Impromptu pre-dawn cattle drive
You are correct, this is never a good thing

Rough night:
10:15 pm - check sheep. One is due to lamb and likely to have issues. Then read to youngest child and fall asleep in her bed.
1:00 am - move to my bed
3:00 am - check sheep. In the rain.
5:00 am - neighbor calls. Sheriff thinks my cattle are out on Renner Rd. Wake up the whole family. Drive to farm behind ours. Yep, that's our cattle.
5:15 am - Drive cattle into the dark, fog and rain where they immediately become invisible except for their glowing eyes when they turn to look at us and the fortuitously white backside of one of them.
5:30 am - My expectation that the cattle know the way home seems false as they appear to be wandering in circles in the giant mud flat that used to be our neighbors' corn field. I'm so grateful that my kids have experience herding cattle and are comfortable spreading out in the dark and containing the milling cattle off the road. Rain picks up and we can barely see anything. We speculate that we may have to wait with them until daylight in order to find the crossing through the strip of woods to our back gate, which we presume they broke down and exited through.
5:40 am - I manage to get up next to the woods without scaring the cattle off and recognize from the profile of the plants against the sky that we are not in the right part of the mud flat. We head them back toward the west and the lead cows find the crossing! With a great crunching of branches they pass through. Almost done!
5:45 am - Gah! The four little heifers I bought in the fall decide that the greenery is too big a barrier and reverse into the mud flats, galloping around us. Fortunately, they have one of our calves with them and the mother is bellowing for it, so they know where the herd is. They want the protection of the herd so go back to the woods after a bit. With some pressure from us in a semicircle around them, they brave the branches. Phew! They are funneled onto our property now by the neighbors fences.
5:50 am - Could they all be back in the pasture? No! Some of them didn't want to cross the gate that had been knocked to the ground during their escape and had veered off into a neighboring field. I jerry-rig a barrier to keep them from heading back out into the mud flat, Owen and Davin go back to get the car and take it home, and Hope and I make a big circle around the cattle to get behind them and funnel them back into the pasture.
6:00 am - Success! All cattle accounted for. Sky is getting lighter and rain and fog has lessened, so we are pretty sure we can see them all. I've scavenged twine and wire from around the area to reinforce the gate until I can get up there in full daylight with some better supplies. We walk home across the farm with Hope excitedly telling me how fun that was and how she would have been mad if we hadn't included her. I see a real future farmer inside there. Davin has the opposite reaction. He's a Never Farmer .
6:15 am - check again. No labor yet.
This pic is for humor. I did not stop for a photo up during our pre-dawn cattle drive. Also, that is not a cow. ;O)






