
Farm Fresh BlogTuesday, October 12 2010
Ranger is deep in Crazy Greek Mother Mode. Here are the boys bouncing to the barn, undoubtedly humming "My Beloved Monster and Me."
Now for the other end . . . I'm in danger of sharing too much information here, but . . . Someone sank his pearly whites into Dad's calf when Dad was takin' a whizz. (And Dad had to clean up the bathroom floor!) Unlike Ranger, there is not a maternal bone in Lily's body. She does, however, really enjoy playing with her baby brother and tolerates his devotion pretty well. I give you State's Exhibit A: Driving back from the grocery store
Monday, October 11 2010
Trace is a bold little fart who is settling in just fine.
He hit the ground running . . . and running . . .
In fact, if I could bottle his energy . . . . . . and sell it in six packs, I'd make a fortune! His battery runs down pretty quickly. In the photo above, his little blue eyes are already getting droopy. In 48 hours he has eaten: 1) beef fajitas 2) breakfast ham 3) toast soaked in grits 4) horse poop 5) sheep poop 6) goat poop 7) yogurt 8) pork rib meat 9) a stick and . . . drum roll please . . . 10) dead rat Amazingly, he doesn't have shooting diarrhea. The boy has a strong intestinal constitution. We've gotten bunches of notes asking how he's getting along with the rest of the pack. So here goes - - - Lily: She's totally okay with him. He's a Border Collie and she knows it. He initially fixated on her because she is a black and white Border Collie who probably reminds him of his mom. She won't cut him any slack because he's a puppy but she won't hurt him either. Since she has always had to share attention, she isn't really jealous. Cowboy: is also okay with him. He doesn't play with him but knows Trace is a puppy and tolerates him quite well. Trace likes to tag along with the other Border Collies. Ranger: LOVES the puppy. This is Ranger's puppy! He has kicked into Crazy Greek Mother Mode and is doting on little Trace like the gay men in the "Modern Family" sitcom dote on their infant. Briar: I didn't want Trace around Briar because she is sooooo big, and he is soooo little. That was fine until this morning when she climbed the fence to check him out while I fed horses. I turned around to discover him bouncing around beside her while she chased cats. She knows he's a dog and is gentle with him. (That giant puppy continues to amaze me.) Alice the Bloodhound: is blind and hasn't really noticed him. Ice: finds him mildly amusing but doesn't want him to jump in her face. I keep her away from him while he's loose. Zena the Retired Police Dog: is fascinated by him. Zena raised Ranger and Lily. She adores puppies, but she is a bit pushy and wants to smother him. He is a little freaked by the way she stalks him and keeps near to us or Ranger when she looms too closely. Oli the Current Police Dog: thinks he is a neat video game. She is not allowed loose with him because he is little and she is fast. Later they will be great playmates but we're not sure she understands "It's a baaaaaby!" So until we're convinced that she knows he's a dog and not a guinea pig, she can stare at him through the bars like a crazed football fan. Overall, he is getting along great with the pack (in small doses.) Ranger is the only one that I trust with him though. Ranger freaked out when I walked down the road with Trace to visit Dear Friend. Ranger jumped the fence and came to find us. He was quite disturbed when he found HIS PUPPY in HER lap! She released his little friend and he checked out Trace quite closely to make sure he was okay. Then he scooted away and shot her the Evil Eye. "I'll let it slide this one time, but I'm keeping my eye on you!"
Sunday, October 10 2010
After a marathon driving adventure across Texas and Oklahoma, . . . . . . we brought The Little Prince home. Meet Trace!
(More pics to come after we've had some sleep!)
Thursday, October 07 2010
Mom's little blessing is growing like a weed.
Now she's a member of a FAMILY! Since the name "Blossom" didn't really stick, Mom has re-named her "Glory", and she already comes to her name. (and wipes her paws!)
She has a big brother who likes to play rough!
"Thank you, God!" Thursday, October 07 2010
Years ago I went with a friend to pick up some goat's milk. We were greeted by a most delightful man who escorted us around his farm. He showed us his goats, his pig, his miniature horses, his cattle, and his chickens. And he did all this . . . in bare feet. I remember being struck with the idea that this cheerful little man was a modern day Hobbit, spirited straight from the Lord Of The Rings. And his feet looked like it. Now I'm not one to point fingers. (perish that thought!) I was in my 30's before I got my first professional pedicure. The reason I was forced to get a pedicure is because Montoya had stomped on my foot ("Oops! Sorry mom!") and my big toe was a most striking shade of blue. A friend was tired of looking at it, so she insisted that we that head to the nearest Vietnamese lady with polish to paint that sucker! So I did. I went in looking like a Hobbit, and an hour later, (and lots of muttering in Vietnamese) I hobbled out with new feet. There was even a beautiful hibiscus flower painted on my bruised big toe. From that moment on, I was in love with pedicures. Ahhhh . . . the vibrating chair, the girl talk, the stupid paper flip-flops. And the magical hibiscus flower that announced "These are the feet of a Pretty Woman, not a Hobbit!" But the sad reality is that the Magical Hibiscus Flower fades pretty quickly under the cold hard reality of farm living. The polish gets chipped off each time a critter bounces across the top of it. I want to, I really want to, but I cannot seem to wear responsible shoes every time I step out of my door. Too often I'm simply puttering around the house in flip-flops or Crocs when drama stalks me, and then I regret my choice of footwear. (Read: The Grace of God & The Red-Headed Demon) You'd think I would learn. But alas . . . take this morning for instance. One would think that I would know better. This is not a picture you want to see when you're wearing flip-flops! Or this! (They get MUCH closer!)
Why don't I ever learn? Did Hobbits have Border Collies?
Wednesday, October 06 2010
While city folks may not have to sling dead 'possums out of their yard on Mondays, they also don't get to rise early on "Hump Day Wednesdays" to this . . . The sun rises to capture the dew on the pumpkin. (Okay, the City Folk can have pumpkins too, but do they also have dew on the horse poop behind the pumpkin? I'm just asking . . .) View from the Front Porch: View from the Back Porch: There's no hum of traffic in the country. This is the traffic I hear in the morning: Sexy Senior Citizen gallops into the barn!
Before I can feed myself, there are animals to be fed: My Second-In-Command climbs up high on the hay to oversee the operation.
After all the animals are fed it's time to walk the fence line with the dogs.
Our version of Brinks Home Security . . . And the chores are done! Bring on the day!
Tuesday, October 05 2010
There are few things that I consider myself an expert on, but the smell of decomposing tissue is one subject that I know a great deal about. So when I drove into my garage barn last week and the smell of decomp assaulted my nose as I climbed out of the truck, I felt that I could safely report, "There is something dead in the garage!" The problem was that I couldn't find it. The garage shed is attached to the goat barn. There are also lots of hidey holes in old junk where a small animal could crawl off to die. My concern wasn't so much WHERE the critter was, as WHO the critter was. Here was my first concern: Lovey hadn't been seen in a couple of days. This launched an all-out search at 1 AM for a tabby calico cat. I called and I called and I called. (Yes, I'm sure my neighbors hate me.)
Perhaps the victim was Remus, the banty rooster who survived multiple Boogey Beast attacks:
Remus used to spend his evenings roosting in the Goat Barn until daybreak where he would trek across the pasture to greet my mother's hens as they began their day. "Hellllloooo Ladies!" I worried that perhaps Remus had met up with Blue Heeler in his journey across the pasture. Or Briar could have loved him to death. The result is about the same. (Again. . . it depends upon your view of torture.) Or . . . Remus could have been killed by whatever attempted to kill him a couple of weeks ago when I thought something was after the goats. I moved Briar into that barn, only to discover that Something was after Remus, not the goats. But I left Briar there anyway. Until yesterday . . . I asked Other Half to feed the dogs. He couldn't find Briar. We hunted and finally found Briar hunkered down in the driveway paddock. My heart skipped a beat . . . Briar had something. . . Fearing for my calico cats, (and Mom's calico kitten) I cautiously approached. Briar looked over her shoulder and happily grinned at me. She reeked of decomp.
This was what Briar had been working on like an All-day Sucker: Eeegaaads! It took me a second to identify the victim, but this cleared it up. Now it's possible that the opossum lost the Let's Kill The Kitty game and crawled off to die. "Look! A cat with a skinny tail!" I doubt Briar tried to love it to death. It is also possible that it came to kill Remus and Briar caught him instead. (Oh well . . . sucks to be him.) Regardless, he ended up dead and Briar finally dug him out of his death bed. The down side to my job as a crime scene investigator is that I cannot throw down the Girl Card and get Other Half to dispose of gross items that are too horrendous for my delicate sensibilities. (You forfeit "The Girl Card" when you play Twister over dead men for a living.) So I had to dispose of the dead opossum while he changed out a broken tail light on the flat-bed trailer.
I'm just saying . . .
Monday, October 04 2010
It's Monday!!!! Seize the day!
Embrace it!
And if problems come your way . . . Ranger says . . . Go forth and make it your day!
Sunday, October 03 2010
This is Rasta. Pardon my French, but she's a bitch. (Actually . . . since we are in the South, we don't call her a bitch, we say, "Bless her heart . . .") Rasta is a large, aggressive ewe who will attack a dog in an instant. This served her well when Oli The Patrol Dog climbed the fence last winter and attacked the sheep in the isolation pasture. Roanie suffered horrible injuries, Jamaica later died, but Rasta was such a "Bless her heart . . . " that the dog went on to easier prey and Rasta was left with just a few blood stains on her wool. Rasta has a deep hatred of all dogs - even Briar.
"Beat it, you stupid white dog!" "You are a DOG! You are not a SHEEP! Don't you get it?!!" Dejected, Briar wanders off to lay down in some sand and watch the flock. But someone sees her. That Someone leaves the flock to go lend a sympathic ear.
"Hey, you okay Dog???" And the ewe who has every reason in the world to hate dogs, stood beside the Giant White Beast, and stayed there. And Briar felt better. Perhaps this world would be a better place if we were all a bit more like Briar and Roanie . . . . . . . . .
Friday, October 01 2010
I bathed Alice again this week, and as always, it was quite the task. Most of the time it's a chore simply to catch her for a bath, but this time, Blue Heeler felt compelled to play in the bath water. It made The Rinse Cycle difficult. But as annoying as it was to have a Little Blue Dog bouncing into the spray, it got me to thinking about the biggest hurdle to bathing a Bloodhound - Montoya. This is what bathing a Bloodhound is like when you add a horse to the bucket: Now for those of you who have ever considered getting a hound, you need to know that even on a good day, they stink. Even if you bathe them in rose-scented shampoo, they will still smell like wet bloodhounds (with a faint hint of rose). But poor Alice, like most bloodhounds in Texas, has skin allergies and must be bathed regularly. This is no thrill for me or for Alice. Bloodhounds come with an uncanny sense of smell. They also come equipped with an uncanny sense of knowing when the thought of a bath just flits across your mind. As soon as the thought enters my mind, Alice runs to hide in the pumphouse. Fortunately for me, cat food is Kryptonite for Bloodhounds, and if I pretend that I'm not holding a leash in my armpit, I can dump dry cat food on the barn floor and snare her as she's scarfing it up .... if I'm fast. Luck was with me, and I was able to catch my hound, pour a little Pantene Shampoo & Conditioner in a bucket, and hit it with the water hose. That's about the time things got interesting. Because Montoya spends so much time in the back yard, I tend to forget he's there. He's like Andalusian Yard Art. And he happens to be fascinated with bubbles. I did not know this until this afternoon. Neither did he. Montoya was delighted with the bucket of suds that I was sponging onto the hound. He hovered over us and supervised the entire operation. "Whatcha doing?" "I'm bathing the Bloodhound." "Why?" "She stinks." "Look! Bubbles!" "Yep.... you need those to bathe Bloodhounds." "Why don't I ever get bubbles?" "You don't stink." "I want BUBBLES!" "Go away. Leave that alone." "I want BUBBLES! I want BUBBLES! I WANT BUBBLES! ......Whoops..." "Happy now? Your bubbles are all over the ground." "Look! I have a Bubble Mustache!" "I'm not impressed. Go away!" "See my mustache? Look. Right here. See? Oh good! You're making more bubbles!" "Go away! I've got to bathe the dog!" (once you finally catch a Bloodhound, you do not, under any condition, let go of that hound if you plan on bathing it that day.) "Oooooh... there are bubbles on the DOG!" "GO AWAY!" "Can I lick the bubbles off the dog!" "NO!" (The dog was in total agreement with me on this.) I dropped the water hose. It squirted him. "That was rude, Mom." "So go away." "Hey! I've got a Bubble Mustache. Do you see it?" By the time I was finished, the hound was soaked, I was soaked, and Montoya was soaked, but he proudly wore his Pantene Mustache until I wiped it off. I don't think the hound will ever come out of the pumphouse again. |