Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Back in Blogland

I just picked up my Imac G5 from a place an hour from here. I'm back in the blog business, not to mention Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop. I also picked up a new surge protector - not knowing why my modem has gone twice in four months, I thought I would be safe. But I do wonder why Apple took out modems of the IMac G5 just a month after I purchased mine.

At any rate, we have had a busy week and a half since I last posted. Back in Late December I promised lambs, lambs, lambs, and I will not disappoint.

At first it was a trickle..... A ewe w/ a couple lambs.....


This mama was definitely experienced and needed no help from anyone.
Then, the tempo started to pick up and I want to tell you, it has been a birthing fury.....

Each lambing season presents its own problems and successes. I am not usually too involved - birthing is The Farmer's place - it's also why he was all for doctors and hospitals when we were pregnant - knowing what can go wrong. We were lucky that at the beginning of lambing this January it was unseasonably warm. Cold weather is usually the biggest challenge a newly born lamb faces.

This year, Julia is much more mobile and much more interested in the sheep. We have been visiting the barn twice a day, helping out when needed. She seems genuinedly interested which is nice.

Here’s the first lamb I watched being born one morning in mid-January. She has a kind of reddish tinge to her – from the amniotic fluids. It dries up and flakes off. Sometimes they have a real yellowish tinge at birth and sometimes they are bright white.



She's up here in less than 15 minutes ready for a snack. The first milk a lamb gets is the most important. It is called colostrum and is very thick and full of much needed nutrients.


Who can resist a face like this?

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Love the photos! I have sheep myself, but the lambing season won't be until April- last year they started in March- with lots of snow all around. We have one race that is kept in the barn during winter, and another race which lives out all year- they are smaller, with horns and lots of wool!
I found your blog because of the knitting, but I don't mind the farm thing either!
Hope lambing season goes well- good luck!
Marit in Norway

Anonymous said...

congratulations! I love lambing season, looking at all the newborns.
I have rabbits and I understand about not everything going right.

Anonymous said...

Hi Kristin! thanks for sharing the pix of newborn lambs, I never knew they were pink! Are your sheep wool sheep or meat sheep? (um, I love to eat lamb...can I say that? ;0) What fun to look forward to so many babies each year. I've missed your pix! I look every day ;0) Have a great day, Celeste Pinheiro

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