Archive for the ‘Cows’ Category

Livestock Management

Friday, September 15th, 2006

Going back a couple of weeks, here’s how the day went when Rosy and Coco arrived at our neighbors’ place.

In order to get cattle delivered by truck, you need to have a race (a wooden or metal ramp that facilitates loading and unloading) on the property at which they are going to be dropped off. We don’t have a loading race on our property, but Kevin and Ronnie, our neighbors (less than a kilometer from our property) up the road, do and they were kind enough to help us by allowing the truck to drop off our heifers there.

Rosy and Coco had been hand reared by a woman (Hi Pene!) who was very fond of them. She was always gentle with them. They had never been “treated like cattle,” so the experience on the truck wasn’t pleasant for them. Immediately after Rosy and Coco came off the truck, they were a bit shaken up.

Have you ever wished things would go a certain way, even though there was no indication that they would? Getting our two Jersey heifers to our property was just such an experience. We tried walking them through a series of paddocks on Ronnie’s and Kevin’s place. We chased the cows, actually. They led us and we tried to keep up.

Finally, we reached the point where we had to take them onto the road for the last stretch to our place. They seemed pretty skittish, still, and I said to Rebecca something like, “What if they just decide to run away?”

She acknowledged that they just might do that, but what else were were going to do?

ADVICE MOMENT: If you find yourself in a similar situation, go get help from someone who knows what they’re doing.

We didn’t do that.

As soon as we took them onto the road, * poof * they were gone. They took off at a full gallop into a bush block of unknown size, several acres at least.

“One thousand dollars worth of heifers: gone,” was the only thought in my head.

“How the #@!*&@ are we going to get them back now!?” was my next thought. It was my first real OH sh*t moment since being in New Zealand.

Becky and I tried to go after them.

Ronnie noticed how long it was taking us to move them and she and Kevin came down the road with their dog, William.

We all started climbing up through the steep bush. Ronnie gave William a command and he leapt ahead of us and disappeared. I’d say it took about two minutes. The dog brought the cows back down to us. A few minutes later, Ronnie, Kevin and William had Rosy and Coco standing in our driveway.

There are a few lessons to be learned from this drama.

  1. We bit off more than we could chew with this move
  2. Kind, helpful neighbors saved our day
  3. We need a dog that we can train to work like William

One Website and Three Cows

Monday, September 11th, 2006

We have been busy lately, and not just because we’ve been preparing to launch this website. Over the past couple of weeks, we have found three cows to join us here on the farmlet. Their names are Rosie, Coco, and Esmerelda. Esmerelda is a four-year-old Friesian (the big black and white girl), and Rosie and Coco are Jersey heifers — both two years old. Rosie is tan-coloured like a typical Jersey, while Coco is the colour of cocoa, due to a bit of mixed blood in her lineage. We think they are all beautiful!

Apart from the charming company they provide, our three cows are important to us for a number of reasons:

  1. They will keep the grass down in our paddocks and driveway.
  2. They will turn the grass into high-quality manure that we can use in our garden.
  3. They will provide us with lovely fresh milk. Dairy products are one of our biggest grocery expenses, so this is a big deal. Of course, the cows will have to have calves before we can milk them, so a visit from a neighbour’s bull is scheduled for the next few days. We will also have to learn to milk our cows!
  4. They will raise calves that we can sell or fatten for the freezer.

We feel very lucky to have found three healthy cows who are so quiet and friendly, and we are determined to give them the best care we possibly can. Esmerelda likes treats of kiwifruit and citrus peels, and enjoys being petted and scratched. Coco is so quiet that we can go right up and give her a hug. Rosie is warier, and won’t let us touch her much, yet. Sometimes she comes over and sniffs me and bunts me with her nose, before scampering off. Perhaps she is teasing, or maybe she just isn’t used to us yet. After all, Rosie and Coco have only been here a few days.

Buying cows was a big move for us, since neither of us has owned or cared for livestock before (unless you count a couple of orphan lambs that I helped bottle-feed as a little girl). We’re very lucky to have a whole council of family, friends and neighbours, who know more than we do about cows, and have given us no end of help and advice.

We are learning quite fast! Our plan is to “strip graze.” For those who don’t know, this means that you keep the cattle in one area of the pasture until they have grazed it down, then move them on to the next area. This has the advantage of allowing the grass to be eaten down more fully in a given area, which speeds regrowth. It also allows each area time to recover and re-grow before the cows return. Finally, any pathogens and parasites will have had time to die off, and will not reinfect the animals on their return. To execute this plan, we purchased a roll of electric fencing tape, and a set of standards, and made a movable barrier around our little herd. So far, so good, except that a) we forgot to turn on the fence, and b) we became hopelessly tangled in the tape when trying to move the fence. Just as well the fence was off when it got tangled. Just as well we have nice sweet cows, who don’t try to charge through the fence just because it is turned off! Also (just as well!) we discovered a cunning anti-tangle mechanism that some agricultural genius has built into the tape roll. Like I said, we are learning quite fast!