Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Coco, Lulu, Ginger

And just like that, lambing is over. My prediction of Ginger lambing first, then Coco, then Lulu...with maybe Frannie having kids before Lulu had lambs was completely wrong. No surprise there!

It was Coco who had lambs first, this past Sunday. I'm sure she was enjoying the warm, sunny day as much as we were. I'm guessing she was thinking: what the hell, I'll go out to the furthest corner of pasture and go into labor while Keith and Ellen think they're going to have dinner, which is exactly what she did. Thanks Coco!

Pretty much as a soon as it was clear she was in labor-a sheep having contractions is really, really obvious and loud-she was delivering her lambs. First was her female little clone, then an all white boy, and thankfully that was it! After both lambs we cleaned off and had nursed from Coco, we cleaned their umbilical chords and carried the sweet little lambs into the family stall in the barn, with three ewes following us in. This was by far the easiest lambing this year! Coco is such a good mom that we are thinking we're going to keep her little girl to breed next year-I'm thinking of naming her Chanel-but names have a habit of evolving around here, so we'll see!

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Ginger was so huge and was acting kinda funny on Monday that I stayed up to keep an eye on her Monday night. She refused to go into the barn and Lulu was steadfastly by her side-again in the far corner of the pasture, I just sat out there and watched them for a while, but nothing was happening, so I finally came inside to get some sleep. I fully expected Keith to wake me up with news that Ginger had lambed in the middle of the night. But nope!

Yesterday, Tuesday, I let Coco and her lambs out of the barn and I just hung around to keep an eye on the two preggos and watch the lambs jump around all over the place. All day yesterday Lulu was scratching at the ground (a sign of labor) but there was no goo....so I just kept watching. Lulu tactfully waited until we were finished with dinner to start lambing, but really I think it would have been better to have a little daylight!!

She also had her clone first-but her clone is male!-and an all white lamb that is a girl. Again, we waited for her to clean them up and for both of them to nurse before cleaning them up and taking them to the barn. It was the taking them to the barn that proved most difficult!

While Coco just followed us while we carried her lambs to the barn-becuase she could see us!-Lulu could not see us in the dark and freaked out! It took multiple back ad forths to finally get her to follow us, with a lot of Lulu screaming and frantically searching for her babies, but at last they we were all finally cuddled up in their stall. Coco and her babies were cuddled up in their stall and Ginger was STILL staked out in the far corner of the pasture-you're killing me Ginger!

Lambing 2015
Lambing 2015

This morning, all I wanted to do was sleep in after our late night running around the pasture-but no! Almost immediately after my alarm clock went off, Keith walked into the bedroom to announce that Ginger was lambing...ugh, can't she have waited until the afternoon, or tomorrow!

So, here we go again. Ginger in the far corner of the pasture and is going through the motions of lambing...but she isn't. Every time Ginger lays down and pushes, nothing really happens. We could only see little hooves poking out and but no head-this is not going well! Giant Ginger is, of course, the most skittish of all the ewes, and she's the only one that clearly needs help.

We somehow get her in the barn, so one of us can hold her down and the other can pull the lamb out-did I mention that Keith randomly is off work today, absolutely perfect timing!-I wanted to hold her down and make Keith pull out the lamb, but that didn't work.

So, I reach in and pull out first the two hooves that are peaking out and then it's head. All of this has taken so long, that I expect the lamb to be dead and am really freaked out at this point. But I pull a little more and and it's obvious that he is actually alive-yay!! I pulled and pulled and was so scared of hurting the lamb. We ended up switching places and Keith pulled the rest of the lamb out-all the while Ginger is contracting and screaming...and we haven't even had breakfast yet!

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Even though it was clear that Ginger was going to have another lamb, we all needed a break from each other, so Keith and I headed in to eat and Ginger had her other lamb in peace. Instead of having one clone lamb and one all white lamb, Ginger's lambs look like identical twins that are perfect mix of Ginger and Sam.

Lambing 2015

One constant theme of lambing this year has been the location...the corner of the pasture. And I'm pretty sure I know exactly why they are gravitating there-our neighbors flock of sheep. I'm guessing that our girls think they are part of that bigger flock, even though our lambs are cuter!

Lambing 2015 Only Coco and her lams are out in the pasture at the moment. Tomorrow we'll probably let Lulu and her lambs out to play...and maybe Ginger's too. No triplets! YAY!! I've been keeping Cupid in milk, just in case we had triplets or lost a ewe...just to be prepared. Finally I get to dry her off completely and get a little break from milking...until Frannie and Snowy have kids!

Up next (but hopefully not for a week, at least!!), goat kids!!

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Hoping for Easter lambs

Our ewes are due to lamb any day now, and Easter seems to me to be the perfect day for lambs to enter the world. But so far today-no lambs. And while, in theory, this would be super cute, it is also a cold snowy day here, so I would be ok with them waiting until slightly warmer weather!

So the waiting game continues. This is one of the hardest parts of breeding animals-you can't talk to them! You don't know how they are feeling or if they are in pain. I just watch and listen and hope to be there when they need me.

Another hard part is figuring out if they are pregnant. Yes, you can buy pregnancy tests for a stupid amount of money and if you just wait, it should be obvious pretty quickly! But still, sometimes it's not.



Take our goats Frannie and Snowy. I already told the tale of Frannie being very obviously in heat, while if Snowy was, she was covert about it. It seems fitting that their pregnancies are similar. Frannie is SO obviously pregnant. She is so short and so wide and has been just getting wider every day and her little teats are getting bigger-this girl is kidding this year! Then there's Snowy. She's always been a little chub and most of the time, to me at least, she doesn't look pregnant at all. When she lays down, yes, I do think she is prego...but maybe not.



But while Snowy is not physically showing, her behavior has changed. Both the girls refused to spend the night in a stall with the evil Cupid months ago-I took this as them instinctively protecting their bellies-smart girls. And Snowy has always been one to jump up on everyone-she hasn't done that in months. She has always been super affectionate, but now she is ever more so, which I really didn't think was possible. When I'm out in the pasture, she is on me like velcro. When I sit down out in the pasture, this 130 lb goat does everything in her power to sit on my lap with her head on my shoulder. And I just hold her. I don't know what else to do. I wonder how she feels, how can we know what being pregnant feels like to an animal? It's both Frannie and Snowy's first time expecting and Frannie seems just fine about whatever is going on in her body, Snowy just doesn't. So I'll hold her. I guess long story short, I do think Snowy is going to kid this year.

Then there are our sheep: Coco, Lulu, and Ginger. Holy smokes, these girls are giant. They are like stuffed sausages walking around on tiny legs that look like they are going to pop at any moment. I had a scary moment a few days ago when I looked outside and saw Coco on her back with all 4 legs stiffly pointing towards the sky-I thought she was dead. I hadn't been outside for about a half hour-had she been like that the whole time? I ran out the pasture with my bucket of birthing supplies, not knowing what to expect. She wasn't dead, she wasn't in labor, I think she just couldn't get up because she is so huge. I rolled her over and helped her get on her legs again. As soon as she was up, she made walked straight to the hay and stared chowing-she was fine! But I was spooked and have been stalking them like crazy since.


The order in which I think these pregos will pop: Ginger, Coco, Lulu, then Frannie and Snowy-and from what I've heard, whatever you think is going to happen will be the last thing that actually happens-so we'll see!

The only baby animals that we have right now are a new batch of chicks. They are now in their awkward, goofy looking, kinda feathery stage, but still they are pretty cute. They're starting to fly a little, so I need to make the walls of their space in the garage a little higher. They still have a few weeks until they join the rest of the flock.


I don't think we'll be delivering any lambs tonight, but I could be wrong! Hope everyone is having a nice Easter!