was breech.
Michael and Nick had come back down to Michael’s truck and
trailer by that time, so we flagged them down, and began round two. Rocket
didn’t want to go back into the headcatch, but with 3 guys pushing on her, she
went in. Then Michael had to try to push the calf back into the uterus far
enough so he could manipulate each hind leg, one at a time, up over the cow’s
pelvis and bring it backward. The young cow was straining so hard, pushing
against him, that it was almost impossible. Nick and Robbie pushed her tail up
over her back as hard as they could, to put some pressure on those nerves
(which makes it more difficult for her to strain), and finally Michael was able
to get both hind legs into the birth canal and then pull the calf. It was limp
and dead, and had been dead for some time. It wasn’t full term; it had very
short hair and wasn’t as fully developed as the other twin. So, we let Rocket
out of the headcatch and she went back to the pen to finish licking her live
baby. By that time Michael and Nick were really late to go work on their
fencing job, so they just washed up a little and left. I took a photo of Rocket
and her baby in the pen.
Early the next morning we had several more cows calving. When
I looked out the window at 1:30 a.m. Buffalo Baby was calving, so Lynn and I
went outside and put her in the side pen where we could see her more easily. While
we were out there I heard a cow up in the orchard gently mooing so I hiked up
there to find Rosalee in early labor. I brought her down and put her in the
front pen. Rosalee calved very quickly and had a heifer calf at 3:25 a.m. Buffalo
Baby calved soon after, at 3:35 a.m. but I had to rush out there and break the
sac and clear the membranes and fluid away from its head, because the cow
didn’t get up immediately. The calf was still encased in the sac and fluids and
would have suffocated. It was a big heifer calf. The cow licked it for a few
minutes then lay down to clean, and the calf was getting chilled. It was cold
and windy. So I went back out and got the calf up, but she wasn’t able to get
onto her mother’s big teats. That cow’s udder has gotten progressively worse
over the years and she’s on the list to sell this fall! She still hadn’t nursed
her calf by daylight.
Robbie took the kids to the school bus then helped me feed
the cows. Rosalee and calf were doing great, but not Buffalo Baby’s calf, so we
put the cow in the headcatch, tied a leg back so she couldn’t kick us, and I
helped the calf suckle those big teats. Then Robbie went to help Michael and
Nick on their fencing project.
That afternoon Merinina calved out in the horse pasture,
right after lunch. After the calf had nursed, Lynn and I moved the pair to one
of the pens by the barn, so the other cows wouldn’t bother them. She had a
heifer also. We now have twice as many heifer calves as bull calves, just like
last year, and only a few more cows left to calve.
The old horses, Veggie (age 30) and Rubbie (age 29) are
finally shedding most of their winter hair and looking a little less shaggy. Veggie
is doing pretty well in spite of bad teeth, and Rubbie is actually quite fat.
Today it’s raining again. The creek is really high, and
Andrea caught up on her irrigating, moving some of the water and shutting down
some of the ditches that are flooding the fields too much. Alfonzo had way too
much water in one of his ditches that comes on down to our place, and it was
starting to wash out the ditch bank.
Andrea went to town to pick up Sam from school and take her
to the ER to have her elbow checked. She was doing cart wheels at school and
landed wrong and heard something snap, and her elbow is really painful. The doctor took an x-ray but couldn’t tell if
it’s broken. He put it in a sling, and told her to come back in a week to have
it checked again.
Lynn and I nailed up several poles and a board on the pen
next to the field, to eliminate the wide spots where the heifers keep sticking
their heads through the poles to try to check out the baby calves. One heifer
got her head stuck this morning and couldn’t get loose until I went into that
pen and spooked her enough to try harder to get out. We eliminated that
possibility of happening again.
Lynn got the kids off the bus this afternoon and Dani helped
me do chores—feeding the horses and heifers. This evening she helped me sort
out a couple cows and two heifers that look like they could calve tonight, and
put them in the pen in front of the house where they’ll be easy to watch. She
really enjoys helping with the cattle.
APRIL 27 – We had more rainy weather with a bit of snow last
week. One of our heifers, Sugar Bear (a daughter of Cub Cake) started calving
on a cold, snowy night so Andrea stayed here and watched her. When she went
into serious labor we put her in the barn to calve. She finally had a bull
calf, and Andrea gave a little pull on it at the end because the heifer got
tired. She mothered it well, and it was up and suckling by the time it was 1 ½
hours old. Here’s a photo of that pair a week later, up in the field.
Lynn goes to town twice a week for physical therapy for his
back. It helps his back, but then he usually does too much lifting or bending
and makes it sore again!
Another young cow, Lilly Annie, started calving the next day
and we ended up putting her in the barn to calve that evening because the
weather was still very cold and windy. By the time Lilly Annie finally calved,
Andrea stayed here on the couch to nap, and Dani was sleeping on the other
couch. Lynn got up at 4 a.m. and looked out the window and noticed the young
cows in the front pen were looking intently at Magrat in the side pen. She
hadn’t been doing anything obvious when we all “crashed” at 2 a.m. but by 4
a.m. she’d calved. Andrea and Dani both got up to help us sled the new baby to
the barn, since the weather outside was nasty/windy/cold. The heifer calf was
black with a white star in her face, white feet, and white tip on her tail—a
throwback to her great-great-great-great grandmother Baby Doll and to her
grandmother Maggie (Dani’s favorite pet cow that we had to sell a couple years
ago when she got old). So this heifer is named MagDoll and Dani hopes to make a
pet of her. Here’s a photo of Dani with the calf, soon after it was born.
We helped the calf nurse (because Magrat’s teats are too
long and low), then Andrea went home to go to bed. Dani went back to bed on the
couch and I took one last look outside and noticed that our final heifer (first
calver) was in labor. I got Dani up to help me, and we were able to put her in
the barn to calve. I sent Dani back to bed and stayed up to watch the heifer
because the calf’s feet that were emerging were huge. She finally got down to
business and had the calf ok, but I gave a pull on it, too. It was a huge
heifer calf. It’s nice to have all our first calf heifers safely calved out. There
were only 3 cows left to calve, at that point.
The next day, Sunday, was a nice day (after a cold night) so
Dani came down and rode Ed and I rode Dottie. The horses hadn’t been ridden for
a week and were a little goofy but we had a good ride. Dani practiced using
snaffle reins as well as the curb (she wants to learn how to ride English style
as well as western), for the first time, and on our way home we found a nice
white tail antler. Dani got off and got it and brought it home. Andrea was busy
irrigating all afternoon. In spite of the cold nights, the grass is growing in
the warmer afternoons and everything is looking green.
Dani helped me clean house a little, in anticipation of
guests. On Monday Lynn went to town for physical therapy, and Andrea and I made
a quick ride on Breezy and Dottie. When Dani got home from school she helped me
with chores and we put several pairs out to the field and brought Rocket and her
calf back in. Rocket still hadn’t cleaned, after having the twins, and is
losing weight. She’s eating ok and doesn’t seem to be sick, but we brought her
back to a pen by herself (below the barn) where we can pamper her with good
feed and she doesn’t have to compete with the older cows.
On Thursday we tagged more calves and put those pairs up to
the field with the other cows, and cleaned house. I made chili and corn bread
and we had lunch when Walter and Jodi arrived. They drove partway here the day
before, spent the night in Pocatello, and drove the rest of the way that
morning. It was great to see Walter again (after nearly 16 years) and meet
Jodi. We visited a bit then they went with Andrea to town (she had to go get
Charlie, who missed the bus). Dani stopped here when Lynn got her and Sam off
the bus, and helped me peel carrots and potatoes and do chores. I’d cooked a
roast and we had dinner for everyone here that evening.
Friday morning Andrea took Sam to the doctor to have her
elbow checked again and this time the x-rays showed both bones obviously
broken, next to the growth plates. She was to continue wearing the sling, with
lots of padding to keep the elbow immobile, until the bone doctor could look at
it. Fast forward to today, and Sam’s appointment with that doctor. He ordered a
hinged brace for it, which he will put on her elbow tomorrow.
Meanwhile, last Friday Walter and Jodi enjoyed helping us
feed the cows and put Cupie Doll and her heifer calf out to the field.
Jodi had been hoping to ride a horse while they were here,
so Dani rode Ed, I rode Dottie, and we adjusted stirrups on Sam’s saddle for
Jodi to ride Breezy. We had a really nice ride, making a big look over the low
range, and Breezy did very nicely for Jodi. We were lucky to get that ride
accomplished, because the weather got stormy again by late afternoon and then
it rained the rest of the days of their visit!
Friday evening was a bit hectic because Em’s car broke down
on her way home from work. Andrea had to take the kids to Mark, and Robbie
borrowed a car trailer and retrieved the car. We’d planned to have dinner at
Andrea’s house (she made lasagna) but it got really late and Lynn and I just
went to bed.
Saturday it rained all day. Andrea, Walter and Jodi helped
feed cows. Then Andrea used the tractor to take new bales to the heifers and
cows; Walter helped her while Jodi babysat the new batch of kittens that one of
Andrea’s cats had (which Andrea rescued and brought in the house). Then they
took Andrea’s car in to town for Em to drive until she gets her car fixed. We
eventually had supper at Andrea’s house. Lynn and I drove up there in the rain
on the 4-wheeler because her driveway was too slippery for our pickup, even
with 4-wheel drive (the tires have no traction).
With all the rain the creek was very high (some of the snow
on the mountains coming off) and our ditches were flooding. Sunday morning there
was water coming down across the field where one of our hay feeders is, so we
couldn’t get to it to put in new hay. Walter cooked a delicious brunch for all
of us that day, and again we drove up there on the 4-wheeler. Then Andrea, Jodi
and Walter helped Lynn put up an electric fence along the creek side of the
field above the house, to keep the calves from sticking their heads through the
elk panels (and getting stuck) and to keep them away from the ditch where they
love to eat dirt and gravel.
Andrea, Walter and Jodi went to town that evening to pick up
the kids from Mark, and I put Emerald (a second calver) in the calving pen. Since
we wanted to make sure she calved ok, we ate dinner at our house that evening
(so we could watch her, and because Jodi wanted to see a calf born). Andrea
went up to her house and brought the food down and we had a pot luck. Emerald
calved after dark, with her hind end pointed the wrong way for Jodi to get a
very good view from the window. I ran out to make sure the sac was broken, and
Andrea and I got the calf breathing, but had to fend off the mama because she
was quite upset with us messing with her calf! It was a huge bull calf (twice
as big as the little heifer she had last year) so it was a wonder she was able
to have it so quickly and easily (only 15 minutes from the time the amnion sac
came into view, until the time she delivered the calf).
That pen was muddy and wet, several deep puddles from the rain.
The calf didn’t get up, so when he was 2 hours old Andrea and I went back out to
get him up. He was big, clumsy and wobbly, flopping around and likely to end up
in the mud puddles. So we got the calf sled and pulled him to the barn with
mama following—so he’d have a clean dry place to get himself organized and get
up and suckle.
The next morning the power went off while I was doing chores
and watering the horses, so I had to wait and finish watering them later. Walter
helped Andrea move hay around with the tractor before she went to town for her
physical therapy. Her old graft contractures are still pulling her back and
neck out of line, and the physical therapy is helping her a little. I cooked
dinner for the whole crew again, and Emily and her boyfriend came out, too. Meanwhile
we put Emerald and her calf out of the barn into one of the second day pens.
Yesterday Andrea, Walter and Jodi took the kids to school
and then helped me with chores and feeding when they got back. Before they left
to go back home to Colorado, Andrea took them for a drive up the creek, so Jodi
could see the old cabin where Walter lived when he first came here. They drove
on up the creek into the forest, so she could see the view looking down the
whole valley.
Then they headed home, but hope to come back and visit us
again in November.
Today the weather cleared up and we actually had sunshine. Andrea
helped me feed the cows after she got back from taking Sam to the doctor to
have her elbow checked (and will take her in again tomorrow for the hinged
brace). We’re still waiting for our last cow (Maggeriete, nickname Shrek) to
calve. She was our last one to calve last year, too, when she had
Butterflybrow.
This afternoon when I checked on the calves and watered the
cows, I took a few photos of some of the cows and calves, including Dani’s
favorite calf MagDoll, and snapped a picture of Lynn waiting for me, sitting on
some bales at my haystack, enjoying the afternoon sunshine.