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.  DSC_9988 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.  DSC_9993 This is the group of ewes waiting to go into a different paddock.marked ewes

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.DSC_9996 tractor across the roadView Across the Road from my pasture. They are prepping the ground to plant alfalfa.

Farm Club Helps Again

We had a couple of impromptu Farm Days–these are days when I have a list of things to be done and I e-mail Farm Club to find out who can come on which days. They come. We work. We talk. Everyone gets dirty and enjoys themselves. Win-Win. This time we set up two days.

On Tuesday Mary and Dona came. Thanks to Dona for most of the Tuesday photos. I usually forget to take photos when we’re all working together. First we cleaned the barn. Three shovels are faster than one! Next I wanted to sort out all the ewe lambs so I could make a  decision about which lambs to enter in the Lambtown Sheep Show in October and make notes about which lambs to keep in the flock.

I called the sheep in while Dona took photos. DSC_1582 An enthusiastic response.DSC_1589 There was only a little bit of coercion by shaking a bucket of grain.farm club holding lambs We took  a little time out for Lamb Cuddling…lamb selfie…and selfies.3 lambs to register  After selecting our two show lambs and an alternate…DSC_1704

… we started halter breaking. It is amazing the difference a few days of 10 minutes sessions makes.

We had been having a discussion of show prep. One reason that I show Jacob sheep is that most often there is no show prep. You do your best to keep them free of VM (vegetable matter) but they are shown in their natural state without the primping that goes on with other breeds. However, having a show in October pushes the limits of being able to present clean sheep. Not only are the sheep in almost full fleece with a whole summer’s worth of dust, but there is the problem of the late summer grasses that go to seed. I coated the two yearlings and the three lambs that were chosen for the show, but I thought we could try a couple of other things too.DSC_1709This is Mae, a yearling ewe letting me know that she really didn’t want to be the guinea pig for this experiment. Jackie loaned me a blower.DSC_1718 I have seen some people use blowers, particularly on Shetland sheep. There may be potential to remove the superficial VM, but it is not going to remove stickery things like foxtails that are deeper in the fleece. And if it’s used too close to the sheep it changes the character of the fleece. It may be worth experimenting with a little more. I don’t think it was a favorite of the sheep.

DSC_1752 DSC_1796 However, it is fun to make cool designs in the wool!DSC_1822 Next we tried washing half each of two sheep to compare the two sides later on. I have been told that cheap hair conditioner used 30 days before the show works well. We chose two non-show sheep for the experiment. DSC_1855Again, the sheep were not impressed and I wasn’t either. I think I didn’t use enough conditioner and should have used a spray nozzle.

On Sunday, several Farm Club members were able to come. Amy, Stephany, Alison, and Joy were here. There are not too many photos of this day. We started by catching all the ewe lambs again and weighing them. We gave more halter lessons to the show lambs and a few of the others that I am going to keep. After that Rusty brought in the ram lambs.herdingWe 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.Farm ClubWe 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.

Thanks to all of you who were able to come and help.

Farm Day – help with sheep chores

Our first Farm Day of the year was on Saturday and five Farm Club members helped me get ready for lambing. I forgot to take photos at the beginning but started with vaccinating all the ewes. In the meantime we kept an eye on the two ewes who were supposed to be bred that day so that they will lamb at the fair in July.DSC_8532There was no question about Miller and Donna, but ZZ left me wondering. He seemed more interested in his buddies in the adjacent pen than he was in Clover although she was doing her best to entice him. I decided that I’d better try another ram so Faulkner was the one. He knew just what to do.DSC_8508 While the rams were otherwise occupied and I had plenty of help it was time to clean the ram pen.DSC_8516Rusty usually keeps the rams away while I clean so he took his usual position although the rams weren’t there.  DSC_8523 The ewes watched through the gate while we moved wheelbarrow after wheelbarrow load. Those red marks are just from the marking crayon we used as we vaccinated.DSC_8524 After cleaning the ram pen it was donkey play time! Lisa discovered the bliss of brushing a donkey.IMG_9375Amaryllis had to hold still for me to measure her. She is about as svelte as she ever gets and I wanted to have a baseline measurement for her (670 pounds according to the tape, which is really meant for horses). By the way, I looked up svelte because I wasn’t sure how to spell it. Svelte, according to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary: thin in an attractive or graceful way; and a. slender, lithe. b : having clean lines : sleek. Hmmm. So maybe svelte isn’t quite the right word to describe a donkey.

 

Farm Club Retreat

Last week we had our annual Farm Club Retreat in San Francisco. Six of us were able to get away for 24 hours of camaraderie and relaxation (and one more member joined us for the evening). We started by visiting the Alemany Farm in southeast San Francisco and meeting two of the volunteers. The Farm’s website states: “Friends of Alemany Farm is a volunteer group that manages the horticulture, volunteer, and educational programs at Alemany Farm, a 3.5 acre organic farm ecosystem in southeast San Francisco.” The farm is on city property at the edge of a park and was formerly an eyesore. It has been developed and used by community groups in one way or another for about 20 years. 013 016 014  015 It was certainly nice to see a bit of color since our drought landscape seems so dreary right now. 018 017    019 Shelby tasted most of what we saw… 020 …including the pineapple guavas… 021 …which were sweet inside, but you really didn’t want to taste the outside part. 022A small community farm in the heart of the city.

After the farm tour we drove back to the NDGW Home where we met up with Lisa… 023

…and later Stephany, who had broken her ankle and wasn’t up for walking the hills of San Francisco. We had a splendid dinner at a Green Chili Kitchen just up the street from the Home. We spent the evening lounging in the parlor with our knitting, spinning wheels, and Mary’s wonderful cookies and pom-poms.

Unfortunately I somehow lost all the photos I took with my iPhone from the pjs and pom-pons in the parlor through the next day’s field trip. BUMMER. The next morning we enjoyed the now traditional Lemon Custard pie (from Green Chili’s)for breakfast and then five of us drove to Berkeley to visit Lacis, a shop filled with all kinds of cool gadgets and featuring a museum. The exhibit in the museum was a private collection of lace complete with the history of the development of lace and it’s impact on European history, as told by the owner of the collection and of Lacis. Fascinating.

I look forward to our next FC retreat in January, 2015.

Amaryllis is a Good Sport

Rusty has never been a willing partner in taking cute holiday photos.DSC_5250 DSC_7185DSC_5273 His friend, Moby wasn’t much better. DSC_7188 Nor was Ozzie.DSC_7190Maybe it would have worked with a smaller hat.

DSC_6900Some of the sheep are OK with it. This is Noel.DSC_6913Here is Paulette. But now we have a new star.DSC_6456 Spinners’ Day Out was yesterday. Most of the people here were part of Farm Club (which, by the way, anyone can now join as an e-Farm Club member) and they were willing (more like insistent) on getting photos with Amaryllis. Dona and Mary took these photos."Get that thing out of my eye." “Would you get that thing away from my eye?” DSC_6482 

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What did I do to deserve such Good Friends?

Farm Club (and others) came through again. Expanding the shop has been an ordeal that started five months ago. The last step was to paint. Farm Club friends volunteered to help so I set a date. If they hadn’t offered I’d probably still be procrastinating.IMG_7533 I have been looking at these paint samples for months and finally chose one.IMG_7534 But first everything needed to be primed. This is where the new section joins the old. IMG_7535 This is part of the original  building. It’s actually an old mobile home, which hasn’t been mobile in decades. I painted it about a dozen years ago after we first moved here. IMG_7540This is at the south end. The window trim on the south end and much of the east side was rotten. The wood beneath was also rotten in some places. It has been very discouraging and overwhelming–trying to figure out how to deal with it. (Don’t look up dry rot on Google unless you want to get depressed.) Some of this still has to be fixed before the whole project is completed, but we moved on with what we could do. IMG_7537  It was extra nice that a couple of husbands also volunteered to help. The more the merrier!IMG_7542 IMG_7546 IMG_7547 I don’t know if Mary overcame her dislike of ladders, but she persevered anyway to paint the eaves.painting photo 1We worked all day yesterday with brushes to get that primer into the wood. Today I got out the new paint sprayer.

I don’t have photos yet of the completed job. There are still windows to fix and more trim to paint, but I am so grateful to my friends for their help that I wanted to write this now. In addition to giving up their weekend days, most of them had to drive an hour to get here.  I can’t thank them enough. There will be another post when the job is completely finished.

Black Sheep Gathering – Road Trip with Friends & Sheep

Black Sheep Gathering in Eugene, Oregon is a favorite event for my friends and me. DSC_3410We gathered here on Thursday morning, loaded sheep, and were on the road only a little behind schedule. We made it to Eugene in about 8 1/2 hours, settled the sheep into their pens, and found our motel. Some years I camp, but this year a motel sounded good.

Friday was show day for the Jacob sheep.1000898_676141575733075_122448312_nI showed ram lambs, ewe lambs, and yearling ewes. My ewe lambs took first and third place in the ewe lamb class. 2-DSC_1639Fandango        My yearling ewe, Fandango, took first place in her class and was awarded Champion Jacob Ewe.

Besides showing sheep, what else is there to do at BSG? DSC_3427Admire several hundred sheep in the barn. This is a Bluefaced Leicester from the farm where I got my ram, Faulkner.DSC_3445 Admire wool.DSC_3450 Watch the wool show judging. These are the fleeces to be judged. After two days of judging the fleeces are for sale and dozens of spinners line up to be first in the door.

DSC_3577Shop! My friends are very good at that!DSC_3558Watch sheep dog demos by my friend, Shannon and her amazing dog, Kate.IMG_6788Take classes. Mary and Dona made these scarves in a nuno felting class.DSC_3442Relax with friends.DSC_3542 Farm Club member, Tina, who moved to Portland last year, came to visit along with 10-week old puppy, Ragu.   IMG_6777IMG_6767It has become tradition now to eat dinner at La Oficina. DSC_3525   On Saturday afternoon all the breed champions are shown together and the judge chooses one to be Supreme Champion. Look at all those different sheep! DSC_3579IMG_6794 It was a fun four days, but it’s always good to get back to California. That’s Mt. Shasta in the distance.

Farm Club Goes to the City – Part 2

In the last post I showed photos of Farm Club’s trip to Hayes Valley Farm in the middle of San Francisco. After visiting the farm we thought about what to do next. Kathy asked us if we’d ever been inside City Hall. We could see the dome from the farm. We decided to go there. I’m going to admit something. I’ve lived in the country all my life (well, I don’t consider my life starting until after moving from SF to Cotati when I was 10) and rarely venture into “The City”. Sacramento doesn’t count. After I pass Vallejo going west I leave my comfort zone. I don’t know how to do negotiate public transportation because I never go there. It was good to have friends who have experience with this (and the right apps). So we caught buses and streetcars for this tour around the city. Way better than driving downtown. First stop was City Hall.IMG_6283 It is a beautiful building.IMG_6284 There are interesting displays downstairs…IMG_6288 …and there are weddings going on upstairs.IMG_6289 We people-watched awhile on the front steps. It seems that wedding parties leave about every 15 minutes.

IMG_6292 IMG_6294 After hanging around City Hall for awhile we decided to head to the Ferry Building …IMG_6295 …to see the “foodie” shops there.IMG_6300 I found this book that I remember having as a kid and then reading over and over and over and… to my kids.IMG_6304We found the right bus back to the NDGW Home. Being creatures of habit, we ate at the same (wonderful) restaurant where we have had dinner the last two years. Then we spent the evening knitting and weaving and chatting. We had a leisurely breakfast of lemon pie we had purchased from the neighborhood pie store the day before and we made it back home by the afternoon.

This was a very welcome day off and it was fun spending it with good friends.

Farm Club Goes to the City – Part 1

This was the weekend of Farm Club’s third annual retreat. Our destination was San Francisco because we have a wonderful place to spend the night. Three of us are now members of the NDGW (Native Daughters of the Golden West) and we (and our friends) have a fabulous place to stay in the city. Look here for some photos of the NDGW home.

We arrived in SF shortly after noon and began our retreat with an excursion to the Hayes Valley Farm. There is a fascinating story here. After the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake collapsed some of the freeways in SF the sites were abandoned. This parcel of land holds what is left of the on-ramp and off-ramp to one of the collapsed freeways. A group of volunteers started this urban farm project a few years ago and turned the blighted landscape into fertile ground with unique collaborations and composting. (One fact I think I remember correctly is that Google supplied 15,000 tons of cardboard used to compost horse manure and wood chips on top of ivy that was growing there.)  IMG_6238 IMG_6240 We saw unique ways of using found materials to grow plants.IMG_6278

IMG_6236This is the seed bank, outside…IMG_6248 …and inside.IMG_6249 There were other uniques structures…IMG_6265… built from unlikely materials.

IMG_6266IMG_6268But the most remarkable thing is the landscape itself.IMG_6260Look at that soil and the vegetation. You almost don’t notice the city behind it until you look from another aspect:IMG_6261 IMG_6263 That’s the SF City Hall in the background.IMG_6264 Yup, that’s part of the old onramp.IMG_6277This is a bittersweet time for the volunteers here. It turns out that this is the last week of activities here. The site is being used under some kind of temporary permit and the city is now going to build condos there. The person that we talked to said that even as the Hayes Valley Farm closes, it is providing a demonstration and lesson to all. There have been no protests, no marches, nobody chaining themselves to trees. They are dispersing all the plant materials, greenhouses, and compost throughout the city–some to schools who have developed urban ag programs, some to other urban farm sites in the city, and some to individuals. They feel that the program has been successful as a model of what can happen with the partnership of cities and volunteers and the benefits to everyone. (Celebrating Blue Tape as opposed to Red Tape.)IMG_6254

IMG_6275I am inspired to try planting nasturtiums again as well as a garden with a bit more freedom from even rows.

Stay tuned for Part 2 of our adventure.

Meet the Sheep 2013

Another great day at the farm and another day that I’m so thankful to Farm Club and my other friends! Meet the Sheep is our annual spring Open House event. It is a big undertaking, but with the help of Farm Club and my family (and some luck with the weather) it went very well.DSC_0626 Mary, Joy, and Gynna are three of the crew that arrived early to help with set up. Notice the threatening weather.DSC_0629 Just before visitors were due to arrive I brought the sheep in from the pasture…DSC_0633 …and moved them to the pasture near the shop so that they would be ready to Meet the People. DSC_0649 Jackie set up a booth…DSC_0650 …as did Colleen.DSC_0653 I resurrected some displays from my Shear Delight days.DSC_0665Shelby and Dona tried out the new photo station that was created by Dona and Rick.DSC_0647The scheduled demonstrations were very popular. DSC_0656 Alison demonstrated spinning.DSC_0659 Colleen taught Solar Dyeing with Kool-aid…DSC_0687…and how to felt a bowl using a balloon.  DSC_0667 Julie brought baby chicks and bunnies and showed people how to handle the bunnies.DSC_0673 I think she won in the Cuteness Category today…DSC_0679 …although Mary’s triplets were popular as were the three bottle babies and the six newest lambs.DSC_0682  Julie also talked about dyeing fiber.DSC_0696Janis made this cool poster using wool from a fleece she bought in November.

And that’s it for my photos although there was a lot more going on. We were so busy that I was in the shop the rest of the day!DSC_0654Good thing that Dona brought brownies for lunch!