Tuesday, March 30, 2010

68 degrees







It was 68 degrees today, and I was working outside in a t-shirt. The snow in the yard is all melted and the mud is drying out. Spring is here!
Since our last blog, we have added a calf to the farm. I was determined to try to catch the cow while calving, so when it looked like all the signs were there that she was ready, I started to check her in the middle of the night. The morning she calved, I had checked her at 3:30 am, and really expected her to be calving. But she was just laying there chewing her cud. When we went out to the barn to milk at 6, I was getting the milk room ready and Tyler went out into the barn to get the grain for milking. He came right back and said, "Uh, Dad? Daisy is calving right now." I went out and looked, and there was a portion of the water bag out that was about the size of a cantelope.

We kept on with milking/chores while keeping an eye on her. After about 15 minutes with no change, I called Don Ost. He said had to go to work and wouldn't be able to stop by. Expecting UPS to call at any moment, I wasn't sure what I was going to do if Daisy had trouble. However, all of a sudden things began to progress rapidly, and within 10 minutes the calf was out and Daisy was up licking it dry. Sure enough, UPS called and I had to leave for work, so I told the kids to rotate keeping watch on the calf so I would know if it sucked and got a good supply of colostrum by the time I got home. They say that it's critical for a calf to get mom's first milk within the first 6 hours of life.

By the time I got home around 1000, the calf had sucked several times so all was well. So we are now milking three cows and getting around 6 gallons of milk a day. That's a lot of milk! Fortunately, our customer base is growing. Today a lady stopped by for 5 gallons. Sure is nice when that happens!

Star is still the hyper cow. I call her the rodeo queen. I'll have to post a video of her at milking time. When we open her stall, she goes bucking and kicking at a run into the milk room to get the grain. Fortunately, she settles down pretty fast once she gets her nose in the grain bucket. She hasn't kicked anybody in a while, either.

We finally decided to go with laminate flooring in the dining room. It had some pretty nasty carpet in it, so that is now gone and I have most of the laminate down. It has been a family project, and when all of the children were outside enjoying the weather, Sheryll was helping me install the long runs. It definitely improves the looks of things!

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Latest happenings

Well, it's looking a little like spring around here! At 9 pm tonight it was still above freezing, and there's quite a bit of melting going on.

We took Emily to the airport today and she headed back to Texas. Bummer! We miss her already. She sure was a blessing to us. Hard to believe she was here for almost two months.

The one Holstein we were going to "babysit" turned into two Holstein/Jersey mix cows that we bought. One has already had her calf. We came out to do chores this past Friday morning and there it lay, still a little wet but doing well. Not nearly as stressful as the last time, and he seems to be healthy. We started milking Mom, AKA "Star" yesterday. Now we realize what a calm, amiable, patient, longsuffering, kind-hearted, placid, etc. etc. cow that Bell is. Star is not. She drew blood on Trevor's hand when she kicked him while he was attempting to put the milk machine on her. Later we were trying to get her out of her stall, and Trevor was at least 3 feet away to her side. The calf was in front of her and he reached out to get the calf to move so we could get Star out, and...whack! She kicked him right in the knee. He expressed a desire to shoot her, but I talked him out of it. I was sure he was out of her reach, but we both now know how far a cow can kick to the side. She is a first-calf heifer, so I guess we have to cut her some slack. Wow, is Bell a good cow! The gentlemen we bought her from assures us that Star will be a great milk cow as well...she just needs training and we need patience. I sure hope he's right.

Is he cute, or what?
The calf on Mom at just a couple of hours old.

Now that's an icicle!

Tucker seems to be enjoying the task!

Sheryll gets in on the milking. We won't be taking any pictures like this with Star anytime soon!

Sheryll sledding/Callie's train

Thanks for the "kid's" sled, Poppy!

The interpretation is "It's a yellow chug-a-chug-a-choo-choo!"