Skip to main content

Uncle Fenway's Full Report

FarmWife thought that I needed to be locked in a separate pasture for the birth of the baby goats (just in case, she says, and because you're big, she says) but she was wrong. I didn't mind; after all, birth is messy and I did have my own dinner to attend to. Nonetheless, just to prove that I would have made a very fine midwife, I will tell you what happened.

First, I looked for signs of impending labor. These included softening of the ligaments around the tail head, which I couldn't feel due to my having hooves but which I could see due to my having very big, good eyes. Imagine a typical fleshy goat butt tranformed into something more closely resembling a coat hanger.

Other signs were yawning (captured here on film) and stretching, or as some horseshow people like to say, "parking." This is something that Tennessee walking horses and valets do, but they do it differently. Missy stretched to facilitate the best positioning of her fetuses, while Tennessee walking horses stretch to give the impression of being long, to look easily mountable, or to hide leg flaws, depending on who you ask.

By the time Missy was really down to business, FarmWife was in attendance. She had a birthing kit ready with lots of disposable blue pads (but not enough), lots of clean dry towels and delivery blankets (fresher than my own turnout rug), sterile scissors of the same variety as my own mane-trimming scissors, and lots of veterinary-type stuff like bulb syringes, iodine, and rectal thermometers. Blleecch.

Missy delivered her two doelings in a very straighforward manner, and none of the emergency supplies were called into use, but if there had been trouble I could have helped in any of a number of ways! I could have brayed for the veterinarian, I could have used my teeth with gentle dexterity to extract a malpositioned infant, or I could have used my warm, soft muzzle to deliver an invigorating rub to a weak doeling.

As it was, both doelings (Pigeon, with wattles, and Dove, without) were up and screaming for milk before you could say, "welcome." Never in my fifteen years of life have I seen such robust babies as these! They weigh a mere nine pounds each, but the two of them have brays of such power and volume as to rival my own. I am proud.

I haven't much time, for these little darlings require my adoring gaze, but let me end with this: Missy will raise her own babies, but the FarmWife and her larval humans will pass many happy moments with us in the paddock as they grow to weanable age. This will be of benefit to me as well as to them, for as we know there is nothing to rival the affectionate presence of my own dear FarmWife.

Yours, Fenway Bartholomule



Comments

  1. Congratulations, Missy and Uncle Fenwick.

    Happy Birthday, Pigeon and Dove.

    Thanks, Farmwife, for this blog. Quite entertaining and educational.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Awe how sweet . . . we are(still) eagerly waiting kiddlets too!! Glad is was an easy kidding!!

    ReplyDelete
  3. A thousand pardons, Fenway! (Not Fenwick) Working the night shift makes for silly errors on my part. It's amazing how sleep can restore cognition, right?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Oh, 5150, no harm done . . . . I had assumed that you were merely inventing a new term of endearment! And thank you, both of you, for stopping by!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Awwww! Congratulations!
    So, "doelings" means they're both girls, right? I thought wattles were a guy thing? Please explain where I am wrong.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Dear littledog,

    Wattles are due to a dominant autosomal locus with variable expression. I don't know exactly what this means, but you must admit that it makes me sound smart to say it.

    Some goats have wattles and some goats don't—Missy does not, but her paramour did, and that is why young Pigeon had a genetic chance to be so blessed! It is not a gender linked trait . . . perhaps you're thinking of testicles?

    Love,
    Fenway

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Thanks in Advance for Your Mulish Opinion!

Popular Posts

Here are the Cloud Dog's X-Rays

Here, for your edification, are the X-rays of dear Paisley's leg. There is, apparently, no new break (since his Monday siezure) but there is, of course, a great deal of abnormality caused by years of living with a shortened ulna. His pronounced lameness, the vet says, may temporarily improve. Unlike me, Fenway Bartholomule, poor cloud dog can't expect much in the way of a full recovery.   Not having the $$$$ for surgery to fuse the joint, we are working on making some sort of rigid splint to support the limb and prevent further degeneration. That is, the humans (with their space-age material inventions and their opposable thumbs) are working on making a splint; I am working on giving cloud dog brayful looks of support and encouragement every time he totters into the yard to relieve himself. As always, he fears me (me?!) and keeps his distance.  Ears to you,  Fenway

Vegan Spring Rolls

I, Fenway Bartholomule, am a vegan: of course I only eat plants, not people! My human is too, so I'm sharing my blog with her today so that she can participate in the 2014 Virtual Vegan Potluck ! When you're done perusing the recipe for these delicious spring rolls, click "back" or "forward" for the entire potluck experience! Virtual Vegan Potluck: Spring Roll Appetizers Beautiful? Check. Healthy? Check. Delicious? Check. Easy? Check. Fancy? Check. Quick to clean up after? Check. Vegan? OF COURSE! If you're looking for something portable, colorful, and crowd-pleasing for your next potluck, look no further than these simple vegan spring rolls! The best part? You can substitute ANYTHING. I never make these the same way twice, so play around with cilantro, kale, cabbage, scallions, or whatever you think sounds good! Ingredients Veggie mix: 2 carrots (grated) 4 oz mung bean sprouts 1/3 cup chopped peanuts (raw, or roasted and salted) or ...

The Scoop on Bird

 Human here, to give you the scoop on Songbird. He is shiny, sweet, and wonderful . . . and a little bit broken hearted. (Fenway was once, too.) As I've gotten to know him more over the last month, I've come to understand that he associates humans with unpleasantness, at least, and suffering, at worst. He has some gnarly scars. He flinches away from touch, though he warms up quickly when treats are involved. He's quite a foodie. He's easily startled. He's alert, and vigilant. He doesn't always feel safe. He also really likes it at my mom's house, which has a slower pace than the wonderful boarding and lesson barn where he lived in June. He appreciates the predictable routine, the long quiet afternoons, and the retired horses who give him company. He has flattened the grass under the big cedar out back and created nests to rest in. The soft footing at my mom's is better for his newly bare feet. He is starting to believe he'll be ok.  I have ridden him...

One person I miss

I have the best of friends around me here at this new home! I have my human Granny and Gruncle (is he a grandpa? Is he an uncle? I'm not sure), I have a horse companion beside me and two other horse companions a little further down the row, and I have a wonderful assortment of ponies, miniature horses, and miniature mules darting about and making adorable little sounds with their adorable little faces at all hours of the day and night. It's really quite lovely. I have chickens and rabbits and cats to befriend, and I have visits from the Woman and her blue dog.  My friend Scotty, who lives on my right, is a wise old chestnut with a soothing presence. My friend Cadbury, who lives on my left, is a fiery miniature stallion (a rescue, for whom gelding was medically contraindicated) who ensures our life is never boring.  I miss one person from the boarding barn—a sweet little girl who was the very first person I came to trust in that new place. She was kind to me from the outset, an...