Gandalf: I left my horns in Manchester, Vermont


This morning, Gandalf, our Shetland wether, woke up with a greatly reduced blood flow where his broken horn drooped from the side of his head.  The shine was in his eye again and the swelling was down around his upper cheek.  I could inspect him closely, cuddle him in his stall, without my stomach flipping.

My sheep vet showed up mid-morning and conferred over the situation, offering me suggestions.  I decided, after getting an estimate, that I liked the general anesthesia vet-office surgery-option to remove his broken horn and wrap him with some gauze and tape.

Thankfully he is about 75 pounds and Dr. Treat, ever-faithful-friend-Kerry and I could carefully lift him into the truck for the 1/2 hour ride north.

When Gandalf and I arrived at the small animal hospital in Manchester, Vermont by noontime, the doggy-dentals were finishing and all of the pups, in various stages of waking up, were rehab-ing in their kennels around us.  I was furnished with a rolling stool (Yee-ha!) and Gandalf considered the option to go into a kennel or stay in his crate while we waited.  He chose to stay in his crate.  No kidding.

Decisions: Crate or Kennel?

Decisions: Crate or Kennel?

Two cats, Murphy & FatCat, that were thrilled to have our attention, mewed & purred  against their metal bars while I stroked them, avoiding their little love-bites when they felt inclined.

Murphy, the bored kennel kitty, curious about a sheep

Murphy, the bored kennel kitty, curious about a sheep

At last it was time for Gandalf to have his surgery.  I ended up opting for having both horns removed.  His remaining horn had a split in it and was weak looking.  All I could think of was if he ended up in this same situation in the future, I’d be kicking myself to Saratoga and back.  I also opted to decline sitting in on his surgery because it occurred to me that what had me so anxious was my attachment to him.  I had so much emotion going into it, I think I might’ve been a first-class hindrance by second guessing or questioning the doctor during the procedure.  I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t have been helpful.  Maybe another time.

Gandalf was a great patient and woke up at the end, agreeable to his new Team Blue headgear.  There is some bleeding where he was disbudded, but it’s not oozing.  He’s on the road to wellness.  We’ll change his bandages in a day or so, watch him to make sure he doesn’t irritate/rub the area and re-open the wounds after they clot, and in 6 weeks or so, he’ll be able to join the others again.  I’m pretty sure I don’t want to chance him opening the wounds before they’re entirely healed over so I’m playing it safe.

Home, sweet, home.  I’ve got one more package of that Hibiscus Tea to have tonight for my blood pressure.  Looking forward to a few boring days in the barn again, please.

Gandalf sports the colors of Team Blue for his headgear while he rehabs at home

Gandalf sports the colors of Team Blue for his headgear while he rehabs at home

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Happy for a bit of supper

Sunshine


I’m not a “go south for the winter” type of gal.  My Russian-heritage instilled me with a quality = struggle outlook.  I’d feel like a weak-y taking a tropical vacation.

Bring on that sunshine!

BUT, yesterday I planted tomato, cilantro and lettuce seeds in my kitchen.

I can’t wait for spring.

Far away in the sunshine are my highest aspirations. I may not reach them, but I can look up and see the beauty, believe in them and try to follow where they lead. – Louisa May Alcott

Jawbreakers


About a year and a half ago, our horse vet had given my gal Izzy a dental check up.  I have only had Iz for about 4 years and I still believe she is the perfect horse for me.  We were a bit disappointed, though, about the news from her mouth.  Apparently she’d had some breakage in the back that we were instructed to keep an eye on.

So this past month when Iz was being temperamental for riding and irritable being handled, I started to watch her more closely while she dined.  I observed her over a couple of weeks to be sure of what I was noticing and also to see if there were any changes.

Sure enough, she was extending her bottom jaw out and to the left when she would chew, favoring the right top and back of her mouth for crunching.  And sure enough, the behavior was more frequent by the end of the second week than when I’d first started observing her.

Time to call the vet.

Dr. Shannon came out to the farm on Halloween and gave her a sedative.  We put her head in a makeshift sling and then Shannon used her special horse dental harness to keep Izzy’s mouth wide and open while she performed the examination and treatment.

Horses under sedatives are always fascinating subjects to me.  It’s a bit of a thrill to watch them.  They’re just so big and you wonder if those four legs are going to go out from under them, but they don’t.  I absolutely love to assist, reassuring my girl, snuggling her velvety winter coat, sighing with her while she patiently has her teeth floated.

The tool that the doctor uses is a power float” and it’s basically an amped up file which she smooths all of the sharp surfaces of the teeth with.  Izzy had two cracked molars in the back and a piece out of one of them.  This had created sharp edges that Dr. Shannon filed down. There were no new issues from the previous trouble spots. The teeth were not loose  at all, so we’ll keep an eye on her to make sure things stay the same.  If the teeth become loose and there is any decay or infection, she’ll likely develop some sinus discharge, possible behavior changes…symptoms that you or I might have if we have rotting teeth.

Dr. Shannon suggested she may have bitten a rock, or something larger such as a stick, to have cracked two molars.  I shudder to think of her grazing and picking up a rock, biting down on it and cracking her teeth.  Shucks, if you’re gonna suffer, might as well have made it worthwhile and gotten something tasty for it.  Husband Jim was blaming it on my habit of lavishing the herd with peppermint treats.  They’re sort of soft, disolvable candies, not quite jawbreakers, but I appreciate him taking an interest in their health, at least.

A couple of hours later, Izzy was safe in her stall, sleeping off her meds while Char & I joined in the merriment in nearby North Bennington.  Every year the Vermont Arts Exchange hosts a community wide Halloween parade and bonfire and all tall small young old and in-between show up for a load of fun.  I repeated my Mary Poppins outfit this year in the interest of not much time to prepare as well as the rain in the forecast.  Char was a “Reveurs”, a character out of Erin Morgensterns fantasy novel, “The Night Circus” and it was much fun putting her together.

We paraded for about an hour and a half, visited with friends and neighbors and then went home to carve pumpkins, drink hot cider and call it an early evening.  No trick-or-treaters, as usual, and if you’ve read my past posts, you’ll understand that there are still plenty of toothbrushes left over.

Happy November. Go floss.

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Abe


Dogs are not our whole life, but they make our lives whole.  ~Roger Caras

Today Abe is having a hard time standing.  He got up to have breakfast with his cronies, but his back leg gave out from under him and he flopped onto the ground.  No cry, just a soft, brief, wheezy moan.  Honest, soft eyes on mine.

I brought his bowl to him and he ate out of my hands.  Jackie and Cricket inhaled their kibble and skipped over to see what we were doing.  Half-snarling, Abe warned them to give him some space.

After eating his food, with gusto, he lay back and tracked me while I finished the backyard chores.

I’ve given him his daily dose of pain relievers and I’ll just wait on it until he’s feeling like he can support himself.

I’m searching to recollect what he might have done yesterday to trigger the intense pain.  The horse vet was by and brought his adorable 4-year old.  We toured the farm while Char and the vet vaccinated the herd.  The little guy may have thrown a stick or two for Abe, but mostly we cuddled the sheep and goats.  So I don’t think it is an injury-related affliction.

At eleven, this long-legged fellow of ours has certainly slowed down.  We are aware of what to expect as we have coached geriatric pups in the past.

For today, though, I’m patiently awaiting the course of meds to take their effect and see my guy get up and move a little, going through the paces of Saturday-on-the-farm.Image

Distinctive, attractive & purposeful


 

 

For years I have driven through the heart of the Pioneer Valley, midway between Connecticut and the VermontNew Hampshire borders, for a slew of reasons. Recently I’d read Pairodox Farm‘s, (one of my favorite farm blogs), post about Tobacco sheds and drooled over the gorgeous photos, knowing I’d get my fix when I drove my daughter back to school. I’ve always wished to stop and explore the sheds that dot the landscape, and this past week was thrilled to find the above pictured buildings in service.  

I’ll admit that I was also dismayed at the thought of the continued harvest of a known carcinogen.

I imagine the buildings in use for harvest festivals, storage of other crops or livestock, quilt shows….  I have this wonderful picture of the interior hosting celebrations, like in “Barn Dance” by Bill Martin, Jr. and illustrated by Ted Rand, a children’s book which I used to read to my own when they were littles….

I decided to take advantage of an opportunity to explore the building up close, stealing a little time from our itinerary without much fuss from my passengers.

This countryside has been the prime tobacco-growing region of Massachusetts since the 1800s.  In 1964 Massachusetts and Connecticut grew more than 8,000 acres of shade tobacco leaf, used to wrap fine cigars.  Processed wraps replaced the leaf in the 1980s, and the industry began to decline.

However, tobacco cultivation is one of the few segments of the Connecticut River agriculture that has relatively thrived in the recent past.  As a result of this, beautiful weathered tobacco sheds still stand in the midst of the broad valley, the soft hills rising in the background.  These single purpose farm buildings were, and are, essential to curing the cash crop where the soil and climate are perfect for cigar-tobacco.  Large leaves dry and cure in these long, windowless buildings with pitched roofs.

A variety of types of ventilation are accomplished via various hinged and gabled doors, vertical siding with side-hinged vents and gable doors, horizontal siding with top hinged vents and gable end doors, or a series of large doors along one of the long sides of the building with the other sides of the building vented.

After harvest, bound tobacco leaves hang to gently dry in bunches from the rails inside.

Distinctive, attractive and purposeful.

Back


The summer getaways are a wrap.  I have had a total of 4 separate outings varying from 2 to 4 days at a shot.  As mentioned in the past, this is no small feat when you run a farm of any size.  Thanks to great help from family and friends, there were minimal amounts of crisis-moments ranging from cats consuming pies and cakes meant for market to waterbirth-chick-hatch-coaching via telephone instruction.

I am, sadly, on the eve of the “Last Day” of the college kids being home. Tonight I have been busy dreaming up the menu for the last family dinner of the summer, trying to include all of their favorite dishes.  Tomorrow will be busy for all of the regular reasons, and a little more so with packing two different vehicles for two different directions.

I planted three fruit trees late this afternoon, one for each child.  A peach and two plums.  I dug deep holes with a broken shovel, filled them with worm-wriggling manure from the pile out back, ran the hose into the pit and placed the pot-bound, discounted saplings into their new homes.

What kind of advice can I give myself when I’m feeling this low?  I have certainly learned great lessons from the past and can apply them.  I have some wisdom.  But in the end, right now, it is still not my favorite place to be.

No worries, truly, it’s just a tedious process which I have to sort out.

And look!  I discovered this, for me, and my school-bound kiddoes:

Aim for success, not perfection. Never give up your right to be wrong, because then you will lose the ability to learn new things and move forward with your life. Remember that fear always lurks behind perfectionism.
David M. Burns

Rock on, Mr. Burns.

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Greener Pastures and Bloat


Contented grazing Shetland flock on the new pasture

New pasture on Wednesday, trouble with the goatsies on Thursday.

Both Marcia and Patricia had developed chronic diarrhea in the night and did not want to go out to with the flock in the morning.  Standing in the doorway of their stall, only Lu was interested in eating any hay or grain.

The diarrhea concerned me, of course, but I tried to stay calm, saw that they were somewhat ambulatory and decided I would just give them a little time before going to the books. By the end of the day, Marcia was much better and eating hay.  No diarrhea.

Spot the bloated goat

However, Patricia had removed herself from the herd and found a quiet place to rest.  She didn’t have diarrhea anymore, but her eyelids were slightly swollen and pale.  Char and I had to pick her up to move her around and so I delved into my goat-books for remedies.

Laying low in the morning. It was a bad sign that only Lu wanted to go out.

Marcia diagnoses the patient

Tummy troubles – too many greens aren’t always good for you

The first remedy we tried was to force feed her some peanut oil.  Supposedly it would break up the bubbles and give her rumen some relief. Not practiced with stomach-tubing, we tried to feed her by mouth. She took a bit of it willingly, only a bit, and we were supposed to get a cup of it down her throat.  So we then tried a bit of baking soda, which she hated, and then vomited up the bit of oil with it.  Neither of us knew a goat could throw up.  That was a lesson.

Next we got a turkey baster full of peanut oil and while one held her, the other inserted the baster and let it trickle down into her mouth.  Though I was concerned with it getting into her lungs, resulting in pneumonia, we carefully managed to get 1/2 cup of it down and then  walked her about some more.  Listening to her stomach revealed some gurgling every now and again.  We let her rest for the evening.

Next morning she was standing, but not interested in eating and her ballooned sides had not decreased in size. A nagging anxiety as well as a lot of reading had me second guessing that I shouldn’t be hitting her with a stronger, faster acting formulas for improvement.  I worried I might have let it go too long and that she would have lasting repercussions of a ruined rumen.  Reading will do that to me…

I called my sheep vet, but he and his son were both on vacation.  I called another vet that I’ve used before that travels from farther away.  He was available and down to the farm in a couple of hours.  First he gave me a tongue lashing for not calling sooner and also for attempting the home remedies.  He made this 47-year-old lady feel like a two-year old.

I am properly shamed by thinking that I could have adequately nursed my bloated goat back to health.

Then Dr. C chatted about his granddaughter’s achievements in the world of equitation and gave us the run-down on her trip to Oklahoma, that day, to compete in a national horse competition.

He shared about his years in the military, his family of veterinarians, his children’s accomplishments, his several dogs, his associates accomplishments, his philosophy on life, his recipe for good healthas a senior…all before finally commencing to give a sub-cut dose of a combination of a steroid called “Dexamethazone” as well as two flavors of Penicillin called “Procaine & Benzathine” for short-term and then long lasting antibiotic protection.

The injection took less than 5 seconds but the build-up, the play-by-play, the lecture and then Q & A session took about forty-five minutes.

Char & Dr. C give Patricia an Rx for Bloat

Dr. C is a nice guy – I’m o.k. with getting my wrists slapped in the interest of healthier livestock.  I’m not so sure I’m all that evil for trying the home remedies first because the fact of the matter is, I know my animals and often I have been correct about how I handle their ailments and also have been successful in nursing them to health.

But the great news is that this morning Patricia was up and at ‘em, leaning on the door of the stall when I walked into the barn, greeting me in her old, enthusiastic ways.  And she had a great appetite!

Peeking into the paddock

Breakfast yet?

Patricia on the road to health, sampling hay

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Why I can’t blog tonight -meet the bottle baby, Aisling:


If I could figure out how to type with one hand while supporting a 5 day old lamb with the other, I would.  But for tonight, you’ll have to settle for this photograph and I’ll try to get around to finishing our lambing stories tomorrow.

Peace and warmth from the farm to you.

Two nitrogen atoms and an oxygen atom went into a bar…


Dentist's office #3

Bear with me, now, as I try to lighten up.  That’s your recipe for  Nitrous Oxide, sometimes called “Laughing Gas.”  It’s what I need when I go to the dentist‘s office nowadays and there’s no laughing involved.

I had my biannual cleaning this morning, bright and early so I couldn’t really fathom breakfast beforehand, and I delved yet again into the fringes of dream-dom, the world that I believe screenplays must be developed from.  It’s not my first choice by any means to wear the fuzzy little nose mask and inhale the sickly sweet fumes of Nitrous for almost an hour, but the short story is that it is the only way I can sit in the dentist’s office without being upsided by a frying pan.

I had some revelations and epiphanies during my time reclined in the rather uncomfortable chair with my head not-so-gently cradled in the bony scoop of a so-called headrest.  While I worked very hard at taking deep breaths and fighting the nausea and anxiety that befall me in that circumstance, I was aware of the sensation of the peculiar razzle-dazzling of my nerve endings in my legs, my arms, my chest, my face…  I tried to let go of the anxiety so that I could focus on deeper thoughts, trying to make good use of the time for meditation.

It occurred to me that it might help to channel my Grandma Brown whom I rarely saw in any state but calm.  She was built like a little rain barrel, and moved around on miniature stick legs.  I used to wonder at the size of her tiny ankles and feet, how they could support her moves.  She was conservative with her movement, as well, and I didn’t remember her hurrying or wasting energy being demonstrative.

So in my mind this morning, I envisioned Grandma Brown sitting in church with her arms resting across her bosom with her hands clasped together, twiddling her thumbs.  She was a master thumb-twiddler and so the second I brought up that slide, I started twiddling my thumbs.  It was the perfect distraction for my worried mind and I started to imagine waltzes and soundtracks to twiddle in time to.  I think the hygienist started to become concerned and at one point, a tissue sort of hovered across the air space and then landed on top of my hands.  I saw this movement happen, but only realized later on that it was maybe to cover my hyperactive thumb-dancing so that she could do her job.

An hour is a long time to have the nitrous mask on and I was exhausted at the end of the cleaning because of the energy it required for me to stay composed.  My hygienist, Ann, was kind to note my patience with an occasional encouraging word.  Initially I told her I would like all of my teeth removed so that I could just have dentures.  She didn’t see the humor in it and said that it would be silly to do all that because of one bad experience.  By the end of the session, I think she understood better how much (perceived) stress I was under.  She said, sounding much like Kari, the babysitter in “The Incredibles“, “You’re doing a GREAT job with your cleaning!”  The enthusiasm was a real lift because I had been imagining that every time she made a note on her pad she was recording yet more decay.  When we were almost through she crooned, “I’m so proud of you, Tammy, because you’re almost done and you’ve been such an awesome patient.  I know how hard this is for you and you’ve been the best patient I’ve ever had!”

Well, I started crying.

And now I say thank you, God, for Nitrous Oxide -the stuff that they use for performance enhancement in car engines and rocket ships and to lessen my anxiety in the dentist’s chair, for folks like Ann that are working hard to do their job well, for giving me good teeth and good health, and thank you, God, for giving me the opportunity to take care of my teeth at all.

Zero cavities later, a nice omelet and cup of coffee tucked in, I can tra-la-la another six months Nitrous-free.

Reward for being a good patient: a cuddle with my Izzy

Living Again


Like night and day, I’m telling you.   It’s as though I was dead, I swear to God.

Max, displays how I've been feeling these past 5 months.

 Weather-wise we’ve had a real stew these past few weeks, ranging from snow and ice-storms to mild temps and plunging thermometers.   I’m only getting about 4.5 hours of sleep a night.  My workload has actually increased these days.

But I’m popping out of bed in the early morning, raring to go, as though I’d slept 8 hours.

I ask of you, has anyone else noticed a change?  There is no other reason that I can explain the return-to-Tammy phenomenon except for the increase in daylight.

This morning there was a bird chorus, different from the solo performances I’d listened to since November.   I skitched,  I ran and sang around in my backyard carrying buckets to critters for their early morning feeding and thought I’d even go for an ice skate on the pond if I could squeeze it in before driving my daughter to school.  All of this from the same farmer gal that has been merely going through the motions since November.  As though I’d been walking around with my hood overtop my hat pulled over my ears and, presto!, I just took it all off and can hear and see again!

Heavenly horses, napping in the sunshine.

  I’m so happy I wasn’t deteriorating from some incurable disease, which I was pretty sure was the case.

Vive le soleil!

I was only missing the sun. :-)