“Moo”ve over…there’s a new leader on the block!

Personalities are funny….but especially so when you are talking about bovine personalities! I know I have talked about this before, but we have a variety of HUGE personalities here at the farm. Jersey, the mom, grandma and great-grandma has her stubborn moments, but for the most part, she is quiet-natured and easy going…kind of a go-with-the-flow kind of girl.

However, her daughter, Mocha is definitely NOT those things most of the time. She is our “diva” cow…she knows what she wants, when she wants it, how she wants it, and lets you know if you haven’t met her expectations! One example is our morning and evening routine: Jeff cleans out the stall while I get the dairy feed ready. If he takes too long and doesn’t close the stall door, OR if I take too long getting the feed ready, she puts her nose on the stall door, shoves it open and walks out to where I am filling her feed bowl. Sometimes she just stands there and waits and sometimes she comes over to see what is taking me so long! Patience is definitely NOT one of her virtues! Mocha shows typical signs of PMS when she is in heat: moody, sulky, difficult to get along with, etc. But, she is smart! She is way too smart for her own good, and ours! Mocha is a leader and sometimes mouthy but seems to understand the way things work. When there is a variation in routine, she complains for three days, but after that seems to acclimate to the new routine.

Mocha has birthed four daughters: Cocoa, Caramel, Truffle and Hazel. Cocoa was fairly easy going, more like her grandma than her mama! Caramel is far more skittish than either Jersey or Mocha. Truffle is very smart like Mocha, but she is far more loving and docile than Mocha. Oh, don’t get me wrong…Mocha has her special ways of being affectionate with her humans… but Truffle is outwardly affectionate. Truffle is also a leader, much like her mama. Hazel is like the best version of Mocha and all of her sister calves put together. She is big, strong, sweet and so very smart!

Mocha with Hazel nursing for the last time.

Since Hazel turned four months of age in January, it was time to move her out of the barn where she has been with Mocha, to the west pasture. It is always emotional for me to know when that last time is that they will be together, so I always snap a few pictures to commemorate the occasion.

Mocha and Hazel (left); Caramel and Snickers (right)

I was eager to see how easily she would adjust to being away from her mama and living full time with her uncle Oreo and her sister Truffle. It has been so much fun to watch. Oh, she mooed incessantly for three days, carrying on a long-distance duet of sorts with Mocha but even during her vocal displays of displeasure at being separated from her mom, she emerged the new leader on the block! From her first moments in the pasture with them, she was self-assured and just walked around checking everything out.

Hazel, Oreo, Truffle (left to right)

Oreo and Truffle followed her around as if they were self-appointed babysitters, but it quickly became apparent that she was taking a leadership role with them. Normally, the youngest calf has the low spot on the pecking order, but not Hazel! She has claimed the prime sleeping spot in the shelter and has made her place at the round bale of hay in the MIDDLE OF THE FRAME. She climbs into the frame and eats from there. I guess she thinks she can’t be challenged or booted out of there since she is the only one small enough to get in there.

Hazel in the middle of the hay frame.

Soon, there will be another addition to the west pasture as Snickers, Caramel’s daughter, will soon be ready to leave her mama and join the other calves. She, like her mama is more skittery, so it will be interesting to see who she attaches to and where she makes her place. She isn’t as assertive as Hazel but really like Hazel, so I am eager to see how all four of them get along.

One of the interesting things that has developed is the fact that Oreo has seemed the most interested and attentive to Hazel since she has joined them. I guess I expected the sisters to bond the most, but he follows her most closely and is so interested in where she is and what she is doing. I will enjoy watching all four of them as they grow and enjoy the pasture this summer.

New Beginnings — Old Routines

It’s a new year and with the new calendar comes a new slate in many ways. However, there is comfort in familiarity and routine…maybe that’s one reason I love farm life. But there are some changes on the horizon.

In a week and a half, Hazel will be weaned and will “move in” with Oreo and Truffle. In a way, I dread that for her as it will be a tough adjustment. She has been going back and forth from her mom to the corral and back again for three and a half months. But, the nice thing about bovine is that they are fairly adaptable to a new routine after about three days. Oreo and Truffle have watched their nieces/sisters from a distance since they were born (with an occasional kiss under the electric tape), so I am excited for her to be able to socialize with them rather than being in the corral alone.

Mocha and her calf, Hazel

We are thrilled that it seems Jersey has put on enough weight to begin cycling again and she is now pregnant with her calf due in August if all goes well. We are presently waiting for pregnancy confirmation for Mocha. If this breeding takes, her calf will be due in October. Mocha’s two year old heifer, Caramel, is in the process of being bred. Caramel’s calf, Snickers, will be weaned in February and then will join the other Hazel, Oreo and Truffle.

Caramel and Snickers

Although the breeding of our girls isn’t new, Snickers will be the last Jersey/Angus calf born her on the farm, at least for the foreseeable future. We haven’t had a Jersey calf born on the farm since 2016 when Caramel was born. We were breeding with Angus hoping for at least 50/50 males to females for offspring, but out of seven calves, only two have been male. So, we are going to start breeding for full Jersey calves so if the 5/7 female ratio continues, we will have some full Jersey heifer calves to sell or raise for beef. It will be interesting to see if the ratio is the same with a different breed. I look forward to the fawn-like looking calves that will be in the future for de Good Life Farm.

One of the things I love is how the species on the farm interact with each other. Hazel has a very curious and yet very contented nature. Each day when I separate her from her mom, we must walk past our livestock guardian, Odin. He will be nine months later in January and his size makes it hard to remember that he is still a puppy. As I walk Hazel passed him, he does everything in his power to entice her to play with him. But, it’s so funny that when she actually walks toward him to play, he tucks his tail and runs. Then she gives up and begins again walking to the corral. When she does this, he gets brave again and comes at her again, trying to get her to play. This goes on as long as he can get close enough to engage her interest.

Odin, King of de Good Life Farm, Protector of the Six Realms (our livestock guardian)

As this post is several weeks old and didn’t get posted…I am going to post this and start a new one. There have been lots of things happening around here! Stay tuned….

error

Enjoy this blog? Please spread the word :)

Follow by Email
RSS