Archive - January, 2013

From the “Do’s and Don’ts” List

 Do’s and Don’ts can be learned in the calf shed.

Cats howl for their part of the take when I bring in the milk.  Nothing sounds more pitiful than barn cats begging for a drink. 

barn cats, bucket of milk, barn cats drink milk, milk pail,I recall being taken in by their urgent cries.  So in an effort to be their merciful benefactor, I considered feeding them first before the calves got their milk.

I tried to pour milk into the cats’ dish from above.  However, the eager, hungry cats jumped up at it to catch the milk in mid-air.  Little milk found its way into the dish.  Rather, the cats got showered with milk.  “How silly of me,” I smiled in embarrassment.

To add insult to injury, the next thing I knew they shook the milk off of their fur coats onto me!

Do feed the calves first.  They depend on the milk for life.

Don’t shower the cats with milk.  They feed themselves regardless of an accompanying latté.

photo credit: Drregor via photopin cc

The “Glass Table”

lace table cloth, Christmas table, glass dishes, candles, Christmas treats,

Old and New Holiday Treats Decked Out with Sparkle

Eyes wide with delight, my eldest grandchild announced, This is the best I ever saw.  It’s a glass table!”

For Christmas Eve several family members joined us, including three of our grandchidren.

Our 6 year-old grandson eagerly helped us get the celebration set up.  We could not have our Christmas party until Grandpa finished milking.  Hence, we had until 8 P.M. to finish the “set up”.

On the farm, “functional” is quite  normal.   Only on special, festive days do we get out the “beautiful”.  I purposed to make our table of Christmas goodies look special.  I spread a festive red tablecloth on the dining room table and overlaid it with a white lace one.  We garnered each setting with a glass snack plate and it’s accompanying glass teacup.  Shiny stainlessware added sparkle to the table.

Christmas bread, Cardamom Bread, Anise Cookies, lace table cloth,  Swedish Kardemummakrans,

Christmas Favorites at our House, Swedish Kardemummakrans and Anise Cookies

Although paper, plastic and styrofoam plates have their place and can be an advantage sometimes, their absence made this table very special.  The old glass plates made the evening celebration a fit way to celebrate birthday of our King Jesus.  Our traditional Christmas goodies never looked better.
photo credit: Wenda Grabau
photo credit: Wenda Grabau

One Day at a Time

calendar, January, Winter,In the blackness of the early hours of a frigid January day, I tred down the snow-covered hill to the milkhouse and the barn.  My rubber snow boots crunch through the icy blanket.  Though my nose gets bit by Jack Frost, I am feeling toasty in my down-filled chore jacket.  My ears carefully covered by my blaze-orange snow cap hardly sense the cold.

As I reach the bottom of the hill, I cast my eyes up onto the disk on the nearby calf shed wallThe circular dial tells me that it is ten degrees below zero.

Chores stretch out from November till March during our calving season.  I bottle-feed and pail-feed the calves.  I see to it that they have satisfying amounts of hay.  Calves need to be fed twice daily, every day.  I am watchful to see that the calves are eating well and not showing signs of illness.

This new responsibility and schedule takes some time in which to adjust.  I have been doing these chores since late November.  Knowing that I have to do this morning and evening every day for 5 whole months straight can be overwhelming.  After all, March is still 60 and more days away.  So, I reject pondering that thought and do the chores one day at a time.

Being responsible for doing daily chores for these calves has given me a greater respect for my husband who has carried the responsibility for his herd these past thirty-some years.

photo credit: danielmoyle via photopin cc

Calf Chores in the Dark

Milker pail, bucket, bucket of milk, warm milk, raw milk, fresh milk,

Fresh Milk from the Milker

Since our kids have left the nest we built here on the farm, I have graduated to be the calf chore crew for my husband.

When daylight savings time ends, calf chores have to be done in the dark.

The calf shed is on the east side of the barn.  My house is on the west side of it.  So my path takes me down the hill, into the barn.  There my husband supplies me with the milk that I am to use for feeding the baby calves in the shed.

corona, winter moon, moon, half moon,

Moonlight for the Wintry World

I carry the pails of milk to the barn door.  I unlatch it and one of the barn cats scoots out the door in front of me.  I can see the barnyard from the lights in the barn.  But when the door shuts, my eyes adjust to the moonlight on the ground.  I slowly maneuvre to the stairway that will lead me up out of the barnyard to the calf shed door.

Just inside the door is a light switch.  As soon as the lights are on, calves beller.  They know what comes next…Lunch!

cats, barn cats, feeding barn cats, cat chores,

Cats Getting Their Share

Barn cats know what that means, too.  They greedily gather around to glean the leftovers that I can give to them when the calves have had their share.

photo credit:Wenda Grabau
photo credit:Bretta Grabau
photo credit:Bretta Grabau

Calving Season

calf, holstein calf, straw bedding, calf lying down,Usually in the springtime, you may enjoy seeing lots of young calves in the pastures with their mothers close by.

Yet, on this farm, we plan to have the young born in the fall and winter.  The reason we do this is for our convenience.

In the spring, the “Do List” includes:

  • plowing
  • disking
  • planting 
  • fencing 
  • manure spreading 
  • cleaning the chicken house for the new chicks

The summertime “Do List” is similarly busy:

  • cut, rake, bale and store hay
  • cultivate corn
  • combine oats
  • bale straw

In the autumn:

  • shell corn, if room is needed for the harvest in the corn crib
  • pick the corn
  • store the corn in the cribs
  • spread manure
  • take down fencing in the pastures that is not needed over the winter
  • cut wood for next year’s firewood supply
  • plow any fields possible before the snows come

Any time all year the machinery must be maintained and the cows must be milked and cared for.  So by now, you can tell, that there is a lot to coordinate on a dairy farm. 

holstein cow, holstein calf, udder, calf sucking milk,Fast forward to late fall.  Dairy cattle are not like beef cows or horses, in that they can calve all alone and manage just fine. Dairy cattle sometimes need  to be helped with the delivery of their young.

Our income comes from healthy cows.  Our future income will come from healthy calves.   Therefore, my husband is actively on maternity duty. 

He is a good record keeper.  He knows the day each cow was bred.  Hence, he knows when to expect the offspring to come.  He checks on them during the night and watches then during the day.  Some nights he spends napping in the barn, so he can be nearby to help the cow when the calf comes.

All of this attention to birthing mixed in with spring and summer duties would be difficult.  My husband arranges the calving to occur when most of the crop work is done.  As it is, he becomes weary.  Doing all of this along with the time pressure of spring and summer jobs would be overwhelming.  Therefore, you understand management’s decision to calve in the fall and winter.

photo credit: Compassion in World Farming via photopin ccnbsp;
photo credit: PLR_Photos via photopin cc