Tuesday. Nice 63 this morning, nearly 90 and much more humid now at 1:30. Calling for the rain/showers/storms to come in from the Ohio area later this afternoon.
Yesterday was a long day but productive. Got the cows in the barn for the vet. 8 preg checks and the one lame heifer.
Sadly, the lame heifer looks like she injured her stifle. She has a nice heifer calf on her.... vet says she ought to get around okay enough to raise this calf... but no promises. Sometimes an injury like that will heal... she is young... could have gotten shoved just wrong by another cow, could have been from the bull mounting her and just caught her with her leg in the wrong angle and slipped... who knows. So she is going to the nurse cow pasture, where they all calved, and is familiar with it, and has plenty of places to get out of the sun and there is more than enough grazing with all the ones that have been moved out.
The 3 heifers that had been checked preg: One he said must have aborted but she doesn't feel right inside... sell her. One looks like she aborted, she did get a small udder; maybe a dead premie calf we didn't find...I saw her in heat but she is open... vet says she is cycling... that decision is up to DS. Third one is FAT... she is about 60+ days so had to have aborted and bred back. She is also kind of squirrelly acting. I told DS she should be beef.
The 2 cows we didn't get in the last check that were out back with their bigger calves... because they suck other cows... are both bred 6 + months. The one has an attitude and is definitely getting sold as a bred cow. The other probably should go too... but I am on the fence. They aren't going anywhere until their calves get sold and that is in the next month when he is planning to ship a load of steer calves. Both these calves are steers.
A heifer of mine that was at the nurse cow pasture and is a total IDIOT... 6 months bred... getting sold as a bred heifer... Tried to go through the head chute and bucked around in there like a crazy bucking bull... she is the grand daughter of one of my jersey nurse cows... go figure....
The older cow from up there that has had a slight limp from when we first bought her, quiet as a mouse and good momma, is bred and close to calving.. she will go back to the nurse cow pasture.
And one other that I couldn't remember if she had been checked... so ran her through... just weaned a BIG heifer calf off her... she is bred like maybe 5 months. She was a bought heifer... pretty nice to work with, she will stay.
Everything that is going to the sale is mine except the heifer he said didn't feel right inside....and possibly the one that is open but cycling... but we have grass so he might as well take her back to the bull at this point. Cannot believe the one bred heifer of mine, is so insane in the barn.... and the one cow that sucks has a high headed attitude too...
Seems like alot of my animals... but then I had kept 12 and calved them out 2 years ago when DS didn't have but 3 heifers... so I have some to pick through... and I am not going to keep "stupids" and idiots....
Then I got on the tractor and raked hay until DS came to get me and take me back to my car to go to work. He finished the 2nd field that I had started at the place we make custom for the guy.
Then tested cows, then went to pasture to do the cow. I actually saw the 3 calves on the nurse cow out in the field... so they are smart enough to go on her all at the same time.... YAY.... now I only have to worry about graining her so she keep up her milk production for another couple of months as they get to eating more grass and some grain too.
Then DS asked if I could take him back to the barn to his truck as he needed to come get the tractor to go hook up to the smaller round baler that we use to custom bale for this man as he does not have a way to handle the real big bales, so we make his with the round baler that net wraps and they are only 4x5... so he goes to try to start the tractor and it only will crank... and crank... and crank.... No fuel getting to the injectors... fuel pump has quit. He had one from about a year ago when it acted up... thought it was going bad,,,then it just started working fine so he thought maybe there was some dirt or something... so he went to the barn, got it and came back and had to put it on the tractor ... it was parked across from my house where he was going to put the hay in rows along the edge of the field. The loader was in the way and he had to work around it... couldn't move it out of the way up in the air because the tractor wouldn't start. Finally got it replaced and then had a devil of a time getting the lines to the injectors bled ... and I had gone over to see if he needed help or anything... finally got them bled and it finally started... so he took it to the barn and left it to where he could get it hooked up today to go bale when he got off work. I brought him back up here to his truck, and he stopped at the house, and took the spark plug out and cranked the engine to blow the accumulated gas out and said to let it dry out and he would get the plug back in and get it started tomorrow (today); and he finally went home. It was after 11 when I got in the house.
Went to bed and was in the barn at 5:30 this morning to test their 2nd test.
So, tested, did the computer work, got the meters. Went to the other field, and we were tossing around me trying to get it tedded but didn't know if he would have time to get it baled this afternoon and there is the forecast of rain by 5-6 p.m. I could have raked it and it would be ready to bale tomorrow, but if it rains, it will have to be tedded out. So he decided to just leave it today. The rain is supposed to pass over tonight with less than 20% chance of stray shower tomorrow. If we don't get much/any this evening, I will just rake tomorrow. If we get much, it will get tedded tomorrow, and then raked and baled on Thursday.
Going in to pack samples now. Hung the load of clothes on the line before, and with the strong breeze, they will be dry this afternoon. Sun tea making out on the deck table...
Squash blanching and freezing on the schedule for later this afternoon.