Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Name that Calf
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......
Half'n half, or hafenhaf refering to the dairy product as well as the ancestry.
ReplyDeleteGorevan Girl,
ReplyDeleteseems to me. Sounds like an real beauty.
Anne Shirley... a little red headed snippet :) then you could go off the whole Anne of Green Gables books for future generations!
ReplyDeleteThat's what I do (going off of books and such)... saves so much in the naming process! LOL
Red Chex's
ReplyDeleteI think Miss Shortstein seems to fit.
ReplyDeleteOk, how about Promise's Ovation.
ReplyDeleteCheckerboard did make a "promise" to Encore....for a calf.
SECRETARIAT!
ReplyDeleteOr Core Promise.
Maureen Magnum.
ReplyDeleteOne for the redheaded O'Hara of days past and one for her daddy. The latter could also be a promise of sorts as to her milk production.
Fattid!
ReplyDeleteScarlett, Carrot, Rosie, Strawberry, Cherry Chilton, Helen (helen reddy)...that's all i can think of for now. good luck and i hope the perfect name is found that beauty. her eye is so soft and cute!
ReplyDeleteYou said, snowflake!
ReplyDeleteGiven the flashes of white colour down at least three of the legs and that special lightening flash down the right front leg, I like the name "Flash Dancer."
ReplyDeletePromising Rose!
ReplyDeleteNorthstar Maple Reprise
ReplyDeleteNorthstar for Northview and the blazing star on her pretty little face; Maple for her grandma; Reprise for the return of the red.
i like rusty. or spot. blaze? petunia. hmm.
ReplyDeleteis she as soft as she looks?
I am so NOT good at naming other people's cattle! I came up with..
ReplyDeleteBella Rose
Thank you one and all! A great batch of names!
ReplyDelete