Thinning the herd

 

3282DB75-6D04-4D23-98BF-1E3DC6872D3CFriday morning we lost water.  Now this happens at least annually and he had just had some power blips so I figured the pump had just kicked off.  The controller resides in the basement of my mother-in-law’s house.  I called a few times and realized she was out of the house.  Around noon I called and she was home, she attempted to reset the pump without success.  I went down to try and see if I could get it started.  The pump controller is pretty complicated so I try not and mess with it too much.  Annmarie has to reprogram it when I do just randomly push buttons and that takes some effort on her part.  We could not find the instruction manual after I tried to turn it off and on (would not do it) then pulled the fuses and got the error code to change from “OC3” to “Er2”.  I then attempted to search the internet for the control manual without success.  I even called a pump distributor with no success.  The longer I stared at the case the more the weird melted plastic section stood out.  I could not ever remember that being there.  I touched the plastic case and discovered that not only was the case melted but that section was hotter than anywhere else on the case.  I called Pendleton Electric, as they do well pump controllers knowledge gained courtesy of Google.  I was able to say I thought the pump controller had burned up and to read the tag on the size with the power ratings.  They wanted the Hp of the well motor but we don’t know it.

We went out to the barn to start sorting sheep and got a call that the repair guys were here.  It was less than two hours from the time I called!  Annmarie went down to answer questions and oversee.  This left the Child and I to sort all of the sheep.  This sounds like a great combination unfortunately sorting out animals is rough on a good day.  If you want to know how well you can work with someone then just try and sort animals with them.  You will realize that everyone else are a bunch of idiots and if they would just do what you ask of them this entire process would go smoothly.  Now when everyone thinks the same thing it tends to cause some problems.  Now that we have more 6 foot panels I was able to create a sweep gate in the back of the barn.  So as we push more sheep down the chute we can keep moving the sweep gate and shrinking their waiting area.  This was Annmarie’s idea but we never had enough panels or lightweight panels to move making this possible.   It worked great and will now be something that happens every time.

They were able to put in a new controller and yes the old one had burned up after 15 years.  The new one has a pressure display in pounds and nothing else.  It’s just a grey box.  You turn off the pump now by pulling the fuses.  Finally, a sensible design.  Unfortunately, they could not get the pressure up to 60#.  They maxed out at 57# which means we most likely have a leak.  Annmarie walked the entire length of the pipe and could not find any water bubbling up. This does not mean we don’t have a leak as Annmarie reminded me there was an area down by Donna’s that was wetter than we thought it should be last year but it never bubbled but it was near the front spring.  So we are going to look at that area hard this spring after all the rain stops or when we lose water totally.

The Child and I had to make some executive decisions as some of the lambs were marked for cull and keep.  Their temperament in the chute decided their fate.  The child doesn’t like sheep with “crazy eyes” and wanted to cull all bad behavior out of the herd.  We saved around 6-8 female lambs to replace the old ewes.  We had to save all the old ewes as they have babies.  We have 6 no tag Barbados sheep.  We had a brand of tag that the sheep could pull out by reaching through the woven wire fences and lost a lot of tags.  We are probably going to have to retag them so we can track their babies.  They all look alike and we would like to track their productivity.  We are going to sort off the ten cull ewes before we put the ram back in with the main herd.  They will spend most of the summer in the orchard so we know they are not pregnant when we sell them.

We ran them through the chute system and had 22 to sell written down and 23 in the pen. We tried to recount several times and discover who I had not written down.  We finally gave up and ran them back through the chute backwards.  All the keep animals were on the inside of the barn so the far end was empty and isolated from the main herd.  Before we got halfway through them we found the one I had missed.   I had set it up so those sell animals would stay in the milking area of the barn and the corral area.  This way when our buyer shows up we can load them and be done in under 15 minutes.

 

E92E12EB-52BA-4CCA-A4FD-1BEA203864BFI had to feed the bull and his two charges and the ram next.  The bull had gotten tired of the four panels surrounding the large bale of alfalfa and had hooked and thrown it off with his horns.  This is one of his talents that he knows and performs on a regular basis.  I pulled a large bale of alfalfa out of the machine shed and pushed it down to Alcatraz.  I had to open the gate to push the bale inside but this let the bull, 2 steer and the ram out.  I thought, foolishly, that they would follow the bale of alfalfa back into their pen.  Nope!  The bull ran over to the far gate and started hollering for female cows.  I got the bale situated and the panels around the new bales.  Both horses were in Alcatraz happily munching on alfalfa when I went out with the tractor to chase the animals back.  No one wanted to back to isolation.  It took me about 30 minutes of tractor wrangling to get everyone back into the pen.  I considered going and getting the dogs but last time I lost my voice convincing them that I was boss.  The tractor worked eventually.   The dogs do best in wide open spaces.  I was unable to get either horse away from the all you can eat alfalfa buffet so I just locked them in with the cows and ram.  Annmarie got them by just walking over to the pen later that evening.  They just walked over to see her, I am not their favorite or their leader.

Removing 23 teenagers, age 6 months or older really opened up the space in the barn.  I was surprised.  It was enough of a difference that we might end up with a teenage herd running around in the barn lot next winter.  We can open up the old lamb shed for shelter and just feed them out of the back of the barn.  I will need to think up a feeder type for the outside of the building.  The real problem are the horses.  What do we do with them?  They need some shelter, they will share with the sheep but an all you can eat buffet is not healthy for them despite what they think of the idea.

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Lambogeddon vs2

We keep thinking that lambing season is going to be over, but it has not happened.  I went out one night and had five lambs running around and could not find all the mothers.  Annmarie had to come out when she got home and discovered that one of the lambs from the momma/baby area had gotten out.  She claims it was from me going through door, I attempted to deflect that to squeezing through the wooden slats but that has never happened before so it was probably me.  I had been focusing on moving two others who were laying by the door a third one could have snuck by.  They are sneaky little creatures.  They are still coming in waves, I went out this morning and found two sets of twins.  It took me a while to find the first mother and while I did that one of the lambs disappeared into the crowd.  By the time I found that one I discovered its twin and found another mother with twins.  Luckily, she had self isolated in a back corner so it was easy to to push everyone else outside.  I put both new sets of twins under the stairs.

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Yesterday we had one twin that was hollering so Annmarie brought it inside the house for me to feed before work while she finished up feeding and watering everyone in the barn.  I sat on the hallway floor and convinced the lamb to drink a few ounces.  It was not the best bottle drinker.  It got better with practice.  When Annmarie came back in she wanted to make sure it was topped off as she was going to take it back outside and put it in with its momma and twin.  She took it out as the ewe had been head butting the lamb.  They do this to knock them away when they think they are not their lamb.

When Annmarie came back from work after noon, she went out and checked on the lamb and it was hollering and cold.  She set up a pen in front of our propane stove using the dog pen.  Once the lamb was fed she just put the lamb in the pen until we could get the lamb to its forever home.  We are going to leave the pen up for a couple more weeks until the lambing is complete.  It works way better than a cardboard box or laundry basket.

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The baby chickens have finally decided to start laying eggs.  The mini eggs are coming a few every day now.  I feel guilty about adding them into our selling rotation but everyone has learned that the chicks start small and get bigger.  We have the same few customers so they are used to it.  If it starts getting out of control I will switch to 18 packs and charge the dozen price.  We have done that before.

 

We are going to work the sheep today.  We need to touch and catalog every single sheep on the property today.  We have a buyer for our butcher weight lambs and we don’t know how many there are.  Annmarie has been working diligently on a free database and we are starting to use it faithfully.  Today we ensure we have every single animal in the database and then we will be able to track and give accurate predictions.  We looked at upgrading the database this week to allowing us to do calculations and reports but they wanted $250 annually per person!  We would have done the $250 but not $500-$750 if we add Sarah.  It’s not worth that.  So Annmarie helped me with an Apple spreadsheet to do some of the calculations.  We probably need to create an all encompassing report for the entire year next.

I stayed out in the barn after sorting off the two sets of twins under the stairs.  I moved the other two mothers and babies into the momma/baby area.  This allowed me to tear down all the pens inside the barn making sorting much easier.  I moved the feeders out of the way of the sorting chute.  I dug out a couple of paths in the straw covered floor to allow me to move the panels and operate a couple of doors in the chute system.  The straw/compost/excrement can get 12-18” deep in the barn and the chute is mounted at barn floor height so accommodations have to be made the later into winter we use the system.

 

These were the two sets of twins I found out in the barn this morning.  There really are four lambs in there.  There are two brown ones up against that wall on the left side of the picture.  Both of these ewes are older, their tags are so worn that there are no more visible writing on them so we use the tag color to guess their age.  I change the tag color every couple of years on the females.  Red was the very first color we used to start tagging the female sheep.  I have used the same blue tag color since inception since the boys all get sold off.

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My wife made spreadsheet.  I scrolled over to just show the last entry and totals.  I am going to mockup the annual one based on quarterly reporting from items we need for taxes and our annual USDA report we file every January.  The USDA is very diligent about getting a hold of us and going through the report.  They send a couple of paper requests then start calling us until we complete the report over the phone.  I have yet to fill out the paper and get it in on time.

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Lucky ones

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Annmarie goes out in the mornings to do the chores and she is a much better kitty whisperer than am I.  This is a picture of our “barn kitty”.  We have 2-3 barn kitties but this one is the most elusive.  It is very hard to spot and runs at the sight of people.  It will now come out when she feeds it and lets her see it!  The fat orange barn kitty lets her pet it and I can even touch it now.  It looks like Garfield and kind of behaves that way also.

We have switched to feeding out of the other side of the barn.  The hay is of a better quality and we are using the lousy hay for bedding and filler.  We are using around 10 bales a day now.  I hope we can compost most of the lousy hay this spring and kill the weed seed that way.

I ordered a new battery for the side by side (buggy) and next week will be installing the new battery and trickle charger so the buggy will be ready for weed spraying this spring.   I may have to steal one of the barn portable lights so I can see to work on wiring the machine shed after my paying job is over in the evenings.  If I spend 1.5 hours a night I should be done in a week.

We are still lambing.  It has been ten days since I posted the last updated birth statistics.  Since that time we have had 8 more ewes deliver, for 14 more lambs of which 13 are still alive and 12 of those babies are sets of twins.

Umatilla County has had record setting runoff in the Umatilla River causing water levels to be the highest ever recorded in history.  Large chunks of towns are under water and at least 6 bridges have been damaged and closed.  We have it better than last year.  None of our fields have flooded and our back runoff creek is already lower than usual for this time of year after we had the flash runoff on Wednesday.  I wish those people luck and the perseverance to hang on and build back up.  This is really going to strain the ability of our county to get projects completed due to the sudden demand for contractors to fix all of this water damage.

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  • Total lambs born (dead or alive):  42
  • # of singles:  7
  • # of twins:  13
  • # of triplets:  3
  • Stillborn lambs:  1
  • # died without a tag:  5
  • # bummered:  3
  • # ewes delivered:  23
  • # lambs alive on property:  33
  • Birth rate (alive & dead included):  183% (goal>150%)
  • Ewe productivity after 1 week (live lambs on farm):  143% (goal >125%)
  • Lamb success (live lambs on farm after 1 week):  79% (max 100%)

We have had 23 ewes deliver their babies but it looks like at least 10 more need to have babies.  We really need to to run everyone through our chutes and do an individual count of all involved parties so we know exactly how many animals there are out in the barn.

Our three cow carcass weights were 386#, 338#, 325#, we shoot for 330# so they were right there.  We are going to hold our price to $2.50 lb/hanging weight for all of 2020 again.

The chickens are making me crazy, we have 32 now and the babies keep trying to decide whether to lay or not.  We were getting 7 eggs a day and are now down to 2/day.  I keep hoping that as soon as the weather warms up the chicks will take off laying and we will be buried in eggs.

 

 

 

A little flash flood

It snowed yesterday and then rained all night.  I of course had not taken the fence out of the creek crossings yet.  I had been talking about it for the last two weeks and just never seemed to get around to it.  This morning while it was still dark I told Annmarie I was going to have to come home early and get those fences out of the back runoff creek.

As I was headed out of work early this afternoon, a coworker texted to remind me I was going to show him around the farm so he could come out and shoot coyotes.  I had of course forgotten this and had told him he would need to send me said reminder but this dovetailed nicely with me needing some help to get the panels out of the back creek.

My Doppelgänger came out and proceeded to help me pull the panels out of the now raging back creek.  It has rained 0.68 inches in the last 24 hours and has rained 5.63 inches since Jan 1, 2020.  We used to get 12” of rain annually.

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We pulled the fence out of multiple crossings and at one point I noticed my Doppelgänger was bleeding all over the fence.  He managed to cut himself on the very first piece of panel we moved.  This did not slow him down and I managed to not fall into the rampaging creek.  I escorted him over the property and showed him where the coyotes were most likely to be hiding and were it was safe to shoot.

Best last minute didn’t know they were gonna help, help I have ever had.  I would have been at it for at least a couple of hours trying to wrestle those panels out of the runoff by myself.  On the way back to the house we stopped off at the barn and Mr Doppelgänger and his girlfriend helped me feed the sheep while they played with the lambs.  Lamb snuggles are worth the wait.

My baby chickens have not been liking the rain and have started to protest and not lay eggs.  They need to just get over it and start laying consistently.

 

 

If only all studs could be this lazy

These are not Siamese twins, some sheep are just greedy.   They were trying to get more grain than was their due and figured that crowding their way in would work.  Sarah wanted to know what to do about them.  She thought that she would have to cut the feeder apart to get them loose.  I told her to just ignore them and continue feeding, they would get themselves loose.  They figured out how to get out of the feeder on their own with no human assistance.  Just like a cat figuring out how to get down from a tree!

On Sunday, Sarah and I went outside and worked the sheep.  We tagged and banded all the babies and turned everyone loose into the main herd.  It took almost three hours in the barn to get everything done.  I even hung some hooks for the buckets so you can now find a needed bucket quickly and they are out of the way.  26785DDE-C95E-4B9A-9048-23236CEAEE45

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It seems like a fairly simple idea, but not one we had put in place.  I blame all of the LEAN projects I have been doing at work on getting the right supply to the right place as fast as possible and as conveniently as possible.

I am still working on the upstairs bathroom.  I really want to get it to a place where I can lay down tile.  I cut the first piece of hardiboard with the skilsaw and had dust everywhere!  It took 20 minutes for the dust to settle down on the breeze porch and I still had to open two windows to get it.  I switched to a utility knife and breaking it along th escorted line afterwards.  It takes longer but there is no dust.  I just need to get the 3” tall wall pieces installed and the bathroom backsplash done and I can start painting the Redgard water sealant on.  That is going to be key to making it waterproof.

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Annmarie and I are tired of lambing season dragging out.  The ram was definitely taking his time.  We have been lambing since Christmas and are just over half way done.  We are in serious discussions on getting a second ram, maybe that will spur some competition?