Milking, day 2. And a new name.

20131216-072426.jpgToday we had our second day of milking the new cow. Unlike yesterday where she was in the barn, this morning we had her out in the pasture with the other cows. You never know how that’s going to go but she came right up to is and was very interested in the food bucket. After a few munches I was able to walk her by halter to the milk parlor where she only balked for a few seconds before going in to be milked. 2 1/2 gallons of sweet Jersey milk later and she was done.

Pictured here you see Spork out this morning at 6am. He is part of the morning crew but what made this even more impressive is that he and a bunch of of the rest of us went out to see The Hobbit last night and didn’t get to bed till after 11pm. Not a complaint from the boy this morning. He jumped right on his chores. The girls, not so much.

So we made an executive decision this morning and the new milk cow will be named Dottie. I don’t know if we need to have a renaming ceremony like you do with a boat. After the issues we had with Maggie, I think its sounding like a better and better idea.

A new cow

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Today we had our first milking from our new milk cow. Despite the black coat, she is another Jersey. Here you can see the last milking being done at the previous owners place. This is the same guy, Mike, who we bought Maggie from. This was his last milk cow and as you can see by his 5 year old son sitting atop her, she is another gentle cow.

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Here is another shot of her previous situation. She was a little fussy over the new people being involved but overall she seems to be a good cow.

Luckily Mike is just down the road on Penny Road so it was only a 15 minute ride home for our new cow. She is already bred back to an Angus so she shouldn’t get too much attention from Benjamin. Plus she has been bull bred rather than AI so she more used to a bulls attention. She is 3 years old so hopefully we should have many years together Lord willing.

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This morning milking in our milking parlor. Just a few minutes work and she went right into the gate. All things considered milking went well and the reports on the milk quality range from “Fantastic!” to “Mmm that’s like drinking ice cream.”

We have yet to name this cow. I have heard a few suggestions go by, Dottie and Dolly being two suggestions. We’ll have to have a quorum and decide on a final name. I actually like Dottie of the suggestions so far. I am sure that there will be a name soon.

You can take the kid out of the farm…

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But you can’t take the farm out of the kid. My crowd, Spork, The Princess, and Bok Bok in Nashville haming it up. Of course dear ol’ dad stayed home to take care of the farm and work.

And with it being 24 degrees this morning, work I did. Pushing 800 pound bales of hay did warm me up nicely though and the cows were surely appreciative of some grub this morning to help with the cold. They also appreciated the section of woods they could get in to keep the frost off of them. We will leave that section open to them this entire rotation so they have some shelter from the winter wind and weather.

This morning I may have secured our new bull. I have been trying to buy a lowline Angus bull from a friend for a while. It looks like I may finally succeed here in a month or two. This will work perfectly as I can sell Benjamin while he had plenty of calves yet to produce and I can start working the lowline genetics into my herd. Plus with the new milk cow coming, I have to sell Benjamin before she goes into heat after she delivers her calf in about 5 months. I don’t want to loose another cow to Benjamin’s huge body. He is fine for angus but just too big for a Jersey. If anyone wants a beautiful bull, let me know. He eats out of my hand and has been perfect since day one.

More farm Princess

I came home after work to discover that we had a calf who had gotten separated from her mom and was on the wrong side of the fence. Unlike goats, cows after making their great escape immediately want to get back to the herd so I happened across this calf pacing the fence and bellowing to her mom. We had about 15 minutes of daylight left and I had two Princesses playing on the front steps of the house. No interns, no Miguel, even Spork was at a sleep over. To make matters worse Bok Bok at 5 had never really worked cows before. Then to top it all off, this was a ninja calf. Admittedly not one that had caused any issues before but it was out so there you go. About 30 seconds in I realized I should video rather than instruct because as you can hear, The Princess immediately took over instruction after I had given them the game plan. I had to stop filming because I was needed to get the cow going but the rest of the event looked like this.

I had to run and back up the girls one time because Bok Bok didn’t quite get what her job was and the calf ran right by her. I stopped it and turned her back. Then The Princess pushed the calf along the fence, past the corner, down the fence, around the open gate, into the barn yard and then closed the gate. All in her pajamas and all while instructing Bok Bok on what to do. I helped a tiny bit and then she didn’t need me anymore. Also all while taking on a cow that outweighed her by 300 pounds with no fear.

Yeah, I was proud.

More hay

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Despite the 80 degree day on Friday, I had to go get my second load of hay. 17 bales, plus the 21 we already have purchased. This should get us into January with what we already have. We need one more load of 17 to get into March. Hopefully we can stretch to make the last load last till the pastures have had a chance to fully recover. Keeping the cows off of the pasture just as it comes out of dormancy is tough. They want all that green grass and we want to stop feeding hay. We will see how long we can make it go.

The good news is the new (to me) truck and trailer are doing well. I was burning more fuel and getting only 8 bales before. Now I get 17 per trip and do so in style.

Goodbye Spunky

We had a tentative plan last year that we weren’t too sure we would act on. We really liked Spunky as a cow but we preferred Maggie over Spunky hands down. Maggie, as you may recall broke her back and had to be out down. Well we thought we would give Spunky another try once she freshened and see if she was better this time. She wasn’t. She was fine, just not as good as Maggie. The management crew here on the farm discussed what to do and we decided if Spunky could find a good home we would let her go and get another cow.

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So I listed Spunky on Craigslist and a wonderful family inquired about her within a few hours. They raise beef cattle and every year have a few calves that need a foster mom. Spunky is to be that mom and she will spend her days as a professional mom for this beef herd. As maternal as Spunky is, I couldn’t be happier for where she is now.

Now to find our new milk cow. One that is more docile and gives better milk.

Well that’s better

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Scratch what I said yesterday. Here is todays haul and that was pretty much from one side. The calf had emptied the other side of Spunkys bag so this was a half load. I think the calf is an early riser and that’s why we are getting such different amounts. It depends on how far he has made it around when we get to her. That’s a solvable problem as we can isolate her from her calf at night like we used to so she has a full bag in the morning or we can graft the calf onto another cow and get all her milk. Either way she is producing all we need and we can get more should we choose. All is well again on the farm.

Btw, that’s Spork doing the work to get the bottles labeled and into the fridge.

Rocky Mountain oysters

Today we moved the cows from the front pasture to the side pasture. In the process we moved them through the barnyard which meant it was time to band and tag the ninja calf. We managed to get all the other cows out of the old pasture and into the new pasture except for, you guessed it , the ninja calf. The rest weren’t an issue. In fact this is what greeted me at the gate.

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They were more than ready to go and about all we did was open the gates and let them through. Not the ninja calf though. He took about 5 laps around the pasture. Fortunately I had Bar-B-Jew, inmate Brian, and Miguel all onsite to help with the ninja so 800 pounds of human vs 100 pounds of calf seemed like a good ratio. In the video you can see the final successful lap of the pasture where the calf finally goes through the open gate. Trust me, there were lots of previous laps.

So after we had the ninja calf in the barn yard, we made a few laps of it where the ninja calf did the thing I’ve only ever seen the ninja breed do which is to try and run through a wire fence head first. Normal cows know better. Ninjas, not so much. So finally we got the ninja calf cornered and Miguel grabbed the head and I grabbed the back and we wrestled him to the ground. He was not amused. I proceeded to put the band on his cajones and then ear tag him number 36. After that we reunited Spunky and her calf and called it a morning from cow work. It was a busy morning.

Milking woes

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We are getting all the milk we need from Spunky each day. However we are not getting all the milk she is producing. She’s holding back for her calf seemingly a little more each day. We like to keep the calf on her because it’s better for the calf, we don’t need all the milk, and this gives us an option if we cannot milk one day.

It does create this holding back problem though. I am milking the next few days by myself so it looks like it may be time for experimenting to see if I can increase the yield. I will keep you in the loop to see if there are any major break throughs.

Ahh winter

The waterer has done well so far this winter. It freezes overnight but doesn’t break and then when the sun comes out the black hose soaks up the sun and thaws restoring water to the cows. The cows are never without water as there is still water in the waterer itself.

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Well I say it doesn’t break. Maybe I spoke too soon. This morning we had this geyser going. It was a small section of hose that adapts the hose to the reel. I have already replaced this piece once with no freeze related issues. It simply failed. I don’t know if the freeze caused it this time or just the fact that its cheap Chinese junk from Lowes.

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The cows did enjoy the shower though. They were pretty funny drinking from the fountain.

Whatever its problem, we solved it today.

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Hard line metal. Assuming it doesn’t crack from freezing, we should be done with the leaks we were getting before.