It's the time of year for separation.
The fecund from the barren.
Those to be eaten from those that are to be saved for breeding.
For the wooly members of our community it is into these two flocks.
A little looking about for estranged offspring by nursing ewes.
But interest is not maintained longer than the udder discomfort.
For the nannies and kids the separation is a greater wrench.
Bleating pitifully, straining against the leads with blue tongues bulging, choking
The young are dragged, pushed and with tails twisted, almost carried to their separate paddocks.
For escapees that brave the electric and barb, it is into the jug of the goat shed.
For two days we hear them crying.
Each new morning brings their bawling growing more feeble and hoarse.
By day three their mothers no longer return their pathetic bleats and return to grazing unperturbed.
So just when we suspect that they may have succumbed to their own misery they are released.
Cautiously they move around their new flock.
Have heads butted by the more dominant.
Then find their own niche.
Here's the challenge - compose a poem each day for one year, that reflects my agrarian life. On our hobby farm on the edge of the Monaro my husband Matthew and I raise children (I have eight, though only five remain at home), sheep, goats, chooks, piglets, a milking cow and her calf, fruit and vegies. To support this enterprise I teach in the remotest school in Victoria - if anywhere in Victoria is truly remote.
Showing posts with label drafting animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drafting animals. Show all posts
Wednesday, 18 February 2015
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