To make it up to you, I will now post a picture of a cute puppy -
Meet Molly. She's Mike's new puppy. (Now we each have four dogs, so we're even.) She's a black and white springer spaniel, four months old. She's very endearing.
Mike's going to struggle to discipline that face.
Even Pip accepts her -
Well, maybe accepts is a strong word. Tolerates. Endures, possibly. They already share a love of napping.
Molly will soon be joined by baby lambs. The mobile scanner man came today and my flock is officially in lamb -
Malcolm the scanner man pulled up with the whole unit on a trailer. He was set up and ready to go before I could boil the kettle to make him a cup of tea.
The ewes walk up the ramp, in goes the device, and an ultrasound of each ewe's uterus pops up on a screen. Malcolm counts the amniotic sacs and gives me the results, and I spray one purple dot on the ewe's back for each lamb inside her. We're expecting in total: 6 singles, 11 twins and 3 triplets. Eunice and my old matron lamb are both empty, so they will have a season off.
Before lambing starts, we still have the final week of shoot season to get through. The dogs and I are doing 4 shoot days this week, and our last day is Saturday - a beater's day, which means all the beaters and pickers up who helped though the season can bring their guns and shoot a few cock pheasants. I butchered a fallow deer to make a huge pot of venison stew for our end of year meal. All in all it's been a successful season. This winter will soon be over, spring will be here bringing lambs and pheasant chicks, in preparation for the next winter.
7 comments:
Comment disappeared?😢 loving catching up with you stew sounded lovely.
And that pup!!!!
I also love naps and want to join the crew. Do Pip and the new puppy also like television and baked goods? If so, I would like to apply for an official position on your couch-sitting staff.
see now i feel privileged that my comment made it :-)
still liking the picture of your new puppy though.
Tell us ignoramuses about lambing - is twins the ideal outcome? If I remember rightly you feed the ewes differently according to whether they are pregnant with single/twin/triplets?
I have three things: I'm looking forward to learning about your sheeping endeavors in your new place. Second: Cute puppy face! And third: kudos to you for using a Willy Wonka reference in your title. :)
Maria - You are exactly right - twins is the desired outcome. If all the ewes got pregnant and had twins, it would be a 200% return, with enough teats to go around so no bottle fed lambs. But where's the fun in that, eh? I will feed the ewes with twins and triplets a concentrate, and watch out for problems like twin lamb disease, which is easily treated if caught in time. I won't feed the ewes until later in the pregnancy, as I want the food to go to the ewe, not to make bigger lambs that will be a problem coming out!
Thanks Jen! (I didn't know about feeding later to feed the ewe not the lamb).
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