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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Asaki. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Name that Calf

Asaki as a baby

Yesterday, my cow, Asaki, had a bright red and white heifer calf. Asaki herself was named in a name the calf contest back in the day, by Mrs. Mecomber.



Now it is time to name her new baby. I hope you'll all help! She is milking shorthorn and Holstein, and because she is red, out of a red cow, she can be shown. The kids are talking about showing her even though she wasn't really born in one of the "good" months.

Becky has suggested Abunga, going along with the, "This is my cow....Asaki...." theme. I hope you will have some great ideas too..... Please leave suggestions in the comments. We will pull one out of the trusty old hat and that will be the baby's name. 


Second breakfast

Friday, July 08, 2011

I Guess


If I didn't have a heart attack yesterday I am probably not going to have one right away.

I got sick of the bull not having any water. The water tub the boss gave him was too small and I was always filling it. And he is a snorty, snotty little bugger and I don't like going around him, but I had to get right up close to fill his tub every day.. I decided to take action, by myself, as no one was home but me. Mistake. Big mistake.

I put a big water tub in with him and filled it. The whole time I was running the hose the little creep was threatening me. As soon as it was full he drank what he wanted and then started working it over with his head...thank God he doesn't have horns.

An hour later I went out to check him and he had broken out the top board of his pen (which had previously been cracked) and was only held in by boards up to his brisket. All he had to do to get out was step over...he wouldn't have even had to lift his feet very high.

I called the boss, who was taking some paper work to his aunt, and stood on the porch with a stick, hoping to not see him rambling down the driveway before help arrived.

He stayed in at least and the guys moved him over to the cow barn on a halter. It was pretty much of a rodeo. He is just a little bull, but he is not nice, no sirree.

We were going to put him in a pen with some heifers, but decided instead to put him in a stanchion and put a ring in his nose....which was done. We were kind of concerned about what he might do if he jumped out or tore up another pen.

He greeted me when I went in to milk last night with threatening bellows and snorting. I was really, really, really glad that he was locked up by his head, the stanchion was tied shut and he was sporting a little chain just in case.

Then just as I was putting the machine on Bayliner, Liz let out a yell and I saw (and heard) a wall of brown, thundering down the manger.

That is when, if I was going to have that heart attack, it would have happened.

I screamed for the boss, who milks in the back of the barn and hollered at the girls to get out of the way. And looked for a pitchfork.

Then Liz called over, "Mom, it's not the bull, it's just Shamrock."

Shamrock is about the same size as the bull and she was having a field day racing up and down the barn, but she is just a Jersey heifer. It took a while, because she was having fun, but Liz caught her and put her out in a pen with her half sister, Shameless, who was put there to make room for the bull.

Time for a sigh of relief, right?

Heck no! In all the excitement, my cow Asaki (read that out loud....Rebecca named her in a name the calf contest a while back) blew out of her stanchion and little Cinnamon jumped through a stall and in with her great big yearling older sister, Rio.

Fun, fun, fun. Asaki ran up the back manger. Cinnamon was terrified, although thankfully Rio was a real lady about the whole affair and just licked her little sister. It took a while before everybody was caught and put back where they belong.

I am too old for this. I was ALWAYS too old for this. Where do I get my (one way) ticket to some place with a beach, something cold with a little umbrella, and maybe some interesting shells and fish and birds? I think I am ready. No, scratch that. I KNOW I am ready.


Thursday, October 03, 2013

Good Morning from the Girls


 Pecan with her new baby boy...photo taken by Liz with her phone. He was sired by a Cal Clark Board Chairman son we had some years ago.



Lemmie is tall. Lemmie has a long neck. Lemmie can help herself to nice, fresh green chop that not many of the other cows can reach.

And so she does.



My cow, Asaki. Asaki is one of those cows you wish you could clone by the dozen. Calm, sensible, easy to milk and easy on the eyes. We like her.



Little bitty Scotty. Scotty is half Jersey, out of Broadway, who is half milking shorthorn and half Holstein, so she has the breeds pretty well covered. She is small, but she is a real hard worker..... pretty much the only Jersey I have ever enjoyed milking.

Here is a collage of Scotty's baby pictures.



Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Name that Calf

As promised

Long time followers and Farm Side readers are probably familiar with the Name That Calf contest phenomenon.

The rules are simple. We here at Northview need a name for a new baby. You out in blog land are clever, inventive, and kind enough to be helpful. And of course, everyone, everywhere, is eager to receive the fabulous prize, which is to have a beautiful bovine go through life sporting the name you gave it.

In past contests, lovely Bama Breeze was named by Florida Cracker. Asaki, as in "this is my cow, Asaki," got her moniker from Mrs. Mecomber. Liz has several named by kind folks as far away as Oregon. Dalkeith, Takala, Maureen, Hazel, just to name a few....

Anyhoo, it has come to pass that I have a really nice calf, and no one can come up with a name that is quite....enough....if you get know what I mean. Nothing quite seems to fit...to have that ring that stands out just so.......

The name-ee is half milking shorthorn and half Holstein, sired by our shorthorn bull, Checkerboard Magnum's Promise. Her dam is a gigantic first calf heifer out of my Trixie family (ask Alan if she looks like Trixie). Mama's name is Frieland Chilt Encore, and she is sired by a Champion son, Chilton. Her dam is my old England cow, who sadly had a preemie while we were at camp, which only lived one day.

Shamelessly nameless is the color of a pale carrot, a soft, orangy red. Her face has a faint roaning pattern that makes it look as if the sun was shining on it all the time....and she has a few snowflake-like speckles on her legs.
(I will try to get a pic this morning at milking.)

She was a total surprise to me. Although Encore's maternal grandsire was Citation R Maple, none of her other family members ever showed any sign of being a red carrier. A sure sign of carrying the gene for a red coat is having a red calf...recessive gene and all. This opens up some interesting possibilities, as England must be a red carrier too. She is an old cow, but, you never know.

I am going to say thanks in advance for all the wonderful names I expect you will probably come up with. I enjoy the connection I feel with my blog friends when I care for animals that you good folks have named. I get a huge kick out of the clever and perfectly good fitting names you have come up with too.....Liz has the naming hat (into which we put slips with your baby names) all primed and ready....

So, ready, set, go......

Monday, March 31, 2014

Life After Cows

One last pic of Broadway, my favorite cow, and probably the best one I ever bred.
I miss her the most.

People have been telling me, for years, ever since it got really hard to pay the bills running a small dairy farm in one of the highest taxed and most regulated venues in America, that there is life after cows. That you pick up, go on, do something else, and maybe are relieved not to have to worry so much, juggle so many balls, always be bound by the constraints of animal needs.

 Can't say as I ever believed it. I started milking cows for a living on someone else's farm 35 years ago. The job has been my compass, salvation, nightmare, and joy ever since. You can raise good kids on a farm....it's a great, if difficult life.

However, starting today I guess I am going to find out if what folks says is true. With my heart clanging in my chest like the clapper in an iron bell, I helped load our heifers on trucks on Saturday, and all but two of the milk cows yesterday. Saturday we had help from family members. Yesterday it was just Ralph, me, and a bunch of strangers. Can I just say that it was one time that I really, really wished that I was a girly girl and could sit in the house and do my nails or something

Yesterday ranks well up there in the top ten worst days in my life. There were many factors involved in our decision, high fuel and feed costs, several years of disastrous wet weather and flooding, the 08 and 09 dairy price disaster, and such, but paying several months worth of income twice a year in school and county tax was the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back.

This year it was maybe lose the farm for taxes or sell the cows. And so.

If you want to buy them, they are hard-working pasture cows, that will make milk on low quality feed. They will run out to grass and graze all day and come in and fill the milk pail for you. They are over at Hosking's Sales. You can even bring home cows whose names are known around the world...thanks to Blogger and the Farm Side. Broadway, Carlene, Foolish, Cevin, Asaki...yes, I had to sell my cow, Asaki....Baja, Camry, Zulu, Scotty, Dalkeith, Monday, Betty, and Lucky and the rest are selling. All but two.

Friends in Ohio will buy Bama Breeze so she will stay. at least for a while. And Liz is buying Neon Moon to maybe breed a calf for Peggy to show when she gets bigger. We saved back a handful of small heifers that wouldn't bring what they are worth to sell so we can pay the damned school taxes this fall, and a set of dairy steers for the same purpose. 

I spent yesterday afternoon holding a sleeping Peggy, her sweet small hand curled around my finger, strong as a good milker's hand would be. Life after cows, right there in my lap.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Name That Calf


Been a while since we did one of these, but we have a very special calf for you to name. I am excited about this baby. She is a daughter of one of my favorite cows, Camry, a daughter of Ocean-View Extra Special out of our old Butternut cow. The newbie's sire is Juniper Rotate Jed.

Butternut was one of five full sisters by Mansion Valley Delaware, out of a cow we had that would not conceive to any other bull. She had five heifers in a row and they did really well for us. Two of them, Birch and Balsam, even won really tough heifer classes. Balsam took junior heifer calf at Altamont and Birch won intermediate heifer at both Fonda and Altamont. She was a February calf and to win against animals so much older than she, at a fair like Fonda, was a big deal to us.

Balsam was born on the 29th of February, so she is young cow in birthdays, but a bovine senior citizen in real life. She is the only one of the sisters still with us, but her family is thriving, with Bayberry, my beautiful Broadway, Rosie, and many others descended from her still standing in the barn. This new baby has a lot of promise and I have real high hopes for her.

If you've been here a while, you know how the name the calf contest goes. You folks are clever, we are unable to come up with a name, so we ask you to offer suggestions. We write them on slips of paper, toss them in a hat and pull out a winner.

Asaki is one example of a cow named this way, as is Bama Breeze. Both still live with us and are still called and registered under their contest names. And that is the prize....your choice of names bestowed upon our new little black girl, printed on her registration paper, and should she reach the show ring, on her sign.

Monday, February 04, 2008

Asaki


Mrs. Mecomber gets to do the honors. Thanks again to everyone who participated in the naming of this baby.

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Second Gen


Milking shorthorn bull. Old Promise is long gone, although we froze three hundred units before we sold him. Alas, most of them are gone too, but we really like the calves from the shorthorn bulls on our Holstein heifers.

We bought another bull a couple of years ago, but he had been a girl's pet, far too friendly and thus far too dangerous. We never used him and just beefed him after a while. He was always trying to get out of his pen to get at/to people. A bull should respect humans and not want to be all cuddly and cute and killer.

Thus we bred our own. Mated Promise with my cow, Asaki and got this guy, who joined his new harem earlier this week. All bulls are dangerous, but he has a lot more respect for us than the second one we bought.Danged if I can remember what we named him....maybe we didn't.

Friday, March 02, 2012

Red Letter

Night.....


Our cow, Asaki, decided to have her calf last night at around 11. Alas, a bull, but a really handsome guy.








Between helping the boss with her and a 3:30 barn check I am kind of stupid today...but here are some pics of him plus another bull calf. The bottom calf is Licorice's Maxwell son. 


Maxwell is at ABS, as a young sire. We have two calves by him, both bulls, alas, but they are really outstanding. Of course, if you look at his mama, here, you can probably see why. Liz has good taste.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Regular or High Test?

Carlene, about twenty minutes before it started

Storms that is...



Last night was something, oh, yes indeed. We went out to do chores early, because the milk truck driver called to say he would be picking up right after night milking instead of some time between day milkings. We needed to be done for him, so he could pump off the milk and we could get the tank washed.

Liz heading home after all the fun


Good thing we did. All day there were threats of bad storms and last night we got 'em.

Becky JUST got off the hill with the herd, maybe three minutes before the rain began driving down like a marching army. In fact I had to go let Blitz through the gate...she always lingers...and got drenched.

Then the sky turned black and yellow like an old bruise and all hell broke loose.

We went ahead an milked, because we simply had to, but I didn't spend any time leaning on metal stall dividers or touching the pipeline. I did keep calling the boss over to look out the door at the heifers in the yard. All their white spots looked green in the weird light. 

And we all know what that means. Liz checked her phone and saw that there were tornado warnings all over the region.

Then the lights began to flicker. I called for everybody to gather up all machines...we were almost done...and get them on the high-producing cows at the end of my line, Asaki, Cevin, etc. We did just that...wanted to hustle and get them milked before the power went out and all.

And then it stopped.


The sun came out. 

The rain slowed to a trickle and everything was done......we lucked out and got the regular variety of storm, lots of thunder, lightning and wind, but no harm seemed to be done.

Just a lot of drama...like a tantrum in the sky.

Other areas weren't as lucky. Check out that video at the second link. Wow! 

So we got just a regular storm, but plenty of high test examples hit all around us.



The sky after the storm

Wednesday, June 01, 2011

June is Dairy Month


Thank you girls for all the good things you make possible.

Thank you Broadway, Dalkeith, Zinnia, Cider, Lemonade, ETrain, Camry, Egypt (BooBoo) Carlene, Bama Breeze, Bayliner, Magic, Bailey, Booth, Verona, Heather, Balsam, Bayberry, Consequence, Blink, Spruce, Asaki, Pecan, Baja, Zulu, Armada, Evidence, Syracuse, Boston, Lucky, Bonneville, Neon Moon, Monday, Blitz, Mandy, Hollywood, Moments, Lakota, Foolish, Detroit, Sugar, Lucky, Licorice, Chickadee, Gracie and all the Northview girls...and all the other, red, brown, black and white and roan cows that work hard to keep us in cheese, ice cream, and cold, fresh milk.

Friday, April 19, 2013

Murphy's Morning


Freshly showered, clean set of work clothes, up extra-early to get the book work out of the way so I could help with outdoor work.

Which is endlessly more fun than bookkeeping....

Liz came in real early so she could get on the road for her job as early as possible and went over to feed the  calves.

Phone rings. Asaki and Foolish are loose in the barn, everything is a godawful mess and Lucky won't get up.

So much for early.. and so much for clean

By the time Lucky was on her feet and outdoors...she is okay, just kind of sore from those two monsters beating up on her...and the manger was shoveled out...and everybody was milked, bedded, turned out, fed, etc. etc. clean anything was a dim memory in the rear view mirror of farming.

Ah, well, who cares about smelling or looking good anyhow? Not going anywhere but out to the field to fix fence....

Friday, April 04, 2014

Bossy Retrospective

Broadway on a grassy day
Rosie at the fair
 Here are some pics of Rosie, and her mama, Broadway, taken over the years.  I probably have more shots of Broadway than of any other cow we ever owned...I can't resist the red ones, and she sure is red.


Broadway with Bloomingdale. Don't know where the latter went

We found out last night that they both went to the same farm and are settling in well.


BDub as we called her, has been my favorite since the day she was born. By our Checkerboard Magnums Promise bull out of Alan's show cow, Bayberry, she born as red as a candle flame and she lit up the barn for all the years she stood there. The only reason I didn't keep her instead of Bama, my other favorite, is that Bama, as a three quartered cow, would definitely have gone for beef.


Rosie was sired by  Spungold Frolic Poker. Liz always loved her dark roan coat.  

Broadway, out in a hutch as a baby

Back when we were on test Broadway always held her own with, or surpassed, our best Holsteins of her age group in milk production.



She also always held her own in the barnyard when there was scuffling over the feed bunk. She was not a pet like Bama, preferring to be a bit more aloof, but she suffered my attentions calmly.


Rosie, during the name the calf contest that gave her her name

When we were loading out I was so proud of her. She stood in the first stall in the barn. The big noisy trailers were right behind her and she was one of the last cows loaded. Thus all the noise and movement and excitement of moving cattle was right behind her stall. At one point Betty and Asaki both ran up into the stall between her and Dalkeith.


Promise, just before we sent him to be drawn
She never reacted at all except to look around wondering what the heck was going on. I could have cried at the level of trust she had in us. We had never hurt her so she figured that we never would. The auctioneer said later that ours were one of the calmest bunches of cows he had sold. We never hurt them, handled them constantly from birth, and cared a lot about them. Guess they knew it.

I am delighted that both girls went to a good home where they will have a second chance. Many thanks to the young man who purchased them and was kind enough to let us know.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

More tales from the key drive

2004 Farm Side this time and much in the same vein as one a little while ago. Sorry about doing this but we are so insanely busy these days....that pesky internship will be over soon though.


Last night

Back in 2001 I told you about some types of cows that grace the average dairy farm, from Feed-Flinging Freda to Light Foot Lucy. Recently I realized that there are personality types among calves as well. You might notice this especially when, for one reason or another, (such as the regular stalls being full), there are baby cows tied in all sorts of weird and wonderful places around the barn. A very common and painful calf is the Knee-Buckin’ Biter. These little darlings know darned well that anything human probably has a bucket of milk secreted somewhere upon their person. KBB’s obviously believe that if they grab that human by the side of the leg, dig in their lower front teeth, and punch very, very hard with their flinty little heads, the bucket of milk will instantly be forthcoming. Actually the only thing forthcoming is the howl of pain produced by the poor human when their knee is chopped from under them while several precise curls of flesh are gouged away by chisel-like baby teeth. One of the twins that was born last week is a ferocious Knee-Buckin’ Biter. I have learned to squeeze around her, just out of reach of her eager mouth, but she nailed Ralph good this morning, much to his painful dismay.

Then there is the High-Kickin’ Heeler calf. A calf of this persuasion will stand quite still, calmly munching grain, as you walk by. Molasses wouldn’t melt in her mouth. Then just as you get almost past, but still nicely in reach, she will thrust both hind feet skyward, as if performing the Highland fling before an audience of thousands. Hoofs will flash past your head making you flinch in terror and manure will splatter all over you. And that’s if she misses. If she connects, well, all I can say is ouch.

More of a nuisance than a danger is the Rope-Chewing Chaser. These calves can’t seem to get enough fiber in their diet, no matter how much forage they eat. If they are tied properly with collars and chains they cause few problems, but woe betide the farmer who ties one up with some handy dandy bailing twine. Sweet little calfie-poo will gaze introspectively ceiling ward without a care in the world, all the while contemplatively chewing and eating the rope that ties her up, the one that holds her water bucket, and any loose twine she finds lying around too. Besides being the one that is running gleefully up and down the aisle every time you come to the barn, she is also the one who has all kinds of tummy problems caused by eating string.

There is a whole subset of calves that become apparent when someone begins training for the show season. First is the Thick-Headed Thrower calf. These little fools don’t seem to realize that the most pampered and beloved calves in the world grow up in a show string. As soon as a calf of this type has a halter placed on her noggin (which is apparently empty) and is asked to come along quietly, she revolts ala Gandhi.

She rolls her eyes, tosses her head, throws herself up side down (preferably in the gutter) and lies there as if taken suddenly dead. No amount of pulling or cajoling will induce her to stand up until she is positive that she has won the battle. Calves of this sort miss all the fun of going to the fair and being patted, puffed and coddled all together.

People-Pinching-Punchers are an alternative form of show calf. They are all too happy to move, but are lacking in both braking mechanism and spatial judgment. A PPP calf will squash you flat against a wall in the blink of an eye. She will also gladly drag you to the wash rack at a canter without regard to obstacles, such as people, baby strollers, Hereford bulls the size of semis, or mounds of hay bales belonging to someone else. PPP’s will clear lawn chairs and leap tall buildings at a single bound. Nobody likes them; everybody has them.

Then there are the Toe-Tapping-Topplers. These little sweethearts neither play dead nor run over your prone body (after they render it that way). Instead a TTT bides her time, strolling elegantly around the show ring, head held high and proud, looking like the star of the show that she knows she is. Then, just when the judge, (and all the spectators), are looking right at her (and you, of course), she steps firmly on your foot anchoring you solidly in place. She then nudges you firmly with her shoulder, dumping you neatly into the shavings in the ring. (At least you hope it is only shavings.) Every one laughs and you look monumentally silly. Your foot hurts like heck too.


The garden pond is beginning to shape up a little

Naturally, not unlike the Plain Old Polly milk cow, who does her job day in and day out without theatrics or fanfare, there is the Lovely-Little-Lady calf. LLL’s don’t kick, bite, or run rampant through the barn raising Cain. These ordinary critters stay where they are put, eat cow feed instead of body parts, and treat people with respect and affection. We have one of those right now; a KPat daughter named Frieland KPat Evidence. (We call her Evie). One of Becky’s babies, she stands tied on the corner of a busy walkway, right next to the curb where we like to sit while we wait for the last few cows to finish milking. We avoid tying calves there when we can, as they turn into KBB’S or HKH’s very quickly and make everybody miserable when they sit there resting their tired feet. However, Evie just eats, moves her fanny out of your way when you walk by, and lays her head in any convenient lap (if ear scratches are offered by the lap’s owner). Needless to say I wouldn’t mind having a dozen Evies. However, like all barns, ours is full of all the other kinds.



***Evie is out at pasture now expecting her first calf. She will join the milking string next month I think. However, as in a normal spring we have a barn full of KBBs HKHs and several sweet little LLLS, notably November, Simple Miracles, Egypt, Dalkeith and Asaki

Saturday, November 17, 2012

My Own Cows


Our herd is mostly registered or eligible for registry and we each own our own cows, so we always know who is who. Because I pay the bills I am usually more willing to sell mine when the time comes than might otherwise be the case.

Thus, my herd was getting pretty small. However, with the boss giving me Asaki things were looking up.

Then I was just on the phone with Alan, who almost never makes it home any more, and he gave me Zulu, AKA Alpha Zulu Pinecone, or "Runner" because she always comes into the barn on a high jog and you don't wanna get in her way.

I am delighted. I always milked and liked her mother, old Zinnia, a swing-bagged, big-bodied old misery, who liked me for some reason and pretty much let me do whatever I wanted with her. Otherwise I couldn't have milked her as she was HUGE and her udder hung almost to the floor and was wide as a washtub. Not being awful stretchy in length, I had to put my head right down under her to milk her. If she had wanted to she could have killed me, but she never did. She was not quite as kind to others and was a calf thief as well.

So anyhow, I have two new (to my bunch) cows to add to those I already own.

Let's see....Broadway my original milking shorthorn, Scotty, my three-breed cow, Egypt, small, black, cranky, but hard-working, Velvet, not exactly my favorite, but...Northstar, another milking shorthorn, Dublin, young cow I got in a trade, Carlene, probably my best cow, another one the boss gave me, and Lucky, red carrier, bred back to Maxwell, hoping for a red heifer, but not holding my breath.

Some heifers too, Betty, a Citation-R Maple coming up to calving, a few more milking shorthorns, Pumpkin, Laramie, Rosie, her full sister, Bloomingdale, Strawberry, Cayenne, some Holsteins, including Liverpool, Lucky's last year's calf, Bastille, sister to Bama Breeze, a shorthorn steer calf, CleoPatrick (out of Egypt), and probably a couple of others I am not thinking of.

Wow, I feel lucky! No wonder I keep wanting to hang on and keep going with such a good bunch of girls (and the one steer).