The weather conditions finally allowed our shearer Matt to
come and shear our flock: a spell of warm weather to raise the lanolin and
no rain so the fleeces dried out on the sheeps’ backs. Matt shears after lambing and before hay
cutting. It’s all part of the family farm’s income, so wife Donna and children
Llewelyn and Ffion came along to help.
They are our good friends as well as our
shearing team, and we know how hard they work year-round, so I put together a
quick supper for afterward. I wish I could say it was homemade but Mike and I
are very busy this time of year too, so it was grocery store pizza for the
children and salad for the adults, plus wine to help with those aching muscles.
Donna brought scones and fresh fruit for dessert. Kath, whose husband is the
woodman on this estate, also joined our shearing team as she loves working with
sheep. Chores double as social time when
friends get involved.
Donna and I vaccinated all the lambs and tended to any
sore feet. Ffion attempted to mark each
lamb we finished with a dot on the forehead, but she’s only seven so a streak
of marker paint anywhere from the neck up was good enough.
Matt started shearing while we vaccinated. We finished the
lambs, and then assisted Matt. Kath worked the gate, Donna and I rolled the
fleece.
Kitty oversees the proceedings -
I haven’t been to the wool depot to get bags so we stacked
the rolled fleeces in the sheep trailer temporarily. The rolls made a
comfortable seat when we were forced to shelter from a heavy shower.
Kath was a great gatekeeper but I forgot to tell her to be
vigilant of Grumpy ewe. With only a few sheep left to shear, Grumpy saw her
chance and blasted through a small gap in the gate. I shouted some choice swear
words at Grumpy and threatened to go home and get the rifle (as I always do)
but I went home and got sheep feed instead, and lured her back to the pen.
Bloody ewe.
Last week two of my ram lambs broke legs. One broke a hind
leg at the ankle joint. An easy
repair. After injections to bring the
swelling down, I fitted a splint (“borrowed” on a visit to the dog vet) and set
his leg properly. It’s stable and he’s walking alongside his mother, grazing
and still milking. The ankle joint will fuse and he'll have a limp, but he will heal - just in time to go to ice camp.
The second ram was not so lucky. The break was at the knee
joint in a front leg and it wouldn’t heal. The ram went downhill quickly, so we
harvested him rather than let him die. I
necropsied the leg. The ram burst the synovial fluid capsule and the joint was full of
infection the colour and consistency of McDonald’s Shamrock shake. That is an Injury of No Return.
Aside from the infected leg, the carcase was clean meat.
However, this was a six month old entire ram I had kept for the breeding sales,
and he was gamey – even though I tried to hide the flavour in a strong curry.
Our loss is the dogs’ gain, and they have been eating raw bones and cooked meat
scraps all week.
I finally got my shorn fleeces packed and sewn into their wool
sheets, and took them to a wool buyer. This year I skipped the Wool Marketing
Board depot and sold straight to an Irish trader for a better price and faster
payment. The Wool Board is a middle man, and sends payment only after your wool
is sold on the open market, minus their cut.
Yet another good connection made through my shearers.
It was my turn to help Matt and Donna this week. We’re into
the agricultural show season where farmers bring their best livestock to show,
be judged, and sometimes sold. It’s the
best advertisement for your product that you can get. A lot of effort is put
into preparing sheep for show, and rather than watch your hard work go straight
back into a pen and lay in muck, exhibitors put coats on their animals.
Donna tried to make these coats herself as they are expensive
to buy. As she doesn’t sew, she tried to make do with iron-on hemming
tape. I offered my meagre sewing skills
and machine, both good enough to hem sheep coats and sew heavy duty leg straps. I
set up in her kitchen by the warm Rayburn.
July in Wales - of course the stove is still going!
Meanwhile, Matt and Donna headed down to the farm to groom
the showing sheep. When I finished my seamstress duties, I watched some of their preparations. Their Welsh Black sheep
are a quarter of the size of mine, and can be lifted onto a grooming table.
It's a husband and wife grooming team, but they work in tandem on the same sheep. First, the sheep is combed to bring up the fleece -
Then the fleece is carefully trimmed using hand shears to
show off the shape of the animal: a nice straight back, full legs, graceful
neck-
Once trimmed, spray shine is applied to enhance the bloom
and keep the farm dust from settling back into the clean fleece. Matt uses a
wooden paddle to tamp the fleece and make it tight -
As a hill breed, a “tight
skin” (good weather-proof fleece) is a desirable breed characteristic.
Now the
newly sewn coats can be fitted-
More finishing touches – plucking stray white hairs, putting
linseed oil on rams’ horns, using a toothbrush to clean between the cleats of
each foot – can be done before loading up in the morning.
It is a labour of love, as much as an opportunity to
advertise your stock. And not without financial risk. Entering a few main
classes in the big county and national shows can total £1000 in a season. I won’t
be entering anything any time soon.
After my bit of sewing, I drove home and pulled into our
drive to find this waiting for me-
The guys have started Canada goose hunting.
The dogs are
going to eat better than us this month.
Do you ever eat Canada geese? I always look at them and wonder why people don't generally eat them - they're huge!
ReplyDeleteI wondered the same thing. I would love to try cooking a goose.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing
I think blogger cut off my comment! I wanted to say thank you for sharing the grooming pictures. I had no idea sheep were groomed this way for show. Do the animals seem to enjoy it?
ReplyDeleteVirginia & Cottontail farm - We have eaten Canada goose, but it's not great. If you want to eat one, choose a young one (smaller breasts, the meat is lighter too) and don't overcook it. Like duck, it needs to be medium rare or it will taste like muddy livers. The underkeeper made burgers out of goose meat last year and, with spices and breadcrumbs, it was probably the best way to eat it.
ReplyDeleteCF - Each breed has its own guidelines for grooming, some are even lightly dyed orange with local soil. Some sheep seem to enjoy the attention, others are flighty and don't like it so much. The ram in these photos loves the attention and it shows in the ring. The little ewe flinched at every stroke. Donna told me she pressure washed the really dirty ones and they LOVED it. Go figure!