Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Don't Try This at Home
Yesterday Liz and I continued our ongoing getting-ready-for-winter marathon. We took a break from food production and preservation to head to the heifer barn to bag up some sawdust and wood chips. Her goal was baby calf bedding. Mine was something to put in Nick's doghouse and run. (Come real cold weather, he will come inside, and have straw for when he is out, but for now sawdust is warm enough.)
While I waited for her to finish turning Mandy and Blitz out in the barnyard for the day I decided to start without her. Our heifer barn is an antiquated kind of tired-around-the-edges structure, which was once the milking barn for the farm that went with our house. Made for Jerseys, the stalls were too small for even Holstein heifers, so we replaced them with pens years ago.
During last winter, a gang of big heifers ran in and out of one of the pens as they wished and were fed outside along a fence. Over the course of the winter, a noticeable quantity of feed and its inevitable by product built up along that fence, which is right across the handiest way to the heifer mow where the sawdust is.
It has rained a lot this year.
I didn't think of that.
Rather than struggle through head-high weeds and grass, I started to cross that pile of feed and the after affects of feed with my grain bag and shovel. Yep, Nick was going to be comfy at night if I had anything to say about it.
I managed to take about eight steps out onto the "stuff". I could feel a little sinking sensation, but heck, how deep could it be? And if I used a sort of quick tippy toe action I ought to be able to get across.
Or not. Just about exactly in the middle my left foot sank right to the top of my rubber barn boot (thank God I decided to wear them instead of sneakers!)
I was really, really stuck. Could not move at all. Boot was about one inch from filling with water. Other foot was still on top, but mighty precariously so.
I hollered for Liz.
She couldn't hear me.
I couldn't just stay there until someone came, so finally I did what I had to.
No, it is not nice to be barefoot in those circumstances.
Yes, I am glad I had a shovel with which to extricate that left boot.
And yeah, after I finally got loose and got my foot clean and my wool sock back on and my boot back on I went down and chopped a path through the weeds and grass so we could get into the barn the other way.
I sure hope Nick appreciates what I went through for him.
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9 comments:
Glad you were able to get unstuck on your own. It's miserable having to wait for someone to help you out.
I hate it when I get my boots stuck. Always happens to me in the pig pen. Yuck!
Hope Nick was comfy last night :)
:) sorry had to chuckle... it sounds so much like something that will happen here.
What always seems to happen to me is running out of gas on the back forty of the place, in sneakers and having to cross the creak, and squish squish squish... all the way home.
Here's to hoping today is better and that winters progression is slow in really coming.
I had to laugh a little too. Nick is a lucky dog! Funny what we go through and folks have NO idea...
I, too, had to laugh! Been there, done that... You do have an entertaining way of describing an otherwise nasty and scary event. I'm not sure I would have had the courage to stick my bare foot in that.
All I can say is you should have waited for me. I told you I would get the sawdust for you and you didn't even need to go in the barn. Though I was glad of the company. I am also glad I now know roughly how many bags I need per day for the calves we have now so I don't have to drag as much around as I did this afternoon.
Heh. I'm sure that the "beef byproduct" - stored there for so long, had plenty of time to amplify the offensive odor effect. It's like it's been stored up and aging not so gracefully!
Deb, much as I hate getting stuck it was just what I deserved. As Alan pointed out to me the turkey got stuck in there all summer...lol And after all that work it turned so cold I had to bring Nick in the house.
Sara, glad it made you laugh...not the first time I have ever gotten stuck, but surely the worst. lol
Teri, stuck in....yeah, stuck in that...what next? lol
NW, no choice. I actually stood there for a while pondering my options before I took my boot off. Tried to dig out with my handy, dandy shovel, but it was packed so hard you would have thought you could drive a truck over it...or perhaps not. lol
Kiddo, you have been working like a whole team of dogs lately...don't think I haven't noticed. If there is anything that can be done to help this situation, you sure are doing it. Love you
Jeffo, um, yeah, exactly...and you know how rotten corn silage smells? That was the feed that was mixed in. rofl
Next time maybe you'll leave the kid to do it? Must have been lack of caffeine ;)
LInda, coulda been I guess. lol. Worst part of it is that she was quite willing...
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