We're well into calving now, and I'm just getting to the blog I intended to write about the occupants of stall six. Mark had brought in a baby that couldn’t get the hang of sucking. His tongue leaked out the side of
his mouth so he couldn’t get a good drag. And he looked a little lopsided
otherwise. Maybe he had laid in the womb wrong. Mark prepared a stall with fresh
straw and walked the cow and calf inside. He knelt next to the cow and guided the
hungry calf close to her flank. If Mark cupped the teat just right, the calf
could suck. After a couple of days the baby figured it out and the
happy couple went back outside to the herd.
Tending the pair was my first stint in the old calving barn
this spring, and it seemed good to be back inside its cozy walls. It’s the oldest working building on
the ranch, so familiar and functional. It’s warm and quiet during severe weather. And in late morning when I clean stalls alone, and sunshine flows through the gaps in the wood siding, it has a timeless
feel that makes me think of Grandpa and Grandma and how happy they must
have been when the barn was new.
Calving is serious business, but you can tell the Pratts have had fun in the barn over the years. There's a neon "Lucky On Tap" sign hanging from the ceiling that dates to long before my time. I tried plugging in the cord and, no, it doesn't work anymore. There's a Hereford sign on the back wall, two cowboy portraits in the straw room, and a scratchy transistor radio on the shelf.
And though I love the old building, I’m campaigning for some upgrades. Maybe a blog will get Mark's attention! The
sliding door across the front is temperamental and Jesse got locked inside one
day when it wouldn’t track. It’s heavy and requires both hands and my whole
weight put into it to get it closed. There’s an inside door that leads to the
warm room, or "technology lab" as the sign on the door reads. It needs replaced as well. It doesn’t shut and stay closed easily, you have
to twist it towards the interior of the door and then push solidly. We go in and out of the warm room continually. Inside is a relic
refrigerator which holds extra milk, a deep sink with hot running water, clean
towels, syringes and treatment bottles, various tools for the task at hand, and a heater on the wall to
warm up a cold calf if needed.
So, yeah, it would be nice to absentmindedly shut the door. It’s not like we have any extra attention or time during calving season.
So, yeah, it would be nice to absentmindedly shut the door. It’s not like we have any extra attention or time during calving season.
mother and baby cozied up |
Pratt Calving Barn |
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