Lambs!
/If you read the last post you know there is a contest about who will lamb first. No one is a winner yet because the choices didn't include the ewe who did actually lamb first. (Don't worry, the contest was just for the ewes in that blog post--we'll still have a winner.)
I came home from town today to find Ears, a BFL-x ewe, just about ready to deliver. I didn't have a breeding date for her so no lambing date either.
One lamb.
Two lambs.
Three lambs. All were up and nursing quickly. Good job, Ears!
I always look at the sheep surroundings for potential hazards. My feeders are chained to the fence or wall so they can't fall on a sheep. If I use baling twine to tie something (rarely because I have plenty of 2' lengths of chain with clips)...but if I do use baling twine I make sure that there is no loop in which a sheep could get a head or horn stuck. If I leave a ewe to lamb in the larger lambing area I make sure the gate is shut with an extra chain because I know a lamb can squeeze through the space between the gate and the wall. So I was sitting in the straw watching the first lamb move around and I planned to move this extra panel before I went to the house because...
...I knew that, however unlikely, a lamb could get stuck between it and the wall.
Sure enough, that happened while I was still sitting there.
So what could be cuter than a baby lamb? (Or at least As Cute?)
How about this foal that was just 12 hours old?
He was born down the road at my friend's house. We have to wait 5 months for lambs to be born. This foal was due on January 29 (11 months) and was just born today on February 22! That is almost a year of gestation for the mare.

