Sun Dogs

Someone said today that it was our first sunny day after fifteen days of rain. I don’t know if that’s accurate, but it sure feels like it. Over the past week, I’ve gotten grumpier when I get dressed in the morning to go feed goats. It’s often been quiet until I start getting dressed, then the rain starts pattering on the roof. I try to keep a positive attitude, but it’s been a challenge. The rain. The mud. The wet. The cold.

I whine.
Continue reading Sun Dogs

Goats, Guts and Gratitude

Watering is the hardest part of the job. Lots of physical labor, hauling buckets, usually getting wet and sometimes cold, always dirty. It’s not the kind of thing most people would enjoy.

But in some ways, it’s my favorite part of the morning routine. By this time, the does have been throwing hay around and their water is totally dirty. And they’re often thirsty. Sometimes as I’m filling the bucket, a goat will put her head down and I’ll adjust the hose so it doesn’t splash. Then she sucks in long drinks as the bucket fills, sometimes raising her head, droplets falling as she blinks in the sunlight, savoring it.

This, I think, is as fine an expression of gratitude as I have ever experienced. It is utter satisfaction, to give an animal a drink of fresh water.

A lot of people pay lip service to gratitude. They make lists of things they’re grateful for, and always remember to say thank you. And that’s all good. But it’s easy to miss the most important part of gratitude of all: experiencing the moment. That’s what goats excel at…being in the moment, all senses completely alive. They are sensate creatures in the extreme, and just being around them helps me get back into the physical world, too, and out of my churning brain. It may be why I love working with them so much; it helps me get back into my own body.

To experience a goat enjoying a long drink of cool fresh water is to experience an expression of gratitude that goes beyond language. Gratitude is not saying the right thing or even about noticing; it is about accepting fully and completely; receiving what is offered with all senses alive.

…………………………………..

Thursday morning started on Wednesday night.

I was away and got a text…“Maple had her kids.” I texted back that I wouldn’t be back until close to ten, but there was a clean pen waiting for her.

When I got home, I stopped at the pens to check and see if the goat and her kids had been safely put away. We let the does deliver the kids in the pasture, then move them into pens where the kids are easier to keep track of and keep warm. But the pen I’d left clean for the next delivery was empty.

I also had a phone message…P said they’d set Maple up in a pen, so I was off the hook for the night. I was grateful…5am comes early, especially later in the week. I catch up on Saturday, “Napday”.

Thursday morning, I head down in the dark for 6am feeding and look in on the mamas-in-waiting in pasture. I see Maple and I’m confused. She clearly hasn’t kidded, so I head for the pens. I find Marilyn Monroe in a pen near the one I’d cleaned. It’s a dirty pen. I’m irritated immediately. I feel like I’m the only one who pays attention to cleanliness and the only one who cares about it from a health standpoint for the goats. So far this year, I’d always gotten mamas and babies into clean pens.

Marilyn and her babies look fine, so I go to the haybarn and start loading up and then feeding. It’s still dark, so everything is done by headlamp. It’s a dark, quiet time of day, and I enjoy working alone with the goats as the light rises.

I get done with the goats in the “patio” (a wood-floored barn) and head for the pens in the “circus” (a tarp-covered shelter). As I’m feeding in one row of pens, an unmistakable feeling comes over me. Someone has died. I know that when I turn around, I’ll find it.

I turn, aiming the headlamp down the row and scanning back. Here it is, directly behind me. Ginger’s larger baby lays dead. Her small, tiny, cute baby lays, still breathing, but with his head trapped under mama. She’s down, and shouldn’t be…it’s feeding time, all goats are on their feet.

I get her off the baby and find him far too weak and thin. I move the dead baby out of the pen, get Ginger to stand, and try to get the baby to nurse. It’s no use; her teats are too tight, too hard.

Since P’s been taking care of the health issues while I do maintenance chores, I decide to finish feeding and watering the rest of the goats first. If P comes down first, she can work with Ginger, otherwise I’ll come back. My irritation grows, feeds itself. If I owned the place, I’d do things differently. But of course I don’t. And I let it fuel my resentment.

I get done before P. comes down and get to work with Ginger. I stuff the kid into my coat for warmth and try to milk her; I get enough milk to fill a syringe and get some into the kid. He is the tiniest kid I’ve ever seen, but was strong just a day ago. He has his mom’s light coloring, very unusual in this herd, and though I know I’m probably only saving him to be sold for meat, I want to try. I get milk into him, and his eyes flicker and he holds his head up. It seems hopeful. When I see P’s car coming down the driveway, I start to cry. I am a wad of emotion and, yes, rage and I know I won’t be able to get my way about things.

P comes down to the pens and tells me what she’s been doing to care for some of these problematic goats. I hold my tongue. No middle ground for me, nosiree…I will either have it all my way, or I will be sullen in silence. I’m working on it, but old ways of being die slowly. And really, what can I do? Am I going to tell someone with almost three decades of experience that I, someone with just barely one year, disagree? It is the curse of intuition…to so often be right, without knowing how, and therefore never quite being able to develop a trust in that knowing. If I can’t explain to you how I know what to do, then how do I ever know that I’m right? Who am I to say “don’t use vinegar for that” or “I don’t think those two goats have the same thing wrong” or even “put the new goat in that pen not the other”?

P looks at Ginger’s kid and pronounces it hopeless. She pulls him out of his mom’s pen, “At least he won’t get stepped on.” I don’t see the logic. If he’s dying anyway, why not let him stay with mom? But I stay silent.

I wait until she leaves, then go back and look at the kid. He’s still breathing. He bleats. Goddammit. I know she’s right, that he is dying, but when something is fighting that hard to live, I can’t just leave it to die in the cold alone. So I stuff him back into my coat, get a good full cup of milk from Condor, grab a syringe, and head for the yurt, while it starts to rain.

He bleats again on the way up. I’ve seen kids fail to thrive and die before, but they never bleated, so I take it as a good sign. I decide to throw a towel in the dryer to warm it and wrap around him. But someone is using the dryer. My anger grows. Why is everyone working against me? I know I’m being unreasonable, but it gets away from me all the same. I throw the towel in with their clothes anyhow and wait. Then I take it out, and head down the stairs from P’s back porch, where the dryer is.

Suddenly, I am airborne. My muck boots, with treads that are so good in muck, are no good on slippery surfaces. My feet fly out in front of me, and I land with a terrific crash, my back onto the stairs.

There isn’t anyone around to hear me cry and curse with pain and more rage. I haven’t killed the kid in my fall; he’s safe in the front of my coat. It takes me a few moments to confirm that I“ll live, too. I race to stand up, just to prove I can.

Those of you who depend on doing physical labor to earn your way in life will understand the sick feeling that goes along with an accident like this…what if it’s so bad I won’t be able to work? Just in case the physical pain doesn’t have enough layered nuances of its own, the brain likes to kick in with some, too.

I know I’ve been brought back to earth, literally, because I’ve been so lost in my head. I try to take stock. What is the next right thing?

I can’t take care of a goat unless I take care of myself. I get the kid under wraps, put the kettle on…hot water to warm milk and to make coffee. Rekindle the fire. Get out of wet dirty clothes and check over my wounds. Already, the largest bruise I’ve ever had is bulging on the left side of my lower back. I find another below my elbow. I know there will be more, but this stopping to take stock of it is new behavior…gold star for me. Usually it takes me a full day before I know where the injuries really are. I’m not not in touch. But I sort it out, get the arnica gel, get the ibuprofen, remind myself to check in from time to time on what I’m feeling in case there’s anything worse. I’m probably lucky in this case to have the extra padding.

Coffee made, milk warmed, I set to work on the kid. I get milk into him, holding him partly under my shirt…feel this warmth, feel another heartbeat, soak up some life for yourself…and I feel hopeful.

Syringe feeding

I start the other job, late, then give the kid another feeding in an hour. But he seems to be fading.

He dies soon after.

It’s sad, but not devastating. I am more frustrated with myself and my role in the whole situation. And I know I’m in for some real pain that will arrive in the next day or so. But I can feel good about having some courage to follow my own course of action. I will learn how to put down a baby goat if I have to, but I am done with leaving them laying on a cold platform to die.

…………………………………..

Skip to Friday evening.

I’m driving back from a meeting, and the moon is up, shining through the redwoods as I drive, so bright that I think it’s an oncoming car around the curve at first. The playlist on my phone is sorted by artist, and The Clash keeps me company on the ride home. I’m usually dead tired by the time Friday night rolls around, but the meeting was lively and the espresso before it didn’t hurt, either.

As I come out of the redwoods, I’m back in phone range and the sounds of my phone tell me that there is a message. I manage to hear most of it over ”Death or Glory“, which I refuse to mute for the sake of a phone message…Lily struggled and had an enormous boy, but they are still in the pasture.

I roll into the driveway, head into the yurt, stoke the fire, and change back into goat clothes. It’s 10pm by the time I head out the door with my headlamp, but I don’t need it. The moon throws all the light I could want, even with the storm clouds scudding across it. I realize how lucky I am that I don’t have to do this in the rain.

I find Lily and her giant boy; he’s next to the mud, and it will be much better to get them into a pen tonight. I snap the leash onto her, having already fastened the other end to my belt loop, and grab the kid. ”Come on, mama…let’s get you guys safe and dry.“ She’s reluctant to cross the mud at first, but eventually comes along, following me with the kid.

I’m leading her to the pen and realizing that, for this moment, I am happy. Even after this exhausting week, even as the soreness sets in over my left side, even with the anger I still haven’t managed to sort out…this simple act of caring for these two goats makes me feel settled and at ease. I notice the moonlight, the clouds. I notice that my coat is warm and that these muck boots are wondrous things for getting through the mud that is everywhere now. I like being alone out here on the ridge, everyone else asleep, the smell of baby goat against my coat.

Getting water and hay for a single goat, I realize there isn’t anything I’d rather be doing. It is a small act of service to an animal that most people, even here, know as ”9“. But in a single moment, it is everything, and for that single moment I can touch that space of gratitude that opens out, over the ridge, under all of the moonlight.

There are hard days to come. The second set of does are all ones that had problems last year, problems that kept them off the milk line. And suddenly this morning, problems errupted in a fury. Some of the problem goats are going to auction tomorrow to help pay the feed bill, and there will be painful choices for P. to make and for me to help with. We may have to sell the goat that my 7-year old nephew wants to marry. I may not agree with the prognosis she’s been lumped into. And I will continue to struggle with my own head, my own self-will, on top of it all.

But if I can open to it, if I can keep my feet on the earth, there will also be moments like a night under clouds and moonlight. Just do the next right thing.

Kidding 2.0

Kidding season is moving fast. The first kids dropped on February 18th, a couple days before we expected them. Tulip surprised us first, with two beautiful boys.

Tulip and her kids

And after a brief pause (where we hurried to get pens ready), we were off to the races. On Presidents’ Day, it seemed like kids were popping out everywhere. And since some of the human variety were visiting that day, it was extra exciting.

Ben and Maddie with Tulip's babies

This was the day Rozena Quail had her babies. There was no way I was missing that! Rozena is an older goat and I worried for her. She happened to start kidding when there were lots of human kids visiting…a 4-H Group plus my niece and nephew and attending adults. A big audience.

I sat myself right down in the mud near her, but gave her plenty of space as she paced and bleated. She tried to push a couple of times, but it was clear she was having to work hard at it. Finally, she laid down on the grass right next to me, her back against me, and commenced to bellow and thrash. I ended up with my arms around her neck, trying to chant Kanzeon in my head, but never finishing the sutra completely before she’d distract me with he battling to have that kid. Finally, she threw her head back over me, bellowing hay breath into my face, and with P’s help, delivered an enormous boy.

I was sure she’d have triplets again, but it turned out that she just had a little girl left, and delivered that more easily. The little girl seemed weak; the boy got more of mom’s attention.

Rozena with her twins

Throughout the day we got mamas and babies in pens, setting them up with food and water. Ben and Maddie turned out to be a big help, cheerfully carrying wet baby goats and leading moms to the pens.

We had a couple more days of that. We are very lucky this year; lots of healthy babies, healthy moms. I feel more useful, knowing what to do, knowing what to watch for. I tended to Rozena’s girl expecially. She continued to be weak and had some kind of eye infection. We syringed milk into her and got her nursing, fitfully.

A couple days after Rozena’s kids were born, I checked on her pen and was dismayed to find the big healthy boy limp on the floor of the pen. I milked Rozena quickly, got the syringe, forced milk into him. You can tell with the milk hits their system…they almost immediately start coming back if lack of nutrition is the problem. His eyes flickered and I had hope. But his head continued to loll. I did everything I could to try to convince him to come back into this world, but it quickly became clear that all I could do was hold him and let him go.

It may be that he was stepped on. It happens from time to time, and with a mama as big and pushy as Rozena, it’s certainly possible. Or perhaps something was just wrong. But now we had to redouble on the baby girl. If we lost her, we’d have a doe who would have to be hand milked every day until the milk line started up…at least five weeks away.

Our efforts were good, and as of this writing, little girl is doing great. Her eye is cleared up and she’s nursing furiously. Rozena also is doing well…last year, she lost weight rapidly and I was worried we’d lose her, but I’ve been feeding her up this year and she seems fit and healthy. I am pushing for her to be retired after her time on the milk line this year…or even before. I would miss her terribly, but she was ready for retirement last year. I gotta look out for my big bossy girlfriend.

Another goat I’ve been watching closely is Cypress. A very nervous goat, she had her first year on the milk line last year, and was always very timid. P. found her starting labor in the field, but couldn’t catch her. I tried to help, but all we got for our efforts was a goat, in labor and a bag hanging half out of her, running around the field, darting between us skillfully as she bleated and carried on. We sat in the grass for a while, watching her and trying to sneak up on her when she laid on her side and heaved. But then she’d jump up again, all progress thwarted. I was sure the baby was dying in the birth canal, and we would have left her if we hadn’t been worried that it was taking her so long and she might need help.

Finally, we chased her up to the barn; instead of going in, she went under. Under the barn is a terrible hiding spot, because all the manure falls thru the slats of the elevated floor. But she was near the edge, so I grabbed her two rear feet. She began dragging me, on my belly in the manure, her front feet flailing and kicking manure back into my face. Luckly, she’s small, and I finally got hold of her well enough to drag her out.

We got her to the garden, where she delivered a healthy girl kid. To my vast suprise. And that kid is the beauty queen of the year, I’m telling you. She’s beautiful. I need to get more pics.

I’ve been trying to make it up to Cypress ever since, bringing her little treats, spending time in her pen, petting her and getting her used to hands. I don’t think I’ll really tame her, but maybe I can make things easier on her for the next time.

Round two will start this week…the goats that were not on the milk line last year, for whatever reasons. Only nine of them, but the first 27 babies and their moms are certainly keeping us busy in the meantime.

I feel lucky and gratefuli to be a part of it, happy to be on more solid footing with it this year. I feel like I know what to do for the goats, and I’m not afraid to take initiative or even sometimes to speak up about how we’re doing things. I have a lot to learn…I will admit, I haven’t even read any of the goat books I’ve had for over a year now! But I am grateful for my teachers, whether they have two legs or four.

Excuse Me While I Kiss the Sky

The rain is pounding on the yurt, but it still can’t drown out the sound of thousands of frogs singing away. That was a brilliant stretch of beautiful days, but we really do need the rain. Today the wind was coming out of the northeast, weirdly, and the red-taileds were able to kite on the unusual updraft on our ridge.

I’m still catching up from a mini-vacation, a little break before the onslaught. I went on a birding trip to Klamath Basin with a small group of folks. What a treat! I haven’t been on a roadtrip in a long time, and this one was made even better being in the company of other birders. No one found it odd that we had our binoculars out at the ready as we drove up I-5, or that we wore them and used them as we lunched at a rest stop.

Klamath Basin, on the eastern California/Oregon border, is home to a complex of National Wildlife Refuges that teem with bird life throughout the year. In the winter, it’s home to the largest population of Bald Eagles in the lower 48 states, and many other wintering hawks, so it’s a favorite destination for raptorphiles.

I’ve been there before, but really wanted to return this year. If I do leave the country for 27 months, I want soak in as many US hawk experiences as I can, before I go.

So I went on this trip, which consisted mostly of riding around in cars and stopping to look at whatever we found was interesting. Mostly hawks, but also spectacles of tens of thousands of geese and ducks, and a landscape of colors so beautiful it almost hurts.

I kept thinking about Joseph Campbell’s exhortation to “Follow your bliss.” Because that’s what this trip was. Riding around in looking at stuff. Soaking it in. Thinking about life. Letting life in.

Watching a Peregrine Falcon make life nervous for a flock of Snow Geese, pointed wings pumping in powerful flight, catching afternoon light, every detail frozen for a brief second in an image in my mind.

Sorting through red-winged blackbirds to find one yellow-headed one, but having the flock of thousands suddenly lift and come towards us, a massive joyful kaliedescope of black and red overfilling the field of vision in our binoculars.

Eighty-eight Bald Eagles soaring out of Bear Valley at sunrise. Yes, eighty-eight. That we counted in an hour.

Rough-legged Hawks. Ferruginous Hawks. Red-tailed Hawks. Harriers. American Kestrels.

Eight Golden Eagles playing in the wind that kicked up that same afternoon. Eight. Unbelievable….they don’t congregate the same way that Bald Eagles do. And I really needed a good view of Golden Eagles. By this time I was in rapture. There was no stopping the tears leaking out of the side of my binoculars.

And in the Butte Valley grasslands on the way home, all of these plus the most stunning looks at Prairie Falcons I have ever seen.

And, oh, did I mention the bountiful Bald Eagles?

Bald Eagle
Click to view more trip photos

I don’t know how to follow this bliss. Maybe just to keep birding as much as I can, to keep watching the hawks.

Meanwhile, twenty-four mama goats grow heavier. We’ll probaby have kids by a week from now, and life will be busier than I can even imagine. I remember how grueling it got last year, and I don’t care. I still can’t wait to see kids leaping out of their moms and into life, watch those amazing moments of standing up for the first time, the gushy smell of warm baby goat. Another kind of bliss.

Head rubs w/Oak

Sisters

I listen to women tell their story, and they tell my story, too. One part of my story I hear them telling goes like this: “I never felt like I got along with other women. I just got along better with men.”

It started at an early age for me. I never felt a lot of sibling rivalry with my brothers, but my sister and I were always at odds. It wasn’t that I didn’t love her…it was just that something inside of me always twisted itself up in envy at her success or hostility at her innocence. She just seemed to move easily within the world even though she had a certain vulnerability. Her feelings showed.

I was always fighting upstream against myself, trying to rein myself in until the pressure built too much and it came out in bursts of defiance and bad decisions. The part of me that demands honest self-expression always being dragged down by the self-loathing coward.

Of course, I didn’t see any of that then. I just stewed in resentment. It came out in bad behavior that I often came to regret.

………………………………..

It was summer and we were bored. A friend of the family, Curly, was visiting. Curly was an older bald guy, the father of my dad’s childhood friend, and he was something like a grandfather to us. He and Mom sat at the kitchen table chatting while my brothers and I played upstairs.

We had a big hard plastic toboggan. It was kind of silly, really…we lived in Ohio, on land that had once been The Great Black Swamp. It’s hard to imagine a place more flat…you had to drive in towards town, near the river, to find anything even close to a hill for sledding. We always went “belly whomping” in the ice-covered fields instead….holding the sled at your chest as you run, then leaping with it as if you were doing a head-first slide into second base. Not the kind of thing you do with a plastic toboggan…you need sturdy wood with metal runners for that.

Still, on that summer day I thought the plastic toboggan had a certain promise that was irresistible. What if we could ride it down the wooden stairs of our old farm house?

My brothers and I were at the top of the stairs with the toboggan thinking it over. We really wanted it to work, but we also really wanted to see someone else try it first. I was the oldest and always the ringleader in these kinds of escapades, but I always looked for someone else to take the risk. I was more the idea person.

My sister came down the hall, looked at us sitting there with the toboggan, and brightly asked, “Are you guys riding that down the stairs?!”

I looked at my brothers, and they looked at me, waiting for me to answer. Sis would sometimes report our activities to the authorities; caution was required. I remember looking at my brother and smiling before I looked back to her. “Yes!” I said enthusiastically. “It’s a lot of fun! Do you want to try it?”

We helped her get situated. She held the stair railing as we tilted everything downhill and I remember her saying, “Are you sure this works?”

“Oh yes.”

She grabbed the rope handles and we nudged the toboggan forward as it slid down the first few steps. Then it bounced funny. WHAM!

WHAM!

WHAM!

Sis screamed, grabbed the railing, legs flying, and the toboggan continued on its merry way, crashing onto the living room floor.

Curly and Mom came running. Mom saw Sis laying on the steps. “What are you doing?!!”

Curly stood looking up the stairs at us, and put the whole story together right away. He laughed, nodded at us and told my mom, “There’s the real trouble. Up there.”

………………………………..

My sister grew up to be the amazing person I always knew she’d be. I see her now with her family, still full of feeling and vulnerability, yet with a strength she’s forged out of her own being. I don’t envy her life now…I want something different. But even though the envy is gone, it’s still not so easy always to do the right thing. I screw up a lot. But it’s worth the effort to try to get it right. I need her.

If there is anything that I’ve learned in the past year, it’s how much I value the relationships I have with the women in my life. While I’m working on my relationship with my blood sister, I find that I now have a whole community of sisters in my life. Incredible women, full of the grace of feeling and vulnerability. Through them, I begin to accept appreciate those sides of myself.

It turns out that the feeling that I just “got along better with men” wasn’t a matter of getting along with men at all. It was really a rejection of women because they showed the same qualities I rejected in myself. It was fear.

It turns out that all along, I needed the kind of courage that women have. I needed my sisters.

Back on the Ground

What an pretty stretch of days we’ve had! Often when it’s this clear, it’s also cold. But there are some nights when I don’t even have to make a fire. Mornings are beautiful with color.

Sunrise, 1/22/2011

Yesterday I stayed at home all day, much to Laika’s delight. We walked down to the redwood grove, still able to cross the creek and go into the woods. The trees pump out oxygen and my lungs greedily suck it in.

Trees have fallen across the path; I find a downed Bay with sapsucker holes drilled in neat circles around its trunk. Sometimes finding the evidence of the bird is as interesting as finding the bird itself.

I spend the day taking care of mundane things like laundry and little repairs. But I also get to work on a painting. The process of these paintings has become as interesting to me as the work itself. Usually I start out by trying to force an idea, but the real painting whispers to me from behind. I try to push the idea away for days, criticizing it for being too dramatic, too over the top. But when I reach the point of taping paper to the board, I will get no peace until I go back to the whispered idea.

Oh, this is gonna be a good one. Way over the top. And exactly where I have been dwelling. Surrendered to the image that wants to be, the symbols appear in my life, making me laugh. Perfect.

I actually got paint down yesterday, and am watching the image rise up out of the flatness. I get to touch that other world, that world of symbol and image and feeling, and play there.

But I want to play it this world, too. Laika spends the day napping in the sun, and when her black coat is hot and glossy, she wades into the pond, then comes to see what I’m doing. “I’m deleting this account,” I tell her, and she seems pleased. “Don’t think,” I warn her, “that this means you get to sleep in the bed.” I walk out of the yurt with her, and she and Jasper seem expectant. “Do something!” So I do…I roll in the grass with them. There is something about getting down to dog level that seems to delight them. And me.

It’s a good life. I’m grateful for it just as it is.

——————————

This morning I caught up on some PC blogs I’ve been following, and was stunned to see that they’ve shut down operations in Niger, evacuating all the volunteers. Many of them had just completed training and were in the process of setting up at their assignments. I’m pretty sure that that’s where they were planning to send me. I’ve been warned of the uncertainty, and to be honest, Niger has never felt “real” to me. My mind wants to keep asking, “then where, where?” Let it be.

I had the first part of my medical exam today. Have to go back Wednesday for followup, and also need to get some tests and such done. Then the dental and vision. Lots and lots of paperwork to wade through. Lots of poking and prodding; the squeezing and squishing yet to come.

Doc moves the stethoscope over my chest, listening. “Your heart,” he says, “is perfect.”

I wince inwardly and think, “Well. Good enough for government work.”