Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Barn Updates

As is the 'norm' around here, things continually change and I need to be ready for it when it happens. A few weeks ago I applied for a job with Washington State University. I planned on moving and needed to make the barns as efficient as possible for the sheep to stay at the farm over winter until I could afford to bring them out in the spring. That may be on hold for now, but in the mean time my barn is FINALLY becoming much more efficient :)

Something that I wanted to do for a few years was build a better way to feed my sheep. Round bales are terrible on the fleeces, I lose ear tags on some of the sheep, and unrolling them take a lot of time and I have to feed them outside in a pasture.

This is the lean to our old dairy barn. This alleyway is used about 90% of the time when entering the barn now so I needed to keep the space wide open. The plywood used for the small square bale flakes of hay is perfect.  They fit in there snugly against the metal hog panel and still allows me a clean, open, bright place to walk.

Inside the pen shows enough feeder space for the 60+ Shetland adult ewes that will be here over the winter. There is room to add three more 8 foot sections, giving me head space for 24 more Shetland adult ewes if I ever needed it.

Below is the south side (left side in photo above) showing some of the feeders.
A better close up below showing only the smallest holes in the hog panel exposed, while using lightweight plywood for the top. The hay all fits in there (more actually on the north side) and still there is room in the small trough for the beet pulp and hay chaff that falls down. No eating on the floor (unless they eat the bedding/oat straw). Little to no hay on their backs or the neighbors' backs.
Reinforced mineral tubs. The ewes kept rubbing their butts on them and breaking/snapping them off of the board they were on. This makes them much sturdier.
Above is the ewe lamb pen feeders that I am using for now. they were 55 gallon plastic drums that I cut in half and screwed on boards for the ends so as to not flip them over. They are lower, and easier for the lambs to eat out of so I am using them in their part of the barn.
Above and below, the girls are approving of the finished feeders.
Above is my home made chute system. This used to be the manger of the dairy barn where we fed the cows and walked with he wheelbarrow. It works nicely for the smaller sheep and I can get an entire system within an area that wasn't utilized before. The middle aisle is for myself. Its not the largest area but this allows me access to both sides of the chute and the digital scale is to the right where the plywood 'gates' slide up and down to allow a new sheep to enter or exit. I've not had any jump over it yet and its low enough I can access the sheep ear tags and check eyelids and worm if necessary.


And below are two samples of the new Whistlestop rams I described in my last post. The 'white' fleece is actually a light badgerface ram (black based) yearling ram that I am SO pleased I got. He is everything I'm looking for in a rams: fine fleece, conformation, horns (my preference only), rare color pattern, depth of body and capacity yet still fine boned, and some unrelated lines to work with. He's a yearling that I hope to use a LOT in the future.
The moorit fleece is of a ram lamb. I was able to go through Jim and Brandy's entire flock and take my pick of the lamb crop. There was a ram lamb with wider horns but this one was finer in my opinion. They will both be going to quite a few ewes in the next week or two.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Buffet Table

Michelle once described my life as not having too many things on my plate, but having too many things on my buffet table! I didn't disagree.....in fact I agreed. Hey, I like to be busy, stay busy, keep busy, be productive, see results, and a job well done, with hard work, determination and love goes a long way and I can sleep at night knowing that I did all I could during that day, and tomorrow would be full of new adventures...or a twist to the day to day things. It keeps my single life quite eventful and living alone in the middle of nowhere isn't so bad with my menagerie.

With the great economy as of late, everyone is downsizing, slimming, culling, not breeding, giving away, trading etc to get back to a more affordable limit. My buffet table needs to be come a plate....ok maybe a platter. Baby steps, baby steps!

Next weekend I have the Spring Exotic Animal auction in Perham here and I am going to move my miniature horses to it, my registered Pygmy Goat nannies (four), my Old English Game Bantams, my Embden Geese, Swedish Ducks, Saxony Ducks and probably my guineas and even many of my pigeons. Non essential hobbies at this point. I've never really made any money with the poultry (pigeons only as late) and the grain to feed them is expensive, they eat a lot and I just don't have the time for them. They give me joy in their own little ways but its not worth what they are eating right now!

Please if anyone would like them please let me know soon! Best offer or give away!

I am really going to concentrate on my sheep, dogs and cattle. They bring me the most joy and the sheep and cattle bring the most money (hey the dogs are a money pit as we dog owners all know...but we enjoy them so much!)

I have figured that the past year or so that I've been trying to sell the above critterse I've spent way more in feed than they are worth, and they are taking up pen space that I just can't afford to have filled with hobbies/pets that I don't see enough of.

I admit, I would miss them, and would be sad, but selling, dying, being born, buying, moving etc are all part of the farming life and I've grown up with it. Its part of life and when money is tight, things need to take priority.

If I can't afford to care for everything the way I'd want to, then I should have them. Plain and simple.

If anyone can help place these animals in homes that would love them forever, please let me know

A long time coming!

 It has been a long time. Too long in fact. We lost access to our farm website and ebonwald website when WEBS.COM was closed by VistaPrint. ...