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You are here: Home / Archives for Castledale

Castledale

LambMetrics – 25 August 2020

August 25, 2020 by Wendy Beer

#LAMBMETRICS for the day

Drysdale & English Leicester Flocks

Born today: 4
Total Lambs Born: 92
Drysdale lambs (live total): 43
English Leicester lambs (live total): 32
English Leicester X lambs (live total): 11
Total Sets of Twins born: 29
Total Sets of Triplets born: 1
Total ewe lambs: 48
Total ram lambs: 44
Ewes lambed /76: 61  (80.3 %)
Lamb % : 141 % [live]
Assisted/Dystocias: 8
Losses: 6 [lamb]; 0 [ewe]

Notable Midwifery tales:

Sometimes the blog-worthy things happen after the blog has been uploaded for the evening…

So, last night, as usual, after the LambMetrics were done I headed across the paddock in the dark, over the gully, up the hill to where the sheds are at the old house to feed the pet lambs.

Organised the milk, fed the lambs (pushy lil beggars LOL) and then rinsed out the bottles using the tankwater beside the shed since the water in the house has stopped until I can get the plumber to fix it.

Now, yesterday, I had to get the horse into the area behind the house because I felt she was tipping over the laminitic edge (drat). She wasn’t overly thrilled at being cooped up and followed me where I was washing the bottles and then went back to a pile of hay. I thought.

I headed back to the house to finish things up and…. heard the gate chain rattle on one side of the small paddock… Now, one thing you need to know about my mare is that she is chestnut and she is very, very good at opening gates.

In a flash I realise I hadn’t put the “horse-proof” latch in place because she hasn’t been in that area for months. Oh no. I put the bottles I am carrying down beside the gate into the garden and head off with the torch – calling to the horse and reminding her she isn’t allowed out in the orchard. (That’s part of the Day Paddock for the pregnant ewes!)

Annnd the gate is wide open. Drat. Oh wait, there’s a white blob in the torchlight…. oh rats, a Drysdale ewe with twins, camped for the night on the wrong side of the fence. Argh. Go a bit further and find three more ewes with lambs. ARGH. The gate has obviously been open for a while. I’d taken the alpacas out of that paddock to put with the ewes in the Big Paddock so no way I wanted ewes and lambs where they were.

Muttering dark things I’m trying to get ewes and lambs to move. It’s hard enough at the best of times but in the dark, when I’m tired and just want to go to bed…. arrrgggghhhh. In the end I had to be as “annoying as possible” and wrangled them all back through the gate.

Then I went looking for any other ewes that may have snuck under trees, around corners and the like. Chased the horse out…. Went back to the gate. But I can hear a frantic lamb back in the orchard so off I go (gee, this torch better not run out of battery) and find a lamb from the next door paddock running up and down the fence. On the wrong side. Must have lain down beside the fence and rolled under. Rats. Big lamb, in the dark and I’ve got a torch.

Up the fence.

Down the fence.

Up the fence. (Patience is a virtue..?!)

Make a grab for it. Miss. Another grab for it in the corner and manage to somehow snag it properly. Lift the heavy sucker up and over the fence so it can be reunited with its mother.

Okay, walk back, check no other lambs and no horse. Right.

Get through the gate. Put horse-proof lock in place.

Walk back towards the garden gate where the bottles are still waiting to be taken back to the house.

Clomp, clomp….

Horse…… you’d better not be in the garden?!

Find the garden gate pushed open…. argh. Why didn’t I latch it on my way out?! (I wanted an early night tonight?!)

She’s gone to the left of the house, so I go around the other way to try intercept her before she gallops over the lawn. Sneaky wench is enjoying some green grass. How do I stop her thinking this is a wonderful game and just going round and round the driveway??

Hmmmm. I start making weird snorting noises (scary…?) and flick/flash the torch as well as toss a little stick up into the tree above her. Snort, snort.

Run, run!

Thankfully, she ran OUT of the garden (and was heard to be trying to let herself out the back gate which HAD been horse-proofed)

Mutter, mutter…. stomp back down the hill, over the gully, up the hill and then just crawl into bed.

LOL

Today though had a cold and frosty, foggy start.

Alas, after doing the rounds – all well in the Big Paddocks – I got back to discover that one of the lambs I’d moved the night before had indeed been nabbed by a fox. 🙁 I’ve never had a problem with behind the house before but I do normally try and have alpacas “surrounding” everything. Of course, I’d had to shift the alpacas from that paddock into a Big Paddock.

Bastard things. Hate foxes.

And then, this morning, there was a newborn Castledale whose young mother could only count to one. And this lamb wasn’t “one”. 🙁

So now we have teeny, tiny Tina. All 2kg of her. Most of the Drysdales and Leicesters would be 4-6kg so she is an absolute titch. (The size XS rug is almost too big!) She looks a bit bedraggled in the pic – that’s what happens when you’re dumped in the dirt. At the moment she’s a very special Princess and has a box in the laundry. The other pet lambs are a bit rough and rowdy for a tiny newbie and she needs more feeding than they do. And I don’t want to go over there really late. Hopefully she doesn’t start yelling at 2am. LOL

Teeny, tiny, Tina.

And then the afternoon was rounded off with a couple of new Drysdale lambs. 🙂

LambMetrics – 7th August 2020

August 7, 2020 by Wendy Beer

#LAMBMETRICS for the day

Drysdale & English Leicester Flocks

Born today: 3
Total Lambs Born: 23
Drysdale lambs (live total): 14
English Leicester lambs (live total): 8
English Leicester X lambs (live total): 0
Total Sets of Twins born: 6
Total Sets of Triplets born: 0
Total ewe lambs: 11
Total ram lambs: 12
Ewes lambed /76: 17  (22.3 %)
Lamb % : 135 % [live]
Assisted/Dystocias: 3
Losses: 1 [lamb]; 0 [ewe]

Notable Midwifery tales:

Today has been…. busy.

A nice Drysdale lamb first thing this morning and then I had to help old Minty (Gilbert’s sister) who decided to have a 6kg whopper and he was slightly overcooked which meant his horn buds caught a little so he got jammed. He’s been a bit of a “lump” today but I think he’ll be okay despite being big and sleepy all day.

Very cute, very fluffy and just a bit blurry. Sorry!

The Castledales have been misbehaving a bit and this little scrap was found this morning and the mother didn’t want it – she had the other lamb. Harder to get those in the pens etc to sort that out so in the end just brought the little one in and fed it.

Say hi to Bibbi….

Bibbi has a very loud voice despite small stature and she can drink like a champion.

Unfortunately, the majority of the day was taken up dealing with a Drysdale ewe that had developed a vaginal prolapse. Have never had a Drysdale do this. 🙁 She’s pregnant with twins but wasn’t lambing. So, there have been numerous calls to the vet and a trip to town and makeshift harness made (twice) because no one local has the ewe retainers at the moment. (Must be imported items?!?)
Probably a 50/50 chance of success but I guess we will see what tomorrow brings.

And now it’s off, in the dark, wet night, to give Bibbi a feed. (She’s in the shed with sheep for company – did I mention her voice was LOUD?!)

LambMetrics – 6th August 2020

August 6, 2020 by Wendy Beer

#LAMBMETRICS for the day

Drysdale & English Leicester Flocks

Born today: 5
Total Lambs Born: 20
Drysdale lambs (live total): 12
English Leicester lambs (live total): 7
English Leicester X lambs (live total): 0
Total Sets of Twins born: 6
Total Sets of Triplets born: 0
Total ewe lambs: 10
Total ram lambs: 10
Ewes lambed /76: 14  (18.4 %)
Lamb % : 135 % [live]
Assisted/Dystocias: 2
Losses: 1 [lamb]; 0 [ewe]

Notable Midwifery tales:

Bit tired tonight (the dogs barking at the foxes at Stupid O’Clock don’t help) so this will be shorter than yesterday!

Two English Leicester ewes had lambed this morning. I suspect they are actually twin sisters….. Each had a single and there was a ewe lamb and a ram lamb.

Lacey with her newborn, “Queenie”

Then a couple of Drysdale ewes popped out their offspring. 🙂

In the shed tonight I thought that the fostered Castledale lamb was starting to get a wee bit whiffy downwind so decided to try swapping the pelt for a proper jacket. “Mum” decided it was a bit strange but it was still smelly so must be her girl!! (Thankfully!) Expecting some bad weather tomorrow and the little one is not a Drysdale that her “mum” thinks she is!

Who’s rockin’ her trendy jacket?!

Little one is moving better now (not weighed down!) and should go ahead in leaps and bounds. Literally. 😉

Have decided to call the Drysdale “mum”, Boadicea. She’s a tough one….. 🙂

Bubba though..? I might need some help. 😉

LambMetrics – 5th August 2020

August 5, 2020 by Wendy Beer

#LAMBMETRICS for the day

Drysdale & English Leicester Flocks

Born today: 5
Total Lambs Born: 15
Drysdale lambs (live total): 9
English Leicester lambs (live total): 5
English Leicester X lambs (live total): 0
Total Sets of Twins born: 5
Total Sets of Triplets born: 0
Total ewe lambs: 9
Total ram lambs: 6
Ewes lambed /76: 10  (13.1 %)
Lamb % : 140 % [live]
Assisted/Dystocias: 2
Losses: 1 [lamb]; 0 [ewe]

Notable Midwifery tales:

Today’s adventures actually started last night after the blog had been written.

I’d gone down to the workshop and I could hear, what I presumed was, an English Leicester being very vocal. Given that I tell the girls regularly that if they are in trouble they need to “yell out and put a hoof up” I thought it prudent to go and check. I don’t normally check them at night because they really don’t need me at night very much at all.

But….. I arrived in the bright moonlight to discover that a Drysdale ewe had lambed and there was an English Leicester ewe with her and there were two lambs. Oh, I thought, they’re getting muddled.

Hmmm. Not quite.

Turns out that the two lambs were twins and the Drysdale was their mother. The English Leicester had a lamb “on the way” but what’s a couple of “easy pickings” ?!

So, torch parked precariously in the coat pocket as I pick up and carry the lambs towards the gate to get them out of the Night Paddock. Their mother was nudging me with her head occasionally and I had speak very firmly with her because I didn’t want to end up on my face (and on top of her two lambs!) with her barging around my legs. Good mother but…!!

Managed to get the lambs – and their real mother – out the gate, leaving the English Leicester dolefully baa-ing on the other side of the fence.  I offered to get her lamb out so she could really have her own but she decided she wasn’t really in a rush after all and took off down the paddock – with no more carry on. Catching a ewe that sprightly in the dark among all those other heavily pregnant ewes wasn’t my idea of a good plan so made the executive decision that she wasn’t as far along as she had first suggested.

Good decision in the end. I got a good sleep and arrived in this morning to find her very smugly with a lovely new lamb of her own.

One of the “nearly lamb-napped” Drysdale lambs this afternoon

This morning revealed not just the English Leicester lamb but also another set of Drysdale twins.

And then on to check the ladies and lambs in the shed. The English Leicesters were very cosy but still very happy to go out in the sunshine.

English Leicester family portrait

Meanwhile, remember Sleepy McFluffFace from the other day?

Look at him now. 🙂

Sleepy McFluffFace and mum pose for a portrait

And then I let the poor ewe, who had lost her lamb yesterday, out of the shed too. She was checking out the other lambs and was a bit miserable but there wasn’t anything I could do.

Headed off to check the Merino and Castledale ewes (that have finally started popping out lambs) and straight away come across a first-time Castledale ewe that seemed agitated. Getting closer it was apparent she had twins but was rejecting one and continually butted it away from her. And then she wouldn’t stand still to let the other little one drink. Argh. Left her for a while to continue rounds in case there was an emergency.

Discovered, in the Twins Paddock, that a Merino ewe and a Castledale ewe had each had twins and had them close to each other and so there was a general hubbub with lambs everywhere and mothers really confused. I didn’t seem to be able to help much as the ewes were flighty so decided to let them sort it out – as long as all the lambs get fed I don’t care who feeds them!! Just goes to show though how easily they get mixed up and we don’t always realise.

Meanwhile, the maiden ewe was standing up to the dog and both lambs were getting a drink while she was distracted which was great but as soon as the pressure was off she went back to whacking the first lamb.

So, they all went closer to the shed. The ewe was very very good – much better than I expected her to be and followed the lamb that I carried. So far, so good. Left her with the small lamb just inside the gate and then took the loud lamb to introduce her to the bereft Drysdale ewe.

Alas, despite coming up to me with hope in her eyes, the Drysdale ewe checked over the lamb and her response was “meh, not mine”. Well, it was a very off chance that she’d be desperate enough (not impossible but not likely).

There is still one old shepherd’s trick though for grafting a lamb onto a ewe that has lost a lamb – the lamb pelt maneuver.

Always “worth a shot”. Worse case scenario is ending up with a bottle-fed lamb.

It’s a bit icky to have to skin the dead lamb and put it on the live one but it can be very successful. Ewes that have licked a lamb clean will always recognise them afterwards from the taste/smell.

Round 2 in the paddock: calling the ewe and she didn’t want to come this time. “You called me last time and it wasn’t my lamb.” So I had to employ Border Collie persuasion to get the ewe up towards where I had left the “disguised” Castledale lamb.

Then I held my breath.

(And took photos)

Hmmmm well it sort of smells like My Baby
Yeah, it does seem to *taste* like My Baby
I have MY BABY! She’s ALIVE!

One very happy ewe this evening.

One very happy lamb.

One very happy Shepherdess.

🙂

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