Lambing Season Begins
A sick lamb and an accident prone ewe

May 2nd 2020
My eleven year old daughter Hope's little white lamb, Freckles, was four days old when she noticed him shivering. It was early in the morning and a little chilly so we didn't think much about it. A few hours later the barn was quite warm and he began to shiver again while huddled in a corner. By this point his twin sister and his cousins were all up and scampering about happily. Examining his little white body with a tiny black V on his nose and black rims on his ears, I saw no external signs of infection but he was definitely too warm and somewhat lethargic. I mixed some of the herbal garlic-echinacea-eleuthero-cayenne tincture I make for infections with a little water and homeopathic Hepar Sulph and gave it to him by mouth. I wanted to take his temperature but discovered that both our barn and house thermometers had died. A couple of calls confirmed my suspicion that neither pharmacies nor feed stores had them in stock (thank you pandemic). I called the vet just in case we decided to go that route.
An hour later was limp when I checked on him. I gave him another dose of the homeopathic, but looking at his utterly pathetic tiny head motionless in my hand, ears all a-droop, I thought we were going to lose him. When the vet then called from right down the street, my daughter and I decided to buy antibiotics in a last ditch effort to save the little guy's life. We met the vet in the parking lot, received the instructions and the pre-filled syringes, and headed home. When we got to Freckles' stall we were surprised to see two little white lambs looking healthy. His fever seemed to be down too. We held off on giving him the antibiotic, as that's not something I want to use unless absolutely necessary. That was four days ago. I continue to give him the remedies and he continues to improve.
May 3rd 2020
Three days ago I got to the barn in the morning only to find one of the pregnant ewes on her side against a wall with her legs stuck stiffly out in an unnatural manner and a sack with fluids hanging out of her. Clearly she had gotten stuck when she laid down on the tiny incline the chickens make when they scratch for bugs up against the walls, and couldn’t get up. I had checked the ewes in the middle of the night so I knew she hadn’t been in that position more than a few hours. Good thing, too, because I once had a cow that died from this same situation when I didn’t find her in time. They are super ungainly at the end of pregnancy and can be carrying more than twenty pounds of baby when they only weigh 100-150 lbs themselves! I called my co-farmer, Kelsi, whose ewe it was. With a little help she was on her feet and moving normally. The good thing about the wooly fur they have at this time of year is that it makes a good handle for getting a grip on a stuck sheep to roll them on to their feet. So much for resting my hurt shoulder. Oh well.
I went back to the house to get Hope and by the time I got back the ewe had two lambs. That was fast! Good thing they didn’t come out in the middle of the night while she was stuck, since she wouldn’t have been able to clean them off or nurse them and we might have lost them. A boy and a girl, both strong and up on their feet and nursing right away. Numbers seven and eight born this spring into our flock. The female is all white and the male has some brown spots on top of the white.






