Friday, July 20, 2012

I'll Be Ready Next Time

The order I placed to Hoegger Supply on Monday night arrived Thursday.  It was really a fast delivery.  




I am so thankful that Dottie Belle's kidding was in the 90%, so the humans could just be cheerleaders; no assistance needed.

Now I have a kidding kit, first aid kit, milking kit with a stainless steel milking pail, and hoof care kit.  I spent over $200.  So you can understand why I procrastinated placing that order; I didn't want to let go of that money.

Cloud thought I ordered him a box of bright orange paper.  He was delighted. Finally, we have a goat to milk.  This first week of milk I will just feed it back to Jazzman.  But from what I have read, Dottie Belle will produce more milk if I milk her as well as let her kid nurse.  So we will share.  This is her first kidding called freshening.  With each kidding she should produce more milk, but I'm just excited to get started.  My grandson, Chase, was up for the challenge of learning to milk a goat.  Dottie Belle was a bottle baby, so one could not ask for a friendlier and more willing goat.
3 Days old, Jazzman is my lap kid in training.
This afternoon I brought Jazzman in to sit in my lap for a few minutes.  I think his mom enjoyed a few minutes of freedom. He also got acquainted with Cloud.  The cat weights 12 lbs and the kid weights 5.5 lbs.

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Jazzman Is Happening Today

Gypsy and Dottie Belle at 5 weeks old.
I got my first 2 Nigerian Dwarf does in February of 2011.
For over a year now, I have been surfing the internet and reading about raising and breeding goats. 





 I've been watching youtube videos like crazy of goats giving birth or kidding.

Monday night I finally decided to place that order to Hoegger Supply that I had been making since January. Mother had sent the money back in January to buy a milking pail for my birthday present and I had put a birthing kit and first aid kit in my shopping cart at the Hoegger site.  Monday night, I also went to this website and printed up the Kidding Handbook. http://www.goatworld.com/articles/kidding/KiddingHandbook.pdf  I even put a copy of the Kidding Handbook in my husband's backpack for him to take to work with him Tuesday and read if he found time.
 
For about the past 3 weeks Dottie Belle's udder has been steadily enlarging, but I didn't know how far along that meant that she was.

Billy Shakespeare at about 7 weeks old.
  She has been living with Billy Shakespeare  off and on since I brought him home in October, but he was only 3 weeks old. I was never actually sure they had mated until I noticed her udder.  

She never seemed interested in him.  So I was guessing delivery would be late August or September.  


Tuesday morning, July 17th, I went out to feed everyone and looked at Dottie Belle with the freshly attained knowledge from the Kidding Handbook.  Sure enough there was a little discharge on her vulva. (I have a picture, but I'm not going to include it in this post.)  I had been checking her ligaments around the base of her tail for a couple of weeks, but that area felt just like the other 2 does'.  But Tuesday morning, I could feel what was meant by "ligaments around base of tail will loosen."  Dottie Belle's were finally different from the other does' ligaments.  So my next step, of course, was to call my husband and make sure he had read the Kidding Handbook.  When I told him today was the day we would be using it, he didn't believe me.  I quickly put fresh straw in the goat shack and put Dottie Belle in there.  I then ran into the house and got the camera, surgical gloves, disinfectant soap, towels, a gallon of distilled water, and hydrogen peroxide as a substitute for iodine to put on the umbilical cord.  As soon asI got back to Dottie Belle, she jumped over the little privacy board I had put up for her and ran to a briar patch and laid down.  She had a contraction, let out loud bellow and I saw "the bubble" I had read about.  My friend and fellow school board member, Jasmine, called about that time and I told her Dottie Belle was having her babies.  She said, "I'll be there in 15 minutes."  Now Jasmine doesn't know anything about goats, but she did not want to miss seeing the big event that I had been talking about for months.  I then called my husband back and told him I was right that she is kidding RIGHT NOW.  I wanted Dottie Belle to go back to the comfy bed of straw I had made like it said in the Kidding Handbook, so I got some goat pellets to persuade her to return.  She followed me back to the shack and as soon as she got there out popped a beautiful kid.  I do have a video. Jasmine showed up just 5 minutes too late to see the birth and my husband came home to check things out just minutes afterwards.  His question was, "How did you know she was going to have the kids today?"  I replied, "Because I read the Kidding Handbook last night."  Anyway, kid number one and only was born at 12:35 p.m.  My husband returned to work, since it looked like everything was under control. Jasmine and I sat and waited until 3:45 for another one to be born. Jasmine so badly wanted to see a birth.  But we were having a board meeting at 4:30 and she rushed home to get ready and go to the meeting.  I gave up going to the meeting and sat with Dottie Belle and her kid until 6:00 and then decided there were not going to be any more kids.  Dottie Belle did everything exactly by the handbook, except that little run for the briar patch. I was at first going to name the new buckling Donald, because this was also my husband Don's Birthday. But Don didn't really care if he had a goat named after him, so I've named him Jazzman in honor of Jasmine.  It was her idea.  He weighted 5 lbs.  The average weight for a newborn Nigerian Dwarf goat is 2-3 lbs.  So he is a big fine fellow and looks very much like his daddy, Billy Shakespeare.
As soon as he was cleaned, he wanted to nurse.

Jasmine and Jazzman
Dottie Belle took a quick nap.

The grands came to love on him.


Chase and Jazzman. Jazzman even has his dad's blue eyes.  
At least I'll have the birthing kit I've ordered for the next kidding. 

Monday, July 16, 2012

A House Full of Cats

Our adopted feral stray cat gave birth to 4 kittens the last week of April.  








I wrote a post about finding them and that I decided to bottle feed them so I could find homes for them. http://charlottesmenagerie.blogspot.com/2012/05/surprise-on-my-doorstep.html

Well, I was successful in finding homes for all 4 kittens. My daughter, who lives just one house from me, took 2, Mittens and Cirus. Steve, a fellow school board member, adopted Panther, the first kitten I found on the doorsteps. 

 But July is time for summer vacations and guess who was asked to kitten sit.  That's right, 3 kittens returned to spend the week with me. 
Mittens enjoyed lying right by the oven so I had to be careful not to step on her.
Panther spent most of the week being carried around by Kennedy.  

Cirus was the most laid back kitten.  He enjoyed long naps on the sofa.
My cat, Cloud, took the responsibility of Kitten Sitter.  He never took his eyes off of them.
  I truly enjoyed the week because I missed the little rascals, but don't want to have them all the time.  Kind of like having grandchildren.  Love on them a while and send them home.


Saturday, July 14, 2012

A Present for Gigi

My fountain
My children and I went in together to buy my mother a fountain for her birthday.  I wanted to buy her one like I did for myself; but when I went back a month later they were sold out.  I like the sound it makes.  To me it sounds like water in a cave, but Bridget said it sound like a running toilet to her.
Anyway, we had to find a different one.  Bridget was the one to spot the fountain we bought for Mother.  It had roses on it and was light weight enough that she and I could deliver it and set it up.  Also, if Mom ever wants to move it, she can easily.







I just hope that Mother will enjoy it as much as Kennedy and Connor did. Mother wrote a post on our visit also on her blog @ http://gardeningwithjuanita.blogspot.com/2012/07/welcomed-visiters.html

Friday, July 13, 2012

Some Shade for Billy Shakespeare


In an effort to control the goat population here at Thornhill Acre, 









Billy Shakespeare lives in separate and by no means equal quarters.  For June and the first week of July, the temperatures were 100 degrees and no clouds or rain.  B.S. gets shade from different shadows made by the fence and house, but not really very much and for a couple of hours a day no shade at all. He often just goes into his igloo to get out of the heat. One day I was at Kings Hardware getting some keys made for the rental properties and wandering around the store.  I found a 5x7 tarp and thought of Billy Shakespeare's need for shade.  Well, of course, a tarp will not just float above the pen, so when I got home with just a tarp and told Don of my plans, he made a list of things we will need to actually put the tarp up.  Then, bless his heart, he went back to the hardware store with me to get them. 
Through the powers of my extraordinary gifts, I was able to distract Don for a few moments from his sedentary hobbies of reading and napping, just long enough to put the tarp up.


Now that we have had rain for the past week, the tarp is great for keeping his hay dry.  Goats will not eat wet hay. In fact, they come up with all kinds of ways to waste hay.  To make things worse, they won't eat just hay; it has to be expensive alfalfa that they waste. 


Monday, July 9, 2012

Local Celebrity--Who?

Four months ago I got a call from someone in our public library telling me about a reading promotional they were putting together using local celebrities.  She mentioned the national campaign with posters of "real" celebrities like George Clooney holding a book and urging others to read.  She asked me, as a local school board member, if I would come for a photo shoot.  At first I laughed, but said, "Sure, I love reading."  She said to bring my favorite book.  Well, I have a lot of books that I love, so I just took the book I had just finished reading, Exile.  I do recommend it.


I've had several friends and family members bump into my poster at the library.  They usually call me while they are still there.  I failed to tell anyone, except my husband, about the poster so they were quite surprised. My daughter took this picture while she and the grands were at the library.  I don't have to go to the library since my husband goes every 2 weeks and checks out about 10 books at a time; therefore,  I haven't seen the poster.  I call Don my book filter.  He reads at least 10 books to my one. He always has a book in his hand and I only read at bedtime. So from his haul from the library, he puts the best one of the 10 on my night stand.  That works so well for me, because I find it difficult to quit reading a book.  I keep thinking it's going to get better.  In the 20 years we've been married, I've only stopped reading one book that he recommends.  Every now and then, I'll buy a biography, because that's my favorite genre and Don doesn't usually read them.

I've read that reading before you go to sleep can cause sleeping problems. That doesn't seem to cause me any difficulty. But a strange thing that I will do is go to sleep and think I'm still reading and make up all kinds of things.  It's very confusing to do that.


Sunday, July 1, 2012

Picking Blueberries

 On Thursday my daughter planned a trip for us to pick blueberries at Hillcrest Blueberry Farm. 
http://hillcrestblueberryfarm.com/  I can't say that I recommend the last few days of the season and 100 degrees, but in spite of the heat we had a great time.  We only picked one gallon of blueberries. 
The grandkids enjoyed checking out the berry picker.

 The blackberry fields were already closed, but we bought some.  We also bought plums and different jellies.  Bought a jar of strawberry nut honey butter.  An unbelievably great topping. All I've put it on top of so far is a spoon.  The "nut" is pecans.  

They sold blueberry lemonade that was a great thirst quencher. Hopefully, next year we will remember to go in May.