Archive for January 25, 2020
Goats! 19.01.2020
0On the 14th, 15th and 16th of January we shore sheep, I rousey in the shed. This means that I sweep all the wool away from the shearers and keep the board tidy. It’s hard, hot work. Sometimes it can be boring. Mum cooks for everyone, my favorite thing is when she makes tiny, little pizzas, they are yum!

Sheep in the yards.
This time when we finished the sheep we got our goats in, our goats are angora, they grow special fiber which we sell.

Me and Uncle John mustering the goats.
We shore the kid goats, their fiber makes us the most money because it is really fine, it is used to make expensive suits and other garments. We had 38 kid goats to shear. After we had shorn them mum helped me draft out the big weather (boys with no”noise”) goats and then the oldest nanny goats.

Some of our weather goats.

“Eddie” A very sneaky goat.
On Sunday the 19th we loaded 102 goats onto the truck to go to the meat works. It was sad to see them go but at the same time it was a bit exciting! I am taking over from mum at farming the goats, we are moving them to the farm where we are building our house and I will need the money they make to build a shed, yards and fences so I can take care of them there.
117 Nanny and kid goats were left, these will make my new flock. I am also going to be buying two new billy goats from Waipu, it is exciting to think that soon I really will be a goat farmer!
Skylarking! 05.01.2020
0I was walking in the long grass near house when I saw the sweetest thing! A Skylark nest!
Earlier I had watched a Skylark hovering, looking down at the same spot which made me curious, there were three little chicks in a tiny nest hidden in the grass, it was really hard to see, lucky I didn’t stand on them! Skylarks are quite common on the farm, they are not native but I like their songs, they fly so high in the air you can barely see them and they sing like the wild wind weaving through the fields.

Skylark nest in the grass.

baby Skylark.