and more goats…
Posted on Monday, April 20, 2009 at 11:17am
(cont’d from previous post…)
We woke up on the Sunday to glorious sunny skies and hot fields of green grass. Spent the morning trying to milk and sort out all the goats.
Nasty Nessa and her bully son Dexter, it was decided, would simply have to stay inside while all the other goats, including the newcomer Marmite, got to enjoy the sunshine. Nessa’s head-butt had slightly marked Marmite, and we weren’t going to take the chance of it happening again.
We think that Nessa and her billy son are simply going to have to go back to the man we got her from. She’s too wild and too unpredictable to be safe around Benji. We only had her in the first place to ensure that Lola would settle in, and her owner says he’s happy to have her back…but now we can’t return her until next week because we’ve brought new stock onto the farm, and you can’t move anything off for six days after a new arrival!
Rich milked Marmite and Buddug and came inside with a huge pitcher of milk. It had been sightly easier this time, he said, but not much. And since our original intention with getting another goat had been to make things simpler and easier, things didn’t look good for keeping Marmite, either. Her owner had said that we should just return her if she didn’t settle in, and we thought we might do just that thing…if we can’t milk her super-small teats, it’s no good for us and no good for her either!
But for the next week, we’re just going to have to live with too many goats, before we can weed out and resolve our little herd to a manageable group.
So, in perfectly illogical fashion, we went to see the other goat that Lynn had found for us, a S’aanen.
Rich had kept S’aanen before - a breed so “milky” that sometimes even the males give milk! (Weird, but apparently true.) I had looked at pictures in a book and hadn’t been overly impressed with the look of them - they’re just white, and a bit dull.
But when we showed up at the house, and walked across the shimmering, blue-green expanse of grass towards the brilliant white herd of goats, drifting like swans-down over the field, I changed my mind. It might have been the sunshine, or the beautiful little kids running with the herd, but they all looked fantastic. Gentle and prolific milkers…
Rich milked the one that was for sale, and showed me the size of her teat, thumb and finger spread far apart, with a grin of relief.
Joli, who was with us, was enchanted with her as well, and we handed over the check and loaded her into the trailer without much ado.
When we arrived home with yet another goat, there were a few mixed groans and complaints….
Now we’ve got a full half-dozen! We had to clean out another pen, and we’re desperately short of straw. Rich will have to take the big trailer to get straw on his day off, which is Wednesday. Also the day that we’re taking little Lola to the vet to have her de-horned - so she won’t grow up to be a menace like her mother.
So all in the name of simplicity, we complicated things to an amazing extent!
The refrigerator is absolutely stuffed with various receptacles brimming with milk. The new S’aanen produces about 4 liters - 7 pints - all on her own. Not to mention the contributions of Buddug and Marmite!
I palmed off some milk on Taid, and he asked me hopefully if we needed more eggs - he’s got dozens to spare. We’re overflowing with milk and eggs…I must look in the Dairy cook book for some ideas of what to do with it all…
Rich went into work late this morning, both to get on top of the milking and to come with me and Benji for Benji’s first day in a new school.
At three, Benji’s starting at the same school that Ceris and Elly went to when they were little. Taid taught the head master when the head was a boy, and Rich built many of the shelves and interiors in the little school house, which originally dates back to the 1800s.
There’s a beautiful play-yard in back, with mature trees and a garden and a willow tunnel, wooden play equipment and wendy houses. We dropped off Benji this morning and stayed until he said firmly, “Good-bye, mum,” and I went off with that slightly stingy-eyed, bitter-sweet sensation that always goes with the passage of time…
