Here at the farm we do try to let our animals do their thing and not get involved unless we have to. New calves get a quick check and iodine on their tummy button to prevent infection - and the same with lambs. For both we spend time making sure they have suckled - but usually from a distance. Like a litter of puppies a mound of piglets is hard to walk past. Even harder to resist the temptation to pick one up and snuffle into its silky tummy. What's surprising when you do is just how much muscle and strength they have even when really little. They can be hard to hang onto, and when coupled with their high pitch alert squeal the reality is never quite as good as what you imagine. But it doesn't stop me from taking the chance in the futile hope one will one day just coorie in and snuggle up for a while.
It doesn't take long for them to grow, and before you know it you've got no chance. The tear-aways that are in front of my mother in laws house are now about 3 months old. Still hanging out with their own mum they don't miss an opportunity to break out onto her lawn and wreak havoc. Today's routines started off with a call to get them back into their pen, and whilst we tried to navigate them round gate and under fence their enthusiasm for breakfast was evident in their attempts to eat my wellies, waterproofs and have a good old nibble on my calf. Any thoughts of picking them up for a snuggle were long gone as I yelled for Fergus to get the feed bucket out asap to distract these teenage equivalents. As you might imagine he found the whole thing pretty hilarious and was in no rush. That's 25 years together for you.
Elsewhere it's been a busy old week on the farm - we welcomed a bunch of Swiss farmers for a farm visit, have spent a lot of time prepping wood stores for the next month and this weekend Fergus and the girls got all the Tups (male sheep) sorted and put out with all the ewes. The female sheep have a 17 day fertility cycle so they will stay out with the ladies for 34 days - giving everything 2 chances to get pregnant. With their gestation period at just under 5 months the hope is that they wont arrive much before the spring grass is starting to grow in early April. If you're walking through the farm then keep an eye out for them strutting around - they are usually easy to spot!