This is part of the Gap pastures we fixed fences in |
So weening a calf goes something like this: First we'll gather all the pairs (cow and calf) from their current pasture into a corral. That's the easy part from there we attempt to sort the cows from calves as well as sorting our cows from strays that have some how or another found their way into our herd. From the corral to the alley and then finally the cows get loaded on to a semi truck. The cows will be sent to their winter pastures while the calfs will be taken back to the ranch.
When you are vaccinating calves that are between 400lb and 600lbs you cannot mess around and seeing as you can't really sweet talk a cow into getting its shots this (the picture below) is what we use.
The green contraption in the middle of the picture is the shoot. |
While weening and vaccinating seems like a big job it is dwarfed by the task of fixing fences. Miles and miles of barbed wire fences that have been cut, rusted out or that are just loose and sagging all crying out for help. I'm not exaggerating at all. 6,000 acres of land that needs some attention.
I can't really complain the job is simple
Here's the back of the fencing truck with Red our trusty cow dog |
enough. I like to call it a zen job. You're working, but your mind is left to think on the more weighty things of life. It gives you a chance to admire the handy work of God. Granted after about three weeks of it you're ready for a change, but you'll not here me complaining about it's a job that has to get done, but it allows you to be a bit more thoughtful. So you see I have a good reason for my prolonged absence from the blogging scene, and there is still more to tell!
Old cabin in Conchen field |