Monday, August 16, 2010
Pins and Needles
Fair time is nervous time for me.
I worry.
The drive is terrible. 32 miles of twisting, winding road, bad enough in the day time, horrible at night when shared with hard core elbow benders and worse. We have been followed, harassed and witnessed massive drug busts while on that merry jaunt to the show and back.
Then there are the cattle. I worry about them. They are so vulnerable to who knows what while they are there. There is a good watchman, but there are so many um.....people....not cow people...all kinds of people. And loose cows, always a few loose cows.
And dear Lemmie has to be hand milked today as the milking parlor won't be open until tonight. She has been hand milked before, but I worry. She is one of my very favorites to milk, tall enough so I barely have to bend down to put the machine on, always clean with a properly placed udder, just a very nice girl...and she is the best cow Becky has ever had. Here at home one of Liz's best heifers, a Silky Cousteau, out of Mandy herself, turned up with a bum hock yesterday. Real bad. She is a big strapping thing, but somebody or something did her harm. Probably one of the other big heifers in that pasture. They tend to play rough. I am so worried about her too. That whole family of cows is very soft, not toughies like some who will just rub a little dirt in it and walk it off. I hope she is better today.
And then there is Gael. Gael is Liz's border collie, Mike's half sister. Her dad was a great enough dog to go to the National finals with his owner. I have written about him here before, one of the most staggeringly talented dogs I have ever seen. Gael was softer when she worked, but she had a git er done attitude that made her more dog than she actually was. She is fifteen. Old dog vestibular disease and with it intermittent blindness. Incontinence. She was drinking from the garden pond when I looked at her yesterday. The next time I looked out to check on her she was gone. I looked and looked. She had fallen behind some plants and couldn't get up. I went and helped her. Then she fell in another flower bed and couldn't get up. She ate a couple bites of meatloaf and nothing more. She has lost so much weight in the last few weeks.... I will get her some canned dog food and see if that helps, but in my heart I know it is getting to be Time.
How I hate to make that decision. I know will feel guilty as I did when Mike left us last fall. Who am I to say? When is it right? Too soon? Too late? Good dogs. Good friends. Good helpers. They are all getting old at the same time.
It all adds up to not much sleep. Worry and a buck and a half will get you a cup of coffee (unless you are the Star$$$$ sort) but I do it anyhow. I will be glad when the week is done and all the decisions are made and the cows and kid back home again.
****Update...first thing I saw out the kitchen window when the sun got down to business this morning was Monday, the Cousteau daughter, lying in some bushes looking awful and very sorry for herself. I was so discouraged I could barely stand it. She is good one. I want her to thrive and prosper. We brought the cows in and were discussing what we would do....try to get her down into a pen, take food and water to her right where she was (problem, the other animals would fight her to take it away from her) or put her in the empty pasture behind the barn. Then Alan said, as he looked out the cow barn window, "Isn't that her right there? Isn't she the only one with a collar on?"
Nonsense....she was so bad off, how could she walk? Well it turns out she could walk pretty darned good and was right there in the barnyard with the rest of the heifers...going back to that whole family being a bunch of wienies.....Yup they are. Guess she sprained her hock, but she is infinitely better this morning. She refused our offer to rest in the barnyard and hustled right out with the others....see this grey hair here...this one right here? It's hers!
I helped take my nieces steers to the fair. One night was plenty for me. About 2 hours was plenty. I used to live for the fair. Now I try to avoid it like the plague
ReplyDeleteThat is a lot to worry about! ((hugs))
ReplyDeleteI hope Gael will take a little can food today. Getting some soft food in their belly always seems to perk them up some.
I worry about all my critters too so you've got company :)
ReplyDeleteIt's a hard decision to make but you've given Gael a good life and you look out for her. It sucks that they all get old.
Our whole life revolves around critters so I can understand where you're coming from. My heart goes out for you where Gael is concerned but you'll know the right time!
ReplyDeleteDang. Knowing what is to come with Gael doesn't make it any easier. I certainly wish y'all the best.
ReplyDeleteAnne, I used to love all the excitement and hustle bustle. Guess I am getting old and tired. lol
ReplyDeleteDani, and I am such a worry wort. She did eat half a can of canned food (and a little meat loaf). She also had a better day and was able to walk without aid. The old dog vestibular disease is such a *insert swearword here*. If it is cloudy or the weather is funky she just can't walk and she gets so depressed. Once the front goes through she seems better. Oh, well...
CTG, well said. It sure does. I miss her young dog self, snooty and self important but lovey dovey too. Now when she is a bad phase I have to warn her before I pet her and I can't even tell if she wants me to.
Linda, thanks, I hope I do. I try so hard to choose what is right for the dog, rather than what suits my convenience. Then I always wonder if I did the right thing....
Jeffro, thanks, that means a lot.
sorry things are hard right now, and really really sorry about the Time. I sympathize.
ReplyDelete*hugs*
I would think with all the responsibility you shoulder that the gray would have edged out the others a long time ago.
ReplyDeleteIt's a testament to your strength that your pigment is pig-headedly pushing back ;-D
Now that line:
" Who am I to say? When is it right? Too soon? Too late? Good dogs. Good friends. Good helpers. They are all getting old at the same time."
Breaking my heart, TC. But that's what hearts do. Somehow they mend and keep going. Though those last dogs of ours. . . well, I wasn't sure.
My heart aches with this post. I understand. Always seems to be all or nothing at times. Hoping you ride this week out okay. Let me know if I can help.
ReplyDeleteI do not envy you having to make a decision about Gael Just remember, she doesn't deserve to have pain in her old days. Sending prayers for your strength.
ReplyDeleteEricka, thanks, it is just life...especially life with kids and animals...but sometimes I get kinda down
ReplyDeleteCathy, thanks for your kind words which always make my day better, every single time. I wish my not quite grey yet hair was attributable to strength, but alas, it is just the genes I inherited from my daddy who is not yet all grey in his late seventies....it is fun though because my younger brothers didn't get that gene. lol And I do tease them. Gael has a good day now and then and so we wait......
Teri, thanks, I am so sorry I missed your visit to the fair. I really wanted to be there but an overnight crisis with our grain company made it impossible to get away until the night show.
Isla G, thank you for those words. And I really mean that. It helps me to think of what is coming in a little different light than just feeling guilty because in the end I will probably be the one who has to decide when the right time has come.