Monday, April 26, 2010

Baaaaahhhh Ram Ewe

Now that spring's here, it seems everyone is 'flocking' to the farm. Hahahah! Get it? Cause I'm talking about sheep. And I said flocking. Funny, funny stuff here folks...

Biting wit aside, Truelove Farms is proud to welcome it's newest members: two (prego) Boer goat does, Eva and Annie, named in honor of two other 'ornery old broads, and four three-week-old lambs, Paul, Mick, Joe, and Topper, who I just named this moment after the four members of my favorite band, The Clash. It's ironic, you see, because The Clash were a rockin-ass punk band, and the lambs are just cute little lambs. Get it?

Eva and Annie are due to drop at the end of July, but in the mean time they're getting used to being on leads, snacking on briars, and learning the hysterically painful lessons of the electric fence. The lambs, in the way of all baby animals, are cuteness incarnate. I made a faux-udder for them out of a five gallon pail and four rubber nipples, and they all go to town together, tails wagging for that extra cuteness.

In other farm news, ten tiny pigs are proving to be more destructive than...several larger but less destructive things. Gotta work on the analogies.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Sprung

Here on the farm, spring has arrived in full force. The fields are green again, the trees are budding out, and there's a certain energy in the air. Of course, it's been an uncommonly sweet April so far, making everything seem a little rosier, with warm, fair days far outnumbering the rainy and drab. And, shaking off the winter, we've jumped into the new season with no looking back.

The pigs were the first to get an upgrade, getting moved out into the hickory grove, onto pasture. With a solar charger and some step-in plastic fence poles, setting up an enclosure for the swine was a simple afternoon's work; moving them to it was another story. The first attempt was a disaster, when the pigs refused to cross the concrete bridge spanning the creek. A few days later, in a jerry-rigged trailer clabbered together from a flatbed and a dog kennel, we finally wrangled the hogs (who each are topping 200 lbs. now) over into their new homes. They took to the new space with ease and aplomb, rooting for fallen hickory nuts as if nothing had changed. They're out there now, happy and content, turning up the swampy ground and working to restore what would otherwise be wasted space.

The chickens got a new upgrade in real estate too. They've been growing like weeds, and were well on their way to outgrowing the barn stall they'd been living in. After building two secondary frames of 2x4s and chicken wire to cover the doors at either end, the bay that housed the steers for the winter proved to be a perfect space. The birds now have room to spread out, stretch their wings, and get ready for their eventual lives in the great wide world.

The steers got a new address as well, moving out onto the fresh green pasture behind the house. This is my first real experiment in rotational grazing: the cattle get a few days to eat a section down before being moved on the new grass. Right now, after devouring their first area in a few scant days, they're on section two. In a week or two, they'll have mowed the entire region down, pasture by pasture, and then the fun of trying to get them across the bridge begins.

There have been several new additions to the farm as well. Earlier this week we picked up a small dexter steer named, originally, Dexter. Dexters are a small breed, and Dex is always going to be a slight fellow. He's leggy and fit, sporting a pair of odd conical devil horns; an interesting looking guy overall. He's become fast friends with #1, and relaxed into the eternal spring-time bliss of eating and sleeping.

New pigs have arrived too, ten of them, just pink and spotted mutts, but cute none-the-less. They are smaller than the Tams were when they came, but are bolder, learning the fence in a matter of hours. They have a bit of a mean streak, at least with each other, but they're mellowing as they get used to their new freedom.

Most recent of all, the farm acquired a rooster, a stately Americauna by the name of George. He's a stunning and pleasant bird, and his crow could come straight off a movie soundtrack, so typically rooster-ish is it. Luckily, you can't hear him from the house. The neighbors across the road might not be so lucky...