- while some played with the fire truck and hose.

Others enjoyed their water in the hot tub, which was used several times a day.



Wool drying on the guest-house/studio porch - trio of dye/roasters - bakers' rack with dyed locks
Sort, wash, dry or dye, skein, weigh, tag and pack was repeated in an endless loop. Three roasters and three huge dye pots simmered most of the day. The washing machine ran non-stop. Soon bags of wool and skeins of roving began to pile up everywhere: in the house, in the barn, in the guest house, in the car, and - eventually - in the trailer.
After making reams of lists and piles of maps and directions, we headed off.
This should have been a clue that we weren't as big as we thought we were.
Next: Convergence 2010
On the ranch:
Last week: moved the ram lambs down to the boys’ pen.
This week: enlarged the garden by planting chard, cucumbers and a fig tree.
Next week: shear goats.
We had 14 lambs* born, lost 5
We are closing the gap a tiny bit: 10 lambs on the ground, with one more ewe to lamb.
When I left, Liza looked like this (left) and when I returned, like this (right)
The lambs that were lost happened mostly while I was gone, but shortly after my return, we lost a very nice, big ram lamb. With some CSI work and a lot of reading, it looks like the flock had picked up listeria. Coincidence or am I jinxed? Anyway, we went on a 3-day innoculation program as per vet instructions, and so far (touch wood) have not had any others lost or ill.
Had 4 angora kids* born, lost 2
Phoebe and her baby Poppy were shown in February post. This month our aging Mint (the one who traveled in the motor home from Arizona) had triplets. Unfortunately, we were at the market, and when we got home one was dead (membranes over her head) and another was near death. She was very small, and I think was born in the sun and was unable to move into the shade. She made a valiant effort, but did not make it. The middle kid, however, had found a nice shady hole and was hiding there when we found her. She is small, but is very full of life.
Yollie and Mint's child Middy.
It is really cute the way the two angora kids (Poppy and Middy) hang out together, though they are several months and sizes apart. They are never too far from the moms, but if something really scary happens - like the Gator roaring down the drive - they run like crazy and stand by... Yollie!
Solved the mystery of who was eating all of our eggs*
Left is before - if we were lucky! Right is after the Tin Cat.
Ever since we tore down the old, mouse-infested chicken coop and put the hens in with the goats, someone or something has been eating all of the eggs. At first it was Yollie, so I rigged up a pen were the chickens could come and go but Yollie could not. That lasted for a few days, then the marauding began anew. It has been going on for months, and we were just about on the verge of setting up a camera, when I discovered the culprits. I went into the pen to feed a little earlier than usual one evening, and peered hopefully into the egg nest - whereupon at least 6 mice went leaping for their lives in all directions! It's hard to imagine that those little buggers could eat four or five eggs a day, but since I put a Tin Cat under their nest, we have more eggs than we can (and should) eat.
dead things in the bathtub*
While gone, I got an email from hubby with no message, just "Avoid taking a shower at night" in the subject line, and this image (left):
Sheba's Pets
Hubby was convinced that the cat was collecting pets in the tub, because she never ate them. Some of us know that lizards just aren't that tasty. She graduated from lizards to mice to ground squirrels, and finally rabbits. Her record is four rabbits in a 24 hour period, of which she ate pretty much all, including the toenails.
Now we try to wait each other out when it comes to taking a morning shower, because the first person has to clean out the tub, and the second gets in free, so to speak.

Where have I been? What have I been doing? No, really: I’m asking YOU! (ggg)
Barely a week after my last post (in the middle of lambing) I got a call from my uber-pregnant daughter who had been quite ill, saying “Hi, Mom … guess you’d better get a ticket: they’re shaving me right now.” She had gone into early labor, necessitating a C-section (like her previous one). Less than 12 hours later the baby started running a high temp and was eventually diagnosed with listeria, which is probably what my daughter had, as well. Thus began two weeks of IV antibiotics and monitoring in various NICUs in the Bay area, depending on the severity of problems at any given time. I got to stay with the toddler, which was truly a bright spot, bringing her - along with dinner - for nightly visits with the rest of the clan. The good news is that we all survived, and the little family is home and healthy again.
Beautiful Baby Riyana Gramma's new girl
Exhausted daddy and daughter
But, poor Gramma, everything after that seems a blurr. I do know that a lot has happened.
In no particular order:
We had 14 lambs* born, lost 5
Had 4 angora kids* born, lost 2
Sheared all the goats and half the sheep
Had to cull two big rams (wolves were happy about that)
Celebrated some birthdays
Got a firetruck
Had several weeks of farmers' markets
Had family visits
Had lots of rain and cold
Solved the mystery of who was eating all of our eggs*
Had some warm, beautiful days
Spent time with friends
Were told one Kangal might have bone cancer (later ruled out with X-rays)
Had to put down our 20-year old farm dog
Then there were meals and sleeps, and spinning and TV shows, lots of dead things in the bathtub*, trips here and there, etc., etc., etc.
Then, one mild morning morning, as we let the ewes and lambs into the llama pen to eat some lush green weeds, a pair of bluebirds sailed by and landed on the fence just in front of us. There they sat, taking turns darting to the ground, snapping up little bugs, and returning to their posts. Today we saw a SECOND pair, gliding just above the driveway. Could be our bluebirds of happiness have returned.
* - next time