Saturday, April 21, 2007

Attitude Adjustment


What a difference a week makes! From five inches of snow and obscenely cold temperatures, to 70 degrees, shirtsleeves and crocus blooming. The bees were swarming in the crocus yesterday, which valiantly took up where they left off three weeks ago when the snow buried them. The goats are lying around, soaking up the sun. My wonderful apprentice Louella did not run screaming when the power went out during the storm, and we had to hand milk for a day.
Maybe I'll make it after all.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

... more lies ...

April 13, five more inches of snow. April 15, snow and rain. April 16, wind and rain and power outage. April 17, snow and rain. April 18, rain. Will this nightmare ever end???

Friday, April 6, 2007

The Groundhog Lied


Fifteen inches of "poor man's fertilizer" on April 5, for God's sake.

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Silence of the Kids


The kids shipped out on Saturday, to Easter Auction. This is the dark side of dairying, and most people usually don't make the connection. For every dairy animal that gives milk, she has given birth to at least one offspring. It's an even chance it's a male, which makes it useless as a future milker. These unwanted males have to go somewhere, and that somewhere is usually an auction, sooner or later. I don't make any money on it. I never get back the value of the milk it has taken to raise these kids. It's just one solution to the issue. I would rather have them take a short trip to the butcher and end their life in a useful fashion on someone's Easter table, than the longer trip as a possibly abused pet tied to a tree or chased by dogs.
In any case, it's much quieter and calmer in the barn, and I'm getting lots more milk to make into cheese. I don't miss them -- I still have my bottle babies that will be next year's milkers. The moms don't even miss them. Fiona just surprised me by saying that when the kids ship out, it's like Jody Foster's character's experience in Silence of the Lambs, and that made me sad.