Oh boy, the sheep got out

My dad and I were just discussing on Sunday evening the art of caring for livestock and one of the things he mentioned was that they always seem to get out when your gone. I remember that I kind of just chuckled at that and thought that that only happens to him, because that’s just his luck. And it is very, very rare that all the employees of Center View Farms would be gone on the same day. That matched with how the sheep would ever know we were gone, made me not really consider it a possibility.

Yesterday, was one of those rare days when all 4 employees of Center View Farms were gone away from the farm. And not just a few miles away, but out of state. My mom is in LA, my dad is in Chicago, I was in Minneapolis, Minnesota and Johnny was on a plane flying over the Rockies. And guess what?

I got a phone call at 7:30 p.m from my awesome neighbor, Wayne, informing me that there were several white faced sheep in a field 2 miles away from our farm. I left my house at 3 p.m that day and they were up near the barn taking a rest at that time. Little did I know they were conjuring up a game plan at a sheep meeting. So they must had been watching my every move, saw when I left, figured out the place of their escape, got out, walked 2 miles down a gravel road, crossed a busy 2-lane highway, passed several fields of delicious corn plants and ended up in a neighbor’s replanted bean field. And us farmers say sheep are dumb! Nonsense!

The next morning when I woke up, I went outside to see that the 28 sheep that had escaped were sitting around in one of the barn lots, looking at me sweetly and innocently. You may be wondering, how did they get returned? Well, all I can say is that we have super, awesome, caring, good neighbors with hearts of gold! Two miles down the road, on their excursion, the ewes hit a crossroads. Half of them went left and the other half went right. Why? Dunno. The farms on both the left and right are owned by former sheep farmers and my neighbor Wayne who lives between us and them was a sheep farmer too. These 28 must have just instinctively known to hit former sheepmen’s homes, smelling their scents from miles away. Right? Sheep are not big business much any more, so very few farmers raise them. White faced ewes are even more rare, so these former shepherds knew exactly where they came from.

With a bing, a bang, and some wicked help from their families, the wandering 28 were herded into a yard, coerced with corn in a bucket to get into a livestock trailer, and driven back to their home, all with ease and professionalism. I have to give a humungo shout out to my neighbors and former shepherds, Wayne Koehler and family, Galen Greenzweig and family, Gary and Sandy Marth with their lovely granddaughter Kate, 6, who I heard helped herd them up, and their son and our neighbor Josh. This experience made me really appreciate the community I live where good deeds, trust, hard work, honesty and just simply put, GOODNESS still exists.

Fixing Fence

Having sheep or any other animal that grazes pasture requires a fence, a good fence. On our farm, the fence that perimeters the pasture is old, actually ancient and decrepit. It has been jimmied in so many different ways for as long as my grandfather had sheep. The original fence was probably first put up in the 1950s and was built with wood posts, barbed wire and tencil fencing wire. Not sure on that but that’s what’s on it now and it looks over 60 years old. Though the wood posts were slowly replaced by ugly steel posts over the years due to weathered and rotten wood.

So the other day, I took the old 6080 Allis Chalmers tractor out with wire, barbed wire, a hammer and wire cutters to fix the fence where the sheep could possibly get out. What I discovered was that the sheep could easily jump over the fence and that it was really of no good at all. So, a farm management decision had to be made. Do I invest in a 2-mile long new fence and keep the sheep to pay for it, which may take more than 10 years to break even OR do I mend the areas that need it most, hope the sheep stay dumb to not figure out they can jump over it and get out of the lambing business that doesn’t make much money anyway.

I decided on the latter, for now that is.

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The tool is an old fashioned wire cutter specifically made for making fences. It cuts wire, crimps wire, and clamps onto wire. Why can’t they make things that simple and efficient anymore?

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A friend in the field. Let’s hope it’s not a corn eating pest, it’s too pretty.