Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Good morning. Sorry about yesterday. It dawned clear and sharp and bright. The air was clean and fresh. It didn't rain. So everybody in the family worked like a dog with two tails to take advantage before it starts pouring again. (This afternoon by all accounts.) Between grabbing a good day when we could and Frontier being down most of the day, I barely even looked at the computer. We cleaned the barn and Becky swept the whole house. I weeded the small garden patch. The guys chopped haylage. We cleaned mangers. We moved heifers up on the hill into the big heifer pasture.
They are a bunch of big ones we really wanted to keep right by the house for the summer, as we are breeding them AI. We need to see when they come in season and be able to catch them to do that. There are self-locking stanchions there we can use for the latter job. However with all the rain the mud in the yard became ridiculous. They just couldn't stay in it any longer. Now they are in a huge field with no headlocks, where it will be hard to see them in heat let alone catch them. We had to think about their health and comfort though.
Unfortunately it is also the field where we are holding the dry cows and calving some of them. Liz goes out every day and walks that fence and checks for new calves or new problems. I will worry more now as some of the big heifers are aggressive and others are overly friendly. (When something weighs well over a thousand pounds, cuddly is bad.) She takes a cell phone and a big stick but still....it got pretty western yesterday moving some of them. One of them, a big, ugly beast named Armada, was downright dangerous when we were trying to get her up the lane. (I am too old to dodge charging heifers, I have to say.) I think she may have sealed her fate and be looking at an auction-bound trailer ride next time we handle them. I need money to pay bills and we don't need dangerous animals. This was the second time she has caused problems.
Today we get another good weather day before storms are expected for tonight. Liz and I need to set up a couple of calf hutches as we have more calves than we have places to put them. We need to get strawberries before the season ends. Rain and frost have made that a big problem. Becky needs to get taken to Walmart for going to Potsdam supplies.
We lost one of our best heifers to bloat Saturday night into Sunday (one of those in the barn until ten thirty nights). I for one still haven't gotten past it. If you have them you will lose them, s**t happens and all, but she was a Silky Cousteau out of an Ocean View Extra Special, a really, really special animal. It was just a freak thing. We treated her and had her coming around good, but she was still pretty weak. Sunday morning Liz and Ralph milk. She was okay then. They came in from the barn for breakfast and while they were eating she rolled herself over on her head and probably suffocated. Only heifer her mother ever had and she is gone too so.....
Just a lousy weekend overall.
I'm sorry y'all are having a rough time right now. ((HUGS))
ReplyDeleteI hope it gets better quickly. :)
I can totally relate. Had a rough weekend here also...
ReplyDeleteThings will be better soon... I hope and pray.
Sorry, 3C's... it always sucks when you think they are going to be fine and then when they arn't it takes you by surprise... I hope the weather changes soon, too... Overcast and rainy does nothing for the mood.
ReplyDeleteDoesn't it always seem that the mean ones never go down and the good ones do?
ReplyDeleteGlad you got a break in the weather, and could get some things done.
Hope your Mom is doing OK.
I liked the hard day's work, and get rid of the problem one - forgiveness is for you not them.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, wish you could stop writing on a positive note - for now I feel sad and I wasn't there until now in your loss. Sorry to read about it and I do hope you started healing. Thanks for telling us about real farming family's loves and life, even the sadder than we want parts.
Sorry, that was one tough weekend. Hope things are improving ... storming like crazy here in the sunshine state!
ReplyDeleteWe lost a good one a couple weeks ago when 3 others were in heat and knocked her into the feed bunk. Found her in the a.m. bloated & dead. Ugh-never had that one happen before.
ReplyDeleteMust be something in the air. We've had late nights lately too.
Bulk tank wasn't working last night so had to wait for repairman before milking. Then finally done milking when I noticed heifer & milkers were mixed together when they knocked a gate down. Another 10:30 night! Then this old gal can't seem to get going the next day!
Definitely a weekend to forget! Hope ya'll get some better weather soon - you're gonna need a boat to get to the barn if it keeps raining like that.
ReplyDeleteDoesn't it always seem to be bad things happen in threes. I feel for you and we are here if you need anything. I'm glad we had at least one good day. I did get my garden weeded and plants moved from in the house to outside porch. Still have two gardens to go but of course as you know the weather did not cooperate.
ReplyDeleteSorry to hear about the heifer. I guess it's a part of operating but not a good part. Hope things get better for you.
ReplyDelete......I could lend Liz a horse?!!!
ReplyDeleteSorry to hear of your misfortunes. Your life, although a happy one, always seem so harsh. Then add tragedy to that. It sucks. But...working like a dog with two tails? Got a chuckle out of that. Never heard it before but it sure is descriptive!
ReplyDeleteDani, thanks, you are really kind.
ReplyDeleteSara, I know, it seems as if every single farmer I talk to is hanging on to their composure by the tips of their very ragged fingernails. These are scary hard times and nothing that is coming along is making them look any better. thanks
WW, we need sun...badly...brought some overpriced strawberries yesterday as the weather has about wiped out the crop. they were so sour from lack of sun. My mom says even the wild ones are sour
Nita, we tried so hard! We were all in the barn til after ten and Liz stayed up with her almost all night. One problem was she was one of those heifers with no want to at all. As soon as she bloated she instantly gave up. It is hard to bring them through when they give up first.
Earl, sorry about the negativity. Things have just been coming at us so thick and fast it is hard to sort through the disasters to find the kernel of good that is always there if you look hard enough. Thank God for wrens and robins and good brothers and my wonderful family. Thanks for being so kind in your words. They are appreciated.
FC, it was a stinker! I hope the rain is what you are needing. We have had so much too much that it is looking like a crop disaster.
LInda, isn't it hard when things break and animals die and you just have to keep slogging along somehow. It is so hard to keep positive. thanks for sharing...misery loves company I guess, but I told my husband about your troubles to try to put the weekend in perspective. It sure was a nasty one.
SC Momma, thanks, you sure have the right of it. All day yesterday the kids were rescuing the chickens from getting stuck in the mud! It is that wet!
LIsa, thanks dear friend. I know you guys are always there if we need you and I am grateful even if I can't take advantage of it. It needs to stop raining or there won't be anything this fall/
Linda, it is just part of the job, but it is a hard part indeed. This one was a kid favorite, and so well bred.
And as to the horse....we used to use one and it was good....
Very sorry to hear of the loss of the heifer. Oh, that can be so hard when its a special one. Bad luck seems to target ones like that.
ReplyDeleteI hope all goes well with the freshenings out in the field. Yes, everyone please be very careful.
Jeanelle, it does seem that way doesn't it?
ReplyDelete