
Farm Fresh BlogFriday, April 29 2011
Dorothy asked for a blog about Oli, the current Police Dog, so here it is! Born in Czechoslovakia, she is a Belgian Malinois, who at best, looks like a coyote on crack! Unlike the magnificent Zena, Other Half's last partner, Oli strongly resembles a nondescript mutt - a tiny little brown dog (on crack!) Years ago, I heard the tale of a canine officer with a malinois who confronted a belligerent drunk. The officer informed the man that he needed to move on out of the area. The drunk snarled, "Who's gonna make me? You and that little brown dog?" And with that, he kicked the officer in the crotch.
The poor cop dropped like a rock . . .
The drunk had to be hospitalized.
Unfortunately there was no one available to pull the "little brown dog" off him.
What our intrepid drunk failed to realize is this: Force = Mass X Acceleration What the Little Brown Dog lacks in Mass, he makes up for in Acceleration. These little dogs are like speeding bullets.
In reality, she is a very expensive bundle of energy, bred to work. Oli is NOT a calm, family farm dog. She is highly intelligent, (in a velociraptor sort of way), and will actively plot means to get chickens or sheep. Absurdly affectionate, Oli will launch herself from a great distance to land in the recliner with Other Half, where she falls asleep and snores like freight train. It is one of the few times she is not in motion. When Oli enters the house, without fail, she flings herself across the living room furniture like a blazing brown pinball, bouncing from chair to ottoman to couch, and back to ottoman. Oli is good with other dogs, and ironically, good with cats. (After all, why hunt cats when you can hunt sheep?) She is a narcotics dog who also does basic patrol work. They work with interstate freight traffic, looking for illegal aliens and narcotics. Oli and Other Half can be sent anywhere in the country, (insert frowny face here) but their primary focus is along border states. Whenever Other Half works without Oli, she stays home on the farm with me. Repeat: Oli is NOT a farm-friendly dog! She would love nothing more than leg of lamb with a side dish of fresh chicken, and is intelligent enough to find a way to get it. Thus, she requires a bit more juggling than the rest of the dogs. And so Dorothy, that's about it! Oli is a Dual Purpose Dog who digs, kills chickens & sheep, plays endless silly games with the puppy, and makes sure that my husband comes home safely at the end of the night. So in the long run, I guess it doesn't matter if she looks like a coyote of crack! Thursday, April 28 2011
If you are squeamish, skip this blog and tune in tomorrow for something warm, and fuzzy, and cute. The truth of things is that I'd rather skip it too, but in keeping with my moral code, I must share ALL the parts of living in the country, not just the good ones. That said, enter this blog at your own risk . . .
Now those of you who are left, everyone hold hands . . .
Okay, here goes . . .
Our neighbor, Kindly Rancher Next Door, is a young man who raises cattle, a few goats, and some chickens. The chickens and goats are income and education for his young son, Cooper, who is learning early the values of hard work and the ranching way of life. I am proud to say the I bought Cooper's first crop of baby goats, and Other Half paid WAAY too much for chickens we didn't need one year because he wanted to give this budding rancher some encouragement. But I digress, back to the story . . . Spring has sprung and the season of baby chicks is upon us. Kindly Rancher Next Door shared this little tidbit over the fence this week: He lost 8 of his first crop of baby chicks to one of our barn cats! I felt terrible. He was okay with it. No hard feelings. Life in the country, and all that. Anyway, he had moved on, and was looking forward to their next little crop of chicks that had just hatched. And now here's the horrifying part . . . He came in one day last week to find a 6 foot chicken snake had gotten into the pen and eaten ALL of his chicks. Then the bastard was so fat that he couldn't sneak back out again! EEEEEKKKKKKK!!!!! (cue "Psycho" soundtrack) My skin is still crawling! I'm not a snake-hater, but Friends & Neighbors, if a chicken snake just ate all my peeps that would be one dead snake! The severe drought is bringing wildlife closer and closer to the houses and barns. I'm most grateful that the sheep rotating in and out of the yard keep the grass down low enough to discourage snakes, but we have no sheep at the other house. (right beside where the 6 foot chicken snake was discovered) Now some of you may be old enough to remember the comedian Richard Pryor. While much of his comedy was a bit raunchy for me, I do recall a delightful skit he did on snakes where he summed up precisely my feelings regarding them. "Snakes . . . make you hurt yourself." Now I see snakes everywhere. The garden hose is a snake. The dog toy becomes a snake. The stick looks like a snake. Everything long and slender has suddenly mutated to become a snake. I jump. I run into things. I cuss. And I keep rotating sheep and goats around the house so every shred of vegetation that the little bastards would use for concealment is GONE! And Other Half wonders why I refuse to collect eggs in the dark! I do want to add one note: Don't you reckon that the Easter Egg Hunt on the ranch next door was modified a bit last Sunday?
(I'm just saying . . . ) Wednesday, April 27 2011
"Hey Frank! Lookat that." "What? Tha dog?" "Yeah, Dude, lookat those googly eyes! Gives me tha creeps." "Earl, Man, get a grip. It's a just a little dog. He's maybe 40 pounds drippin' wet. "Oh Frank! He's comin' this way! Run!" "Pul-ease, Earl! Get a grip! It's just a DOG."
"Seriously Frank! Those googly eyes are comin' this way!" "Earl, Earl, Earl . . . He's on the OTHER side of the fence, Dude. Get ahold o' yerself."
"That's a good point, Frank. He's on the other side of the fence. Yeah, yeah, yer right. On the other side o' tha fence." "Of course, I'm right, Earl. Stick with me, Dude."
"Run, Earl! Run! He's gonna git us!" "I thought you said he was on the other side of the fence, Frank!" Tuesday, April 26 2011
Friday and Saturday the boys spent the day building a new cow pen. Easter Sunday we worked cattle in the new pen. The Plan: Step 1: Run cattle into roping arena. Step 2: Run cattle through new rear gate that leads to new pen which leads to new chute which leads to new head gate! Step 3: Catch cow in head gate. Doctor any cows that need doctoring. ID Tag the calves. Step 4: Release cattle to allow them to run back into roping arena. Sounds easy. Right? Wrong! There were a couple of hitches in the plan. Hitch 1: Cattle had NO intention of running from arena through new gate. Solution: Border Collie
Hitch 2: We didn't inform the cattle that they were supposed to run from the head gate back into the roping arena. Solution: Border Collie
Cowboy moved the cattle from the arena into the holding pen. The cowboys (Other Half, Son, & Dearest Friend Doug) moved the cattle through the chute and into the head gate.
With the occasional help of a Border Collie Lily picked up the cattle as they came through the gate and ran them back into the arena. A job that would have taken hours otherwise, took less than an hour with 3 Cowhands, 2 Border Collies, and a new headgate. GooooooooOOO TEAM!!! And the girls? What did we do? Contrary to what the boys will tell you, we did not sit on the couch eating bon bons watching Oprah while the boys worked. Dear Friend Debbie supervised Cowboy, . . . and I handled Lily. And I took pictures. And I let the bull get away because I was too busy taking pictures. So Lily had to go get him back. Ooops! Ma Bad! Sorry Lil! "No problem, Mom. I gotcha covered!"
Saturday, April 23 2011
Bertha is one of the latest additions to the farm. She is a nice ewe but has a loud mouth. Seriously. That's what the lady told me when I bought her. "She has a loud mouth. She will just stand in the pasture and holler for no particular reason. No lost lamb. Not hungry. Just screaming to hear herself scream."
. . . she's screaming.
Since I have another one just like that, I wasn't too concerned. So I brought her home and plunked her in the paddock with the weanlings, where she would fit right in. So what if she screams? Everyone in there is screaming. But yesterday . . . oh dear! Yesterday the weanlings and Bertha, were in the back yard and I was plinking away on the computer. I heard Bertha on the porch screaming. I checked her. She was fine. She was peeking through the dog nose smudges on the sliding glass door. Once she saw me, Bertha was convinced that this indeed, was the pickup window for the drive-thru restaurant and amped up her screaming. The Border Collie was beside herself. She is the self-appointed hall-monitor/taker-of-names-when-the-teacher's-out/crossing-guard kid who firmly believes that it is her duty to make this farm run as tight as a battleship, and sheep begging at the back door did NOT float.
I ignored Bertha and went back to typing. The Border Collie settled down under the table. And that's when I heard it . . . the unmistakable sound of someone trying to break in the house! YES! I KNOW! Can you believe it??!! That stupid ewe was banging the glass on the back door. Aging Sliding Glass Door vs Hooves & Forehead of Impatient Sheep = Catastrophe I couldn't get out of my chair fast enough. It clattered back as I catapulted across the room. Border Collie led the way. Fortunately before either of us could get there, my Livestock Guardian Dog took care of the problem. Believe it or not, this creature can move very quickly. Just as I rounded the corner, I saw Briar body-slam Bertha. Normally she wouldn't consider bouncing a full-grown ewe, but in the instance, even the DOG knows sheep who bang on glass doors end up in freezers! Border Collie was voting for this anyway. She was livid. I flung back the door to verbally abuse the sheep and Bertha grinned at me, "There you are!" Lambs were gathering on the porch to see what Bertha had found. It was definitely time for some Border Collie intervention. I gave the word, and she moved them off the porch as Bertha was placing her order in the drive-thru window. "I'll have some alfalfa. I said, ALFALFA. Hey! Is this thing working? I said 'I'll have some alfalfa. Hold the fries." (And to answer your questions, "No!" Bertha was not a bottle baby. She came off a 600 acre sheep ranch.)
Friday, April 22 2011
I think my Indian name must be "Walks With Goats." Each morning I take the Dairy Goats for a walk. They're learning to browse. (What goat has to be taught to browse???!!!! I KNOW!!! Whodathunkit?!) Nevertheless, this little group has never been allowed to free range so the concept of browsing is a bit alien to them.
They're used to eating Goat Chow and alfalfa, not trimming fence lines, but they follow like puppies while I sip coffee. (no, the dogs don't come along on this walk) They are beginning to discover honeysuckle.
I may have to re-name Clover, since for the life of me, I keep calling her "Copper," (Gray Hair Syndrome) We are ending our little walks with an arrival in the Kitchen Garden/Pet Cemetery. The goats were a bit reluctant to enter the garden at first, (Understandable, since 6 dogs are buried there!) but they have now gotten into the hang of pruning roses, jasmine, weeds, and lemon trees. I like keeping them there because I can peek out the window and monitor their progress.
Yard Crew
Thursday, April 21 2011
I'm pleased to announce that Trace is "Back In Bidness!" After weeks of trying to keep a baby Border Collie quiet and confined . . . . . . so his broken leg could heal . . . . . . we have let loose The Beast! (As if we were ever able to keep him quiet anyway! But please don't tell the Vet!) Wednesday, April 20 2011
I call this creature the White-Chested Sneaky Snake. When I'm headed to the barn and I don't want 5 dogs running with me, I put them, one by one, into a kennel on the back porch. Dutifully, each pup slides behind the bars. Every pup, except one . . . the White-Chested Sneaky Snake. This creature hides. It hides behind the Toy Tub. It hides behind the Tomato pot. It hides behind the barrel. It flattens itself into the pavement and stays really, really, REALLY still, like a little green lizard, blending into her environment. It wants to go to the barn. The White-Chested Sneaky Snake knows that I will, at some point, need her help . . .
. . . because there are sheep at the barn.
Tuesday, April 19 2011
How To Confuse A Livestock Guardian Dog Step 1: Wean lambs Step 2: Add some more adult sheep and a few goats Step 3: Move rams daily Step 4: Wean more lambs so the screaming is in "surround-sound" And for the final step . . . have the Dear Friend put HER sheep on the property next door! Poor Briar saw the sheep next door and had a mental melt-down this morning.
No, not your sheep. Cathy's sheep. "MY sheep!!!" No! Cathy's sheep on Roberto's land. NOT your sheep. "MY sheep! My sheep! MINE!" Do NOT go over there! The fence is hot!
Because they're Cathy's sheep. "Why not My Sheep? I hear sheep screaming. My Sheep screaming. Sheep not happy." Mommy won't be happy either if you climb that fence! "STRESS! STRESS! The sheep won't shut up! I cannot stand the stress!"
I feel the same way, Dog. I feel the same way.
Sunday, April 17 2011
The best way to manage the property is multi-species mob grazing with fewer animals. So we're selecting the best and selling the rest. (but keeping Roanie!) That said, the dairy goats are still staying. They are part of the program. Goats are a pain in the butt, but a necessary part of farmland management, and great comic relief. Besides, although meat goats, and sheep are currency, bottle-raised dairy goats are pets who double as a lawn crew . . . I keep trying to get good pictures of this goat, but it hasn't happened.
And this. . . peeking from under my shirt tail.
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