Showing posts with label Sheepdogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sheepdogs. Show all posts

Friday, February 15, 2013

"In the Path of Love"

 

for
"DeltaBluez Tess"
(July 13, 1998 - Feb 13, 2013)
by Diane Pagel

  
In the shadows of life.
a few leaves must fall
but the spring is near
and life will grow again.
 
The path is long and hard
and courage is earned
the sunlight is in our eyes
and the tears freely fall.
 
 photo by: Patricia Fix Anderson
 
You walked down the path
held my hand, taught me all
to let me go by myself
with my new courage. 

 photo by: Diane Pagel

and yet today I weep for you
but tomorrow i will be proud
knowing you are at the end of the path
and the rest of the journey is my own.
 
 


Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Drought and Economy Plague Sheep Farmers

....reprinted......


Since he was a boy in western Colorado, John Bartmann seemed destined to become a sheep man. He raised lambs with the local 4-H club and sheared them for elderly German farmers. His office is lined with paintings of sheep and a plaque honoring him for “promoting culinary excellence” in lambs.


 
John Bartmann, whose business has been battered by drought and plunging prices for lamb. He has trimmed his flock by one-third and said he expected to lose about $100 for every lamb he sold.  The wooly main attraction at the Mountain View Lamb Feeders feed lot in Eaton, Colo. Farmers say they are still paying near-record prices for corn and hay to feed their livestock through the winter.
 
 
A lamb points the way to the office of the Mountain View Lamb Feeders feed lot in Eaton, Colo. But over the last few years, skyrocketing costs, a brutal drought and plunging lamb prices have battered Mr. Bartmann and the 80,000 ranchers across the county who raise sheep — from a few to several thousand. It is the latest threat to shadow a Western way of life that still relies on the whims of summer rains, lonely immigrant sheep herders and old grazing trails into the mountains.
      
“For the sheep industry, it’s the perfect storm,” Mr. Bartmann said, glancing out his office window here at a bleating sea of wool. “The money is just not there.”
      
Many ranchers are laying off employees, cutting their flocks and selling at a loss, and industry groups said a handful had abandoned the business entirely. Mr. Bartmann has trimmed his flock of 2,000 by one-third. With prices down more than half since last year and higher costs for gasoline and corn, Mr. Bartmann said he expected to lose about $100 for every lamb he sold.
      
“Even in the good years, you don’t make that much money,” he said. “We can’t take that kind of hit.” 
      
Weather and economics take big shares of the blame. The drought withered grazing grounds, killed off young lambs and dried up irrigation ditches, and a glut of meat and imported lambs from New Zealand helped send prices plummeting. But some ranchers and officials in Washington believe that the deck was stacked against the sheep ranchers by the small number of powerful feedlots that buy lambs, slaughter them and sell them to grocery stores and restaurants. Even as prices farmers received fell to 85 cents a pound, consumers at supermarkets were paying $7 or more a pound for the same meat.
      
As cows, pigs, sheep and other animals make their doomed way from the range to kitchen tables, many of them end up in a matrix of feedlots, slaughterhouses and meatpacking facilities where a few companies control a vast share of the market. The top four companies control about 65 percent of the market for lamb and as much as 85 percent of the market for cows.      
 
 
That kind of concentration makes it easier for a few powerful companies to manipulate prices to their advantage, said Patrick Woodall, the research director at Food and Water Watch, an environmental advocacy group. This fall, several Western senators and ranchers’ groups wrote to the Agriculture Department saying they suspected that meatpackers had been hoarding sheep in feedlots and keeping prices artificially low. The agency that oversees stockyards said it would investigate.
      
“We’re going to force a lot of people in the lamb industry out of that business,” said Senator Jon Tester, Democrat of Montana. “You want competition that’s fair. If you have manipulation, that’s a whole different story.”
      
In Kaycee, Wyo., Lisa Cunningham said she and other sheep ranchers watched with astonishment as their prices soared and then crashed over the course of the last two years. Ms. Cunningham said she was lucky to get $1 a pound for young lambs, down from more than $2. 
      
“You can’t hardly get anyone to buy your lamb,” she said.
      
Still, even some sheep ranchers do not blame the packers and say they believe that the declines are related to shifts in the market. Federal insurance has helped blunt the blow, as have government programs to buy lamb from struggling ranchers.
      
It is the latest twist in a brutal year for thousands of farmers and ranchers across the country. In a slow-motion disaster, a drought covering more than 60 percent of the country scorched corn stalks into parchment, dried up irrigation ponds and turned farm fields into brittle crust. Farmers begged local governments to let them tap aquifers. Scores of ranchers dumped their livestock at drought auctions. Farmers say they are still paying near-record prices for corn and hay to feed their livestock through the winter. And if abundant snows do not come to replenish streams and coax new grass from the ground, they worry that next summer could be even worse than last.
      
“The drought plays into everything,” said Fred Roberts, a sheep rancher in Rock Springs, Wyo. “We have absolutely no feed. We’re feeding as much corn to the sheep as they can eat, and you can imagine how expensive that is. Nothing grew here last year.”
      
Here in the northern Colorado town of Severance, Mr. Bartmann, a man with a Wyatt Earp mustache and a master’s degree in animal production, spends his days managing a lamb feedlot increasingly surrounded by high-end ranch subdivisions.
      
Even before “the wreck” in prices, he said, his business had been growing increasingly tenuous. A few years ago, he lost big areas of grazing land because it was declared potential habitat for wild bighorn sheep. The summer drought claimed even more grassland. Now, many of his sheep are spending the winter on a Kansas feedlot. A few hundred others are here, munching hay under gray skies. Mr. Bartmann climbed into a battered pickup truck to check on them one recent morning, unsure what the next season would bring.
      
“It just keeps pulling everything down,” he said. “After a while, you say it isn’t worth it.”
 
LINK TO ARTICLE
 
 
 
 

Friday, December 7, 2012

Are you smarter than a Sheep?

I found this test and thought you might like this. I got all of them right. Whew, it was a tough test but I managed to succeed. See if you are smarter than a Sheep!

I appreciate www.wooddogcrate.com  for making this post possible.


T
F
1
The ram went over the cliff because he did not see the "U" turn.
T
F
2
The ram committed suicide after hearing the hit song "There Will Never Be Another You."
T
F
3
Virgin Wool comes from sheep that are both fast and ugly.
T
F
4
The ewes did not get pregnant because they were under the weather.
T
F
5
During the breeding season, an odd number of rams must be put with the ewes. One ram will breed ewes; two will spend their time fighting; with 3 rams, 2 fight and one breeds, etc. , etc. , etc.
T
F
6
Willard Straight Hall (the Comell student union) is an example of a creep feeder .
T
F
7
If Papa Ram weighs 200 lb and Mama Ewe weighs 140, J.R. Ewing's ideal slaughter weight would be 102 lb.
T
F
8
Twin lambs can be said to be wombmates.
T
F
9
Half-sib twin lambs usually are produced by white-faced ewes because "blondes have more fun."
T
F
10
Aab, Aab, is the typical sound of a dyslectic lamb
T
F
11
A hot-house lamb must be potted before sale.
T
F
12
Ewe-tah is the most important sheep state in the U.S.
T
F
13
The Booroola Merino gene manifests itself in the double recessive (bb) form when lambs stand on their hind legs and say "booroola, booroola."
T
F
14
Corried Ale is a fermented beverage made from sheep's milk by Australian shepherds in the outback.
T
F
15
Orf; Orf, is a sound made by baby lambs when they are hungry.
T
F
16
Proper protocol requires that before disposal of a dead sheep, it must have the wool pulled over its eyes.
T
F
17
Rambo-llet is a synthetic breed developed by Sylvester Stallone.
T
F
18
Each year in March, sheep breeders in Finland gather together and enter their top rams in the finnish Land Race.
T
F
19
St. Croix is a church in France for shepherds.
T
F
20
The two hormones necessary to initiate and synchronize estrus in anestrous ewes are TLC and PTL.
T
F
21
Several rams competing for a cycling ewe in an accelerated lambing system is referred to as STAR wars.
T
F
22
The French have recently announced an improved old English breed, now called the Lincoln Continental.
T
F
23
Eileen is one of Brian Magee's ewes that grew up on a hillside with one set of legs shorter than the other.
T
F
24
Flushing is the process of giving sheep large quantities of water to clean out their system.
T
F
25
The Tunis was "Red" Skelton's favorite breed of sheep.
T
F
26
Fall-bom dwarf lambs are usually named Sneezy, Dopey, Doc, Bashful, etc., and sold as Hot-House lambs at 30 to 40 lb.
T
F
27
Sheep that don't pay their bills are known as I.O. Ewes.
T
F
28
Sssisss BOOM BAAaa! are the last three sounds of an exploding sheep.
T
F
29
The Happy Hunting Ground of Sheepdom is known as Ewe-topia.
T
F
30
The Southdown breed received its name when it was noted that all of the sheep face south when they lie down.
T
F
31
Blue tongue is a perceived disease of sheep usually occurring in August in sheep grazing pastures infested with wild blueberries.
T
F
32
The term "mob-stocking" originated in Chicago in the 1920's when Al Capone used shipments of ladies stockings to disguise contraband liquor.
T
F
33
Mulsing is a term originating in the 1800's in Australia when sheep were trailed into the outback behind mule drawn wagons.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Rocky Ewe Winter Series Trial results - Dec 1

The trial was a success yesterday. The weather was not dumping rain, in fact, it was sunny and not windy, aside only during the lunch break. A couple of small rain showers during a couple of runs, but chilly but the weather held out. It's nice to be at a December trial and have no snow, dumping rain or gale force winds. The sheep were nice as they added more Katahdins and most of the runs were good. The handlers kept the dogs (for the most part) well off the sheep and the sheep trotted a nice pace through the course. Open was first, with a 350 yard outrun, and left hand drive and then pen and spilt. Since these sheep are hard to shed, I let the handlers take any two and it proved a lot more doable. I enjoy judging this trial and seeing how much better everyone gets from the last time I judged. I will talk about some of the runs but not all of them so if you don't see your name mention, don't take it personally. I will mention you next time!
 
Cindy Baker with her rescue, Brill, went out and laid down a screaming run. Not much to take off as she held a nice steady pace and got the shed just like a pro. She took a scared wee rescue Border Collie and turned him into a top Open dog. What a great story!
 
Brian Ricard with his new dog, Cody (Norm and Vicki Close) decided to show how you can take a pushy dog and gently guide the hair trigger ewes through the course. As I was talking to my scribe, saying if anyone can get a split, it would be Brian, then he waved his hand and had a text book split. I smiled like I planned it to happen that way. Thanks Brian for making me look good. His one set of missed panels was his only downfall to an otherwise perfect run. You could tell that Cody had tons of power but kept himself in check under Brian's guidance.
 
Tim and Nell sure can run a darn nice course and at the last second his sheep slid beside the fetch panels. Darn ewes! Linda and Pooka ran quite well and she can shed. She did the shed three times and finally Pooka held the shed but the fact, anyone can do three sheds is a miracle on these sheep. Pooka has a sweet way with her sheep and her sheep really like her. Again the missed panels didn't help. It seemed like the sheep would go through the panel, then at the last minutes scoot by on the side. No reason that I could see! Linda skillfully handled Pooka and made the run look easy. Another nice run to watch was Ursula and Pete. She got a hold of him on the fetch and he is a big, powerful dog and he handled him quite nicely throughout the course. Her drive was very nice, aside from the dratted missed panels, and she had one of the best post turns.  Marched the sheep into the pen like a pro and was working on the shed when time ran out. I think she would have gotten the shed  too! They are a nice team!
 
Jim with Amos and Sweep, had pretty much the same run and both of his dogs can be on the muscle but he handled them well. Jim is a quiet handler and if you don't watch out, he will kick your ass! He did his magic shed also!  He loves his dogs and his dogs adore him! Zot worships the ground he walks on!
 
 

Bonnie and her Bob had a nice run. Again those missed panels cost her! her outwork was tremendous and he can work the sheep! This team is one dynamic team and one to watch for when she moves up to Open. Ron and Kass had a nice run and she is fairly new to PN. She is a young dog and ran quite well. Kathleen with Gael and Josh, decided to cinch down third and fourth place. She is a top contender in PN and you will see that she is always near the top, if not at the top in PN. She runs her dogs well and trained her Kelpie, Josh by herself and he is one nice kelpie with good feel to the sheep. Vicki with Skye and Blitz, ran quite well and placed back to back. Again the darned panels cost her! Carolyn and Brynn did quite well with nice outwork. The sheep started to fuss on the second drive panel. so she let everyone settle, then got it all back together again and marched them down the last leg and popped them into the pen. Bryn had her idea of what she wanted to do but Carolyn was patient and insisted she did as she was told and then it was nice recovery. A lot of dogs had issues in that area as the sheep wanted to break to the exhaust and a few went way offline, but Carolyn got it under control and prevented that.  Judy and Britt had nice outwork and she is one pushy dog but quite nice.  Again those missed panels cost her! She is a very nice dog. Nora ran Joe and Gin. Joe is very nice to the sheep and she had a bit of trouble at the darn second panels but otherwise, he was one of the dogs that the sheep really liked. Gin is her new dog and they are so close to making it as a team. This is a good match!

 
The ranch class had a decent outrun and a first leg then pen. By this time, the sheep were not happy and didn't want to play but these handlers stepped up to the plate and ran well.  Cynthia Mills and Folly (kelpie) on a rerun, (the first run the setout dog "helped"), laid down a near perfect run. The sheep were really pulling on the drive but she was patient and held it and then stuffed them into the pen. Very excellent work and look for these two to be making future statements on the trial field. Cindy Baker, again with another rescue dog, Rook, laid down a nice run.  Cynthia ran her kelpie, Krayken in Novice and had an assisted drive and got a score of 62 (?).
 
 
It was a nice day to be judging. There were a lot of good, controlled runs and you could see some of the top scores were only a 1/2 point spread.  I  did a non-compete run with Maid and she did quite well. She wanted to go on the away side on the first time than my come-bye at the turn at the first crossdrive panel but she did go the way I wanted her to go. On the turn at the cross panels, she wanted to go away as the sheep were starting to break and it would be the easy catch but she easily took the come-bye flank and tucked them in line and had a stunning shed. I gave her a wide comebye flank and she went like a champ. She settled the sheep in the ring and waited for me to set up the split.  She flew in like Superman and before the sheep knew it was was a hold. They saw her and decided they should listen to her! She really tried hard for me and took the downs well especially on the outwork. We are getting better on each run. She tried hard for me at this trial and I was very happy with her.
 
We finished before dark and then they had fun runs. My brain was tired and soon I passed out at home, snuggled with my dogs.