Farm Day
/This was the fall Farm Day. Usually we would be getting ready for shearing but since I have postponed shearing until January we did other things. Unfortunately Dona wasn't here because she seems to take most of the photos on Farm Day. We started by gathering up the different groups of sheep. They have been separated into breeding groups and it was time to put all the ewes back together with just one ram. That means that I'll have just two groups now--the large group with the ram, Ringo, and the non-breeding group (March ewe lambs, State Fair lambs and their moms). There are photos of one group in Rusty's blog.
After putting the ewes together the rams also go back together. This is a ram lamb that I kept but didn't use this year but we took photos so I can register him. Right now the yearling ram, Alex, and the two ram lambs are in a small pen so they can become buddies again--it's really a matter of working on the hierarchy so when they go out in the larger area they don't kill each other. There should be no question that the yearling ram will be on top, but the two lambs were duking it out. This guy knows how to use his horns to get his way. We'll see when they go out who won the second place spot.
This is the group of ewes waiting to go into a different paddock.
As they turned the corner you could clearly see all the marks from breeding (from the marker the ram wears on his chest). Unfortunately the blue mark on that ewe in the back means that she still is not bred after having been bred twice by Alex. I think were a few other ewes with blue marks tonight. I'm wondering about Alex's fertility. Normally I'd expect all the ewes to be bred the first time around. I'll know in the morning.
View Across the Road from my pasture. They are prepping the ground to plant alfalfa.









While I'm introducing sheep this is Kenleigh's Isadora and her lamb, Isabelle, who was born at the fair and will be staying here.















...but to no avail. None of the four ewes wanted much to do with him. I don't have a photo but I did see him finally lying down by the fence looking exhausted and dejected.
















We had only a slight mishap because as we put them in one gate of the barn I realized that the other was still open. They mingled with all the ewes and we had to sort them again. It's not hard at this age because the horns make it obvious which are the ram lambs. We selected two rams for the Lambtown show and discussed which ram lambs to keep for next year's breeding. More on that in another blog post. Those rams had halter lessons and then went back to Ram Lamb Land...away from the ewes.
We caught the big rams, looked at their fleeces and discussed the breeding line-up. Then we took many wheelbarrow loads out of the ram pen.






















































However I'm not happy that the branches get stuck in their wool.




There are plenty of these still on what is left and they will be easier to get to. With my luck though they will all ripen just about the time that I go to Texas for the birth of my granddaughter.
By the way, you'd think that I'd come up with another solution to this problem. See 

…which makes it clear where Rusty was hiding out.






































































