May 4th, 2020
At long last, a full night's sleep

Two days ago Hope and I were sitting in the barn after morning chores, mightily enjoying the scampering lambs when one of the pregnant ewes’ water broke. By the time I got her into a lambing stall (not something she was a fan of, apparently), another ewe began straining and passed a bag of fluid as well. The second ewe was Nieve, who is the founding member of our flock and my special pet. I raised her on a bottle after buying her from a breeder who had some orphans. She’s been suffering from a medical problem called a prolapse and had been wearing a special harness to keep everything in place. Several times I had believed her to be laboring when really it was just a relapse of the prolapse ;0). Her condition mandated sleeping in the barn or multiple nightly checks, neither of which is conducive to a full night’s rest, so I was especially thrilled to have our watch coming to an end. We sat in the barn with the ewes as they laid and stood, strained and rested, and lost more fluids. Sitting with a birthing animal is a beautiful and mysterious experience. Sometimes the babies come quickly and sometimes they don’t and going to the house for even a few minutes usually means missing the birth. I positively adore being present for the births. A whole new being is entering the world and it fills me with joy.
We sat with Nieve and Starburst, a second time mom who is black with a little white and belongs to Hope. We like colors in our flock, a nice variety of white, brown and black, preferably with spots or patches of contrasting colors. Starburst was the first of our black ewes to go into labor, and we had not yet had any black lambs this year, so we were eager to see what she produced. After two hours of waiting, the ewes had not progressed much. I had to run an errand so Kelsi stayed with the ewes – one of the many good reasons to have a co-farmer. :0) While I was away, Kelsi live-texted me updates as she decided Nieve was struggling too hard and unproductively and gave her a hand by reaching in and applying a little traction to the front hooves of the lamb. Shortly afterward, Nieve birthed a pure white male lamb that matches her color. Before I returned she also birthed a second that was stillborn. This is the first stillborn lamb we’ve had, though there have been a number of calves over the years. It’s always sad. He was small and thin compared to the living one, leading me to suspect some ongoing difficulty in the womb.
When I returned from my errand, Starburst was actively pushing and lambing seemed imminent. However, another hour passed with no visible progress. I attempted to feel for the lamb to see if the positioning was right, but my hands are pretty large and she was small inside. Kelsi Small-hands to the rescue! The poor lamb was not positioned well. Instead of two front hooves and then a head, it was front hooves only and then, much further back than it should have been, a head and two more hooves. Poor mama! No wonder this little one was stuck. After many attempts, Kelsi managed to get the lamb into the correct position and the legs coming out into the world. Pretty soon a little black male lamb with some white on his head was born. As mom was cleaning him off, I went to do other chores and when I returned I found he had a little sister, white with brown spots on her shoulder and neck. It wasn’t even dark yet, and everyone seemed to be all set. Finally, I was able to get a good night’s sleep.






