Last week when we were driving back from the hay field, we passed in front of the pasture and I had to stop the truck and get a photo of the cows. They were all lined up in a row and looking right at us. It was as if they were posing for an Olan Mills Family Portrait. (Makes us sad Clarabelle isn't in the photo.) In the afternoons, the cows like to meander over to the west side of the pasture next to the neighbors and relax in the shade. Tricia and I were hot and sweaty from loading hay. The cows were refreshed and rejuvenated in the green grass, shaded by pine trees.
From left to right is: Elsie (Clarabelle's heifer), LuLu (Rosie's heifer), and Rosie. If you remember, Clarabelle was injured when the cows were going in heat and jumping on one another. Cows' cycles are 21 days. It is almost that time again.
This afternoon I contacted the neighbor that lives about 5 miles down the road that we always bring our cows to him to get bred. Well... bad news. He informed me that he sold his Jersey bull on the 12th of this month. It was so darned convenient. We'd mark off the days and when the cows/heifers were going into heat, we'd drive them down the road for their "date" and then pick them up.
We are frantically calling around, trying to arrange breeding with another Jersey bull. So far the first call resulted in Strike 1. The gentleman I called sold both of his earlier this summer during the drought and hasn't replaced them. He did give us a lead and we'll be following up tomorrow on that lead as well as another.
Dairy bulls are not found in every pasture. When our cows have bulls, we keep them around for at most two years. They get real mean. In fact, they injure/kill more farmers than beef cattle bulls. When our bulls show the slightest signs of this ornery or bossy behavior, it's off to the slaughterhouse for them.
We will be on the phone tonight and tomorrow, trying to come up with a Plan B for how to get them bred. We'll take Rosie and Elsie for breeding first and then two months later, we'll bring LuLu. Hopefully we can find a bull that's not too far away!
No comments:
Post a Comment