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About Robin

Owner of Meridian Jacobs, farm and fiber shop. I raise Jacob sheep, teach fiber arts classes, weave handwovens for sale, and manage the store.

Who’s in the barn?

The lambs in the last post are 10 days old now and yesterday I let them into the pasture with all the other sheep. Last night I found the little ram lamb limping and I diagnosed a broken leg, but wasn’t sure where.  I took him to see my vet today and she came up with this splint to immobilize the leg. The break is at the top of the tibia and this splint holds the joints on either side immobile.  We’ll leave it on about 3 weeks and see how he is.

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While I had my camera in the barn I took other photos.

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Amaryllis, the donkey.

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Jasmine, one of my son’s does. He has gone to his summer job and I’m milking the goats that are left.

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Ewes and ewe lambs on the pasture.

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These ram lambs were so happy to get out onto the pasture after being in a dry lot getting hay for weeks. I have to keep them separate from the ewes now so my options are more limited. This pasture now has plenty of feed.

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This is trefoil, one of my favorite flowers, and good sheep feed. There is a lot of it in that ram pasture.

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My husband came back from the hardware store and told me he bought something for me. The other day when I was irrigating I broke the only shovel that I could find –one with the handle taped. So this is MY shovel.

Lambs in June?

I guess its normal for people in cold climates to have lambs later in the year, but June seems pretty late for me. This is Hillside Sidney with ram and ewe lambs born a couple of days ago. I got Sidney along with 5 other sheep in February and there had been a ram escape at the previous owner’s farm.

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Here is one of the things on the list for today. I have lots of buttons waiting to be drilled and sanded. I like to do a lot at once because it’s kind of a dirty job–horn dust  in the hair and all over. I want to have a new batch of buttons for the Spinners Day on the Farm in Healdsburg tomorrow.

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Empty Nest

This has been quite a week–nothing having to do with my business. My daughter flew in from Vermont last Friday and her boyfriend got here from Texas on Saturday. They both left this morning. My youngest son, Chris, will leave today for his summer job. Yesterday the Empty Nest thing hit me. But here is a glimpse of how we spent our week.

We spent a day in San Francisco–taking the ferry to Alcatraz, watching the sea lions at Pier 39, visiting Coit Tower, and ending with a walk on the Golden Gate Bridge and a visit to the Marin Headlands for a look over the bay.

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Isn’t this a perfect plant to have at a prison? Look at those spines. Actually, this was part of a decorative garden. The employee families used to lived on Alcatraz and had normal lives other than the fact that the kids took a ferry to school.

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This photo is taken from Marin County, northwest of the Golden Gate. Alcatraz is the island to the left of the north tower and San Francisco is south of the bridge.

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Katie celebrated her 21st birthday. I guess this was the first time she has tried to blow out candles with her hair not in a ponytail…or maybe its just the number of candles that was a challenge.

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Katie and Aaron painted the barn!!!

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We visited son and daughter-in-law in Pollock Pines and drove up to the Forest Service helispot where Matt works so that Aaron (from TX)  could see what real mountains look like.

We also went back to San Francisco to see the show, Wicked. This is the story that explains the history of the Wicked Witch and the Good Witch in the Wizard of Oz, including how the Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Cowardly Lion originated. It is an excellent show–well-done and very funny. It’s a great experience if you ever get the chance to see it.

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Here is the culmination of the weekend.  Chris, the #3 kid,  graduated. He leaves for Lake Shasta today so he can start work tomorrow morning on a Forest Service Hotshot crew. He spent all night at Grad Night and I hope we can wake him up in time to get there before dark today!

Tomorrow–back to work for me. I have ignored everything. I have wool to sort and get to the mill, buttons to finish, looms to warp, classes to plan, website to update, etc. My husband now has 2 months off (teacher) and his next task is to enlarge my shop/classroom! We’d better get busy. Maybe that will keep me from realizing that there are no happy little faces in my house anymore.

Walk on Water

Graduation is just around the corner, so high school classes are finishing up projects. The Physics classes at Dixon High have a project called Walk on Water. The idea is for teams to figure out a way to get across the pool using “foot-power”. I don’t know all the criteria, but I do know that they couldn’t make a boat, use oars, etc. and they had 2 minutes to cross the pool.  The teams who are able to accomplish the task (and turn in the written work) can use the Physics final as extra credit.

The day started with one of the students playing the National Anthem on his electric guitar. Then the crafts were christened by dumping water on them. I took photos of all 16 entries, but will include only a few here. There seemed to be 2 main types of creations–raft-type of crafts powered by feet and  floating foot-gear. The former seemed to function better than the latter in most cases. There was a 3rd structure as well–wait till you see that photo at the bottom!

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This is my son’s team with the smallest guy as the “walker”. That’s Chris in the water in front. The “walker” had a bar to stand on but brought pedals forward one at a time that turned the paddle wheels. They used large water bottles as floats and old plastic pipe that has been lying around our place since we moved here–they had to buy a lot of fittings though. (I think the local hardware store has to stock up on duct tape and PVC fittings for this event.) And, of course, there is baling twine.

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This team used a similar idea but taped shoes onto the pedals so the feet would stay in place and they made a different kind of paddle-wheel.

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Here is the most successful of the floating foot-gear style. I don’t know what the big tubes are, but the walker’s feet are so well sealed in them that she had a hard time getting them off.

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Here is another raft type of craft. The walker used the supports to hang on and paddled the water directly with her feet.

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There were several of this style, but they kept filling with water. I think that this one finally made it after a few attempts.

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This is was a crowd-pleaser–the hamster-wheel craft. There is a PVC pipe framework inside and the walker rolled through the water in a record-breaking time of 21 seconds. It’s a good thing that it moved quickly because it didn’t take too much longer until the cardboard structure was falling apart.

A bunch of clever kids, don’t you think?

Decisions, decisions

I decided to donate a lamb to the raffle held by JSBA (Jacob Sheep Breeders Assoc) to support AGM (Annual General Meeting)–  http://www.patchworkfibers.com/raffle.html –but I needed to figure out which lamb.  So it was also time to  figure out which lambs I want to keep (and choose the raffle lamb from this batch).  This is not an easy thing for me, especially since I just counted sheep after an auction trip and I still have 114 and I really should have only about 50 by the time breeding season comes around! The first step was to sort out the ewe lambs and then sort them into 2 and 4 horn groups. I didn’t get them all in here, but I sorted out most of the older ones.

This is most of the 2-horn lambs.

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And this is most of the 4-horn ewe lambs.

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I don’t think that there were any lambs that I wouldn’t be happy with in the flock, so it was a tough decision. Here are the 2-horn lambs I chose.

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Here are the 4-horn girls.

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The girl on the left is the lamb for the raffle–guess I should come up with a name.  Here she is:

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She has a very pretty fleece and her sister is in the 2-horn group that I’m keeping.It was a tough decision. I think that my thought process on this might be a good topic for my Farm Club News–maybe that will be the next one.

http://www.meridianjacobs.com/exec/eFarmClub.asp

The rest of my lambs are on my website:

http://www.meridianjacobs.com/exec/eSheep.asp?categoryID=Ewe%20Lambs

My New F-word–F…Foxtail

Also could be titled “Yet Another Reason I Don’t Get to the Loom”.

I trimmed border collie, Rusty’s, feet this weekend. I was late in the season and his toes were packed with foxtails. I was able to pull most out, but there was one place that was oozy and I couldn’t find a foxtail with my non-medical equipment (tweezers). I waited until Monday and took him to the vet. While he was on the table the oozy spot squirted out the foxtail and we were going to let it go at that. The vet, as any good vet would, suggested checking Rusty’s ears. He hadn’t shown any signs (shaking head, etc), but he sure wouldn’t let us hold him well enough to look in the left ear.  So I left Rusty to be knocked out for a better look. The little foxtail on the left below therefore cost me $200. Two days later the foxtail on the right cost me $50 (lots of shaking his head, but able to pull it out without the sleeping drugs).

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For those of you whose dogs live in utopia and don’t know about foxtails here is what they look like:

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And this is a whole field of them. The vet recommended that we landscape our yard so that we don’t have foxtails. Ummm…that would be another thing that has been on the list–not “landscaping”, but planting some bushes and turning the dog paths into paths with some kind of surface that doesn’t turn to mud in the winter. I did go out with the weed eater and try to zap the foxtails growing in the yard around the house.

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As I was weed-eating  I noticed the pomegranite trees. I love pomegranites–not just to eat, but the whole cycle of the flower.

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Here is a flower that has just lost it’s petals and you can see the part behind the star-like points will become the pomegranite. Those are flower buds that haven’t opened around it.

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This one still has one petal but is already starting a baby pomegranite.

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These pomegranites will be included in the fall produce baskets for Gourmet Farm Club members.  See the following link:   http://www.meridianjacobs.com/exec/eFarmClub.asp

Hot dogs

The TV weather people are thrilled. They get to say “triple-digits” for the first time this year. We’re not so thrilled–I like the 80’s and even the low 90’s, but I can do without triple-digits. We don’t have A/C and count on the whole house fan and the evening delta breezes to cool us off at night.  I don’t see any delta breezes yet and I have a little clip-on fan blowing on me while I sit at the computer.

My son and his new wife are finishing up their honeymoon. In fact they are on a plane as I write and we’ll be picking them up in S.F. tonight. I’ve been dog-sitting since Thursday. The dogs’ other grandmother had them for the first part of the week. These dogs live in the foothills and aren’t used to triple-digits either.

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Sam is an Akita-mix. On his first day he spent a lot of time in the pool.

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Guiness is a 7-month old puppy (already 70 pounds) and spent a lot of time in the hot afternoon sleeping near my computer. He has his head on the teddy-bear that he carries around with him.

The hot dogs will be glad to get back to the mountains tonight.

Leash it!

I’m trying to figure out a name for my new product. This is the one that is going to make my fortune. Well, maybe not…but it involves yarn and it’s fun to do. These are the leashes I’ve been working on. I think I still need to do something about some of the tassels and beads to neaten them up. My original idea was to splice the ends, but that would involve learning something else and a lot of time and then I wouldn’t have an excuse to go buy beads.

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There is a member-screening at the Artery’s Annual Meeting this weekend and I’ve been planning to get these ropes done so I could take them to the screening. I also need to finish some more buttons.

I’m back to the loom–trying to weave off the warp that I put on before I broke my arm in January. This is a baby blanket warp on the AVL.

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This blanket is still on the loom. Purple enough?

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These will be listed for sale on my website soon I hope.

Dixon May Fair

What do we do Mother’s Day weekend? For the last 20+ years it’s been spent at the Dixon May Fair because my kids have been showing livestock. My youngest is a senior and this is his last year (or maybe next to last) showing his dairy goats. This is Trista, who was State Fair Champion last year.

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Chris had help showing his kids–they would have had the Cute Award if there was one.

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Chris has won Dairy Goat Showmanship every year that he has showed. That means that he enters Supreme Showmanship in which the winners in all the other species compete. They show beef cattle, dairy cattle, meat goats, dairy goats, swine, and sheep. Here is Chris showing a dairy cow. Chris has won Supreme Showmanship in the past but was 2nd behind one of his Dixon FFA friends this year.

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Now Chris says that he’ll need to come back and show next year so that he can win Supreme Showmanship. He is eligible to show in FFA for one year after high school. The trick is to figure out who will be maintaining the goat herd if he is off at a job, school, etc. Hmmm, that would be me.

More wedding photos

Here is a photo that shows the back of the shawl–my fiber friends are asking for this.

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This is Chris catching the garter. When he learned the significance of that he tried to give it away as quickly as possible.

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What flower girls do when waiting for all the adults to finish with photos:

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