Name the Lambs and Seven Little Surprises

Choosing this year's theme for naming the lambs was a lot fun but not so easy. Thank you everyone for adding to the pool of imaginative  and clever suggestions for names. With soooo many great ideas, choosing the right one was difficult, but we've chosen a naming theme that feels just right for this year, for several reasons (as you'll soon see!).

Without further ado, this year's theme,  suggested by Lisa of New Hampshire,  is COLORS, which, as Lisa pointed out, feels especially appropriate with the release of my hand-dyeing book (Teach Yourself Visually Hand-dyeing, Wiley Publishing) later this spring. 

I thank Lisa for her good idea – she's the lucky winner of a set of Little Lamb note cards and 2 skeins of Foxfire Fiber's  Upland Wool & Alpaca yarn!

There is another very good reason why COLORS makes so much sense for naming lambs this year. But first, I need to share a  little secret: seven of our lambs were born over five weeks ago.  A terrible keeper of secrets I am tickled to now introduce our newest additions – tiny flock of CVM/Romeldale sheep! CVM/Romeldales are among the most colorful and distinctive looking sheep you will find. They also happen to be the most critically rare of all the rare breeds of sheep in the U.S. today (as listed in the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy).

My little CVMs currently reside with shepherd (and breed expert) Chris Spitzer at Yellow Creek Cottage in Ohio, where they were born in January. I am grateful to Chris for guiding my selection of a starter flock, who won't actually be on the ground here until April when they've reached about 12 weeks of age. That puts their arrival right in the middle of lambing season – just to make things more interesting.

Here's a first look – photos sent by Chris when these lambs were only days old. She promises to send more current photos soon, so we can see how they've filled out.

W919 cvmram-F
Meet ram lamb (a taupe colored badger-face) #1,

W933 cvm ewe rose grey -F

                                                     and ewe lamb #2 (a chocolate brown moorit),
W926 cvmewe-F

 and ewe lamb #3 (a taupe CVM with badger markings),

W906 chocolate ewe splash white half sister to brown ram-F
                                               and ewe lamb #4,           another chocalate moorit,  

W941 cvm ewe taupe spotting-F

ewe lamb #5 (the most adorable IMO),
W937 half sister to brown ram medium brown-F
             
                                             ewe lamb (a rose-grey moorit)  #6,

912 rose grey ram face
 and ram lamb #7 (rose-grey)!!!

I can't tell you how excited I am both to be adding such gorgeous natural colored fiber to my flock while working to preserve this remarkable breed. I will be the first CVM breeder in Massachusetts and the second breeder in the country to be concentrating on one of the CVM breed's most elusive colors: the rare rose-gray. I'll be joining the very good company of fellow New England CVM breeders, Nancy Zeller of Long Ridge Farm, Betsy MacIsaac of Crooked Fence Farm, and Sarah Bowley of the SVF Foundation, who have been all been helpful to me in learning about this breed.

Waiting for these lambs to arrive is a little like waiting for Christmas morning. I simply can't wait to meet them. In the meantime, they are in need of names. 

While we're waiting for the rest of the flock to lamb, it's time for another contest!  We have our theme, now let's name one of the new CVM lambs each week, beginning with ram lamb #1. Post your ideas in the comments section. To keep things interesting and fair, try to avoid repeating names already suggested (if there's a name we love suggested by more than one person, we'll draw to see who wins). Each week's winner will receive a thank you prize for helping to name our new little flock. 
If you would like to know more about CVMs, visit  Yellow Creek Cottage  and the National CVM Conservancy.

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copyright 2009. Barbara Parry. Foxfire Fiber & Designs. All rights reserved.
photos provided by Chris Spitzer.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Waiting for Snow

Yet  again!  It seems last week's milder temperatures were just a tease. And we now return to our regularly scheduled winter.

Bred ewes

I kept an eye on the sky this morning as I made my rounds, hoping to make it to the village for a latte and Sunday papers before the pending storm. 

First stop, the big barn. The bred ewes (above) are becoming absolutely rotund. They are due for shearing next week, and I'll be anxious to see if they are  heavy in fleece or heavy with lambs – or just plain heavy. It's so hard to tell under all that wool.

I walk right past the yearling crew to reach the hay stack. Twenty-nine sets of eyes follow my every move as I snip the baling twine and slip the grassy flakes into the wooden feeders. This group looks good, and it's remarkable to see how much wool has re-grown in a little more than a week's time.
Breakfast, please!

Though we ended last week with a worry from one little lady –  and a barn call from Doc Majors. Holly noticed that one of our yearling ewes, Chanel, (who was fine on Thursday as you can see from my last post),  was in a total slump Friday morning. Head down, not eating, not happy. The blessing of having other farms nearby means that sometimes the vet is in the neighborhood exactly when you need him. Doc, who was just up the road at the neighbor's dairy, was in my barn within an hour of my call. Holly and I had moved Chanel (along with Dolce, for company) into a small pen in the milking room, a heated space. 

First order of business was an ultrasound to make sure she was not bred last fall, in one of the unauthorized forays of the little ram lambs. I held her steady while Doc conducted an survey using a wand against her undercarriage, just above her udder. The wand was connected to a small monitor strapped to his forearm which showed a series of mysterious black and white blips, but no signs of lambies, thank you very much.

The ultrasound

A thiamine deficiency – perhaps triggered by a sudden change in her rumen at shearing –  seems the likely cause for her depression. And I'm really lucky Holly spotted it right away. If a sheep is off feed for more than a day, it only tips the rumen further off kilter. It can spell disaster if not addressed quickly.

The series of prescribed thiamine injections along with vitamin & molasses drenches is working wonders. My little hot-house flower is now bright-eyed and really mowing down the hay. Although she and Dolce are rather enjoying their small pen in the milk room (and the extra attention), tomorrow, they'll re-join their siblings in the barn. 
 
Ultrasound II

I did make it to town and back this morning before the storm hit. Snow or no snow, a latte is the perfect start to a new week.

Morning latte

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copyright 2009. Barbara Parry. Foxfire Fiber & Designs. All rights reserved.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Spring Tease?

Winter flexed its muscle last night but today held early signs that winter is losing its grip. After a fast-moving overnight storm and a snowy start, by 9:30 it was low 40's. By noon the sun's warmth had melted the snow from the barn roof  and the traces of last night's storm from memory. 

Snowy late winter morning

Any seasonal shift infuses the barn with restless anticipation. Lots of jumping, jostling sheep as I doled our this morning's hay. Amy appreciated a quiet moment and a private helping of hay away from the frenetic energy in the barn.

Amy

The newly shorn yearlings, who look like a bunch of plucked chickens, were just plain nutty over in the big barn. I can't tell you how hard it was to get this picture of Chanel and Donatella – no one would stand still! Funny how the absence of wool makes their ears look so big.

Shorn yearlings

For the first time this year, the trees have that soft look, a slight reddening at the very tips of the branches that is one of the earliest signs of spring. As I turned onto Patten Road on my return from the post office, a flock of plovers pin-wheeled across my neighbor's pasture. They are among the first of the snowbirds to return each year to build their nests in the tall grasses in the meadow near the brook.

While I know today's weather may only be a tease, it still feels so good to have a taste of what's to come. Within the next week, we'll shear the rest of the cormos which is followed by the lambing count down. Then the real adventure begins. 

Thank you for continuing to send your thoughts for themes for naming this year's lambs. Just when I think I've made up my mind, another good idea is suggested. I will post our chosen theme for this year's lambs – and the winner of "Name the Lambs" here on Friday, February 27th.
Monadnock, belted galways late winter

I have a few more special announcements to make here over the next weeks. Stay tuned!

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copyright 2009. Barbara Parry. Foxfire Fiber & Designs. All rights reserved.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Happy Hearts Day

It feels really good to have shearing round one behind us. Thursday was long day, but the yearlings were surprisingly mellow and the day was mild. 

Here are a couple of cameo "before" shots:

Issey, looking rather sober,  was first up. His fleece was a snowy white, soft, billowy cloud. You can see the line  at the neck where the jacket protected the wool and also how the coat slightly compressed the fleece. The wool expands like a marshmallow when released.

Issey

And here's Pucci, looking more ready for a nap than his first hair cut.

Pucci

The "after" shot: a group of shorn yearlings at the feeder.

Post shearing

We made a significant dent in the skirting on Friday. There is something heavenly about tossing a freshly shorn fleece on the skirting table. The wool is warm, buttery and fragrant. Each fleece is folded into  a cardboard box after close inspection.
 
Close up fleeceon table

Lambs wool is the cream of the crop. Here's a staple of Issey's fleece. His crimp is nice and uniform. The wispy tips are characteristic of a hoggett. This fleece is special, given how hard we fought to keep Issey alive last spring! His way of saying "thank you".

Closeup lambswool staple

Buster supervised from beneath the table. 

Buster under skirting table

Happy Valentines Day!

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copyright 2009. Barbara Parry, Foxfire Fiber & Designs. All rights reserved.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Ready, Set, Shear

Holly walking goats

Preparing for our first round of shearing involved a goat transfer. Holly escorted Butch and Gypsy to the Commons on the west side of Reynolds Road, which was looking pretty empty without the yearlings. There's nothing like a pair of goats to liven up a party. After weeks of segregation, Butch and Gypsy  are just plain thrilled to have some sheep to push around. With a glint in their eyes, they were quick to show the Border Leicesters who's in charge.

I'm beginning to wonder if tomorrow's shearing day will be an endurance test of sorts. Mike's got two cracked ribs and I've been in bed with an awful bug since Monday. I get really sick once each winter, usually right about mid-February. So this may be a real picnic. My shearer, Andy Rice, arrives at 9. Luckily, Caleb and Chris are coming to pitch in.

I've just started a list of who's getting their first haircuts:

Yearling Ewes:

Donatella, Chanel, Dolce, Chloe, Stella 

and some Yearling Wethers:

Dior, Burberry, Valentino, Armani, Gabbana, Issey, Calvin, Diesel & Beckham


I'll be sure to post a few before & after photos.

Wish me luck.

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copyright 2009, Barbara Parry. Foxfire Fiber & Designs. All rights reserved.

Categories: Uncategorized.

Moving Day and the Full Snow Moon

First of all, I am overwhelmed by the number of fantastic suggestions for naming this year's soon-to-be-here lambs. Thank you to everyone who has written a blog comment or sent an idea via email. Some of you are thinking way outside the box. There are serious themes, cute themes, arty themes, nature themes, geographical themes, political themes, religious themes and literary themes. Clearly, we're going to have some fun with names this spring. I'm holding off on deciding for a few more weeks. Stay tuned here to discover this year's name theme – and the lucky winner of our contest. I promise to let you  know by the month's end. Until then, keep the ideas coming – and thanks for the help!

Today we took a passel of yearlings along with a few adult chaperones on a little hike up the road to the Big Barn where this group has a big date on Thursday morning with the shearer. Big Barn is the warmest and most protected of all our buildings. An alley of windows allows sunlight to stream in all day. Sturdy doors shield from the perpetual north and westerly winds. Here this group will stay, cozy indoors after shearing, until they've grown a new set of woolly long-johns.

Moving between barns means a  jaunt down Reynolds Road, which bisects the center of the farm. Fortunately, sheep don't "get" roads, otherwise they'd be off to Greenfield. For them, the road is just another path leading from one building to another. Straying doesn't cross their minds, especially at this time of year, with no tempting grass in sight. I lead the parade, holding a grain pan, just in case.

Would you like to come along?

Barb opening gate

Heading out the gate

Like a well behaved troop of girl scouts, we go out the gate and single file down the road.

Moving down road

Middle of road

Twenty-nine lambs in the middle of the road is a traffic stopper. My neighbors are somewhat use to this sort of thing.

Turn left at the carriage barn

We take a left at the Carriage Barn and head down the little hill . . .

Sheep following barb into big barn

and  into the Big Barn.

Entering big barn

Crowd in the big pen

Lots of excitement. New pen, new hay feeders, new neighbors. Hey, where's Barb with that  grain pan?!

Enough grain, you piglets

"No more snacks, you'll spoil your dinner!"

This group will look much different the next time you see them. 

By the time Holly and I fed the rest of the flock and buttoned up the farm for the day, the sky was dimming. I made it home to the top of Patten Hill in time to watch the rising full snow moon.

Full snow moonrise

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All content and pictures copyright 2009, Barbara Parry. Foxfire Fiber & Designs. All rights reserved.

Categories: Uncategorized.

Contest: Name the Lambs!

Sleepy lamb stretch

A story in yesterday's USA today states that a study conducted at Newcastle University in Newcastle upon Tyne shows that the more affectionate treatment of cows – including giving cows names – encourages them to produce more milk. It goes on to say this doesn't come as a surprise to dairy farmers throughout the U.S. who often name their members of their herd and call them by name. Jon Bransen of Double J Jerseys in Portland Oregon claims, "A cow that is happy and calm is going to produce more milk".

This got me thinking about our practice of naming each and every lamb and making good effort to learn those names so we can use them when talking to our sheep. Many of our sheep actually answer to their names. After reading about this study I couldn't help but wonder if naming our sheep makes them produce better wool. Since stress can be a big factor in causing wool break – a major fleece flaw – it stands to reason that calm and happy sheep produce great fiber.

With lambing season just around the corner it's time to start thinking about names for our soon-to-arrive lambs. Each year we choose a theme for naming; it's fun and helps us keep track of the ages of members of our flock.  

This year is your turn to help us choose a theme for naming our new arrivals. Think of a theme that lends itself to some great names for little ewes and rams and post it in the "Comments" below or email it to me by the end of this month. I'll announce the winning theme in early March, just weeks before the arrival of our newcomers. If I select your theme, you'll win a special "thank you" prize. 

Here are themes I have used in the past 5 years:

2004 – The Year of Botanical Lambs (mostly flowers)

2005 – Greek Mythology

2006 – Herbs & Spices

2007 – U.S. Towns & Cities

2008 – Designer Lambs (inspired by fashion icons)

2009 – ??


Help us name the lambs!


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copyright 2009, Barbara Parry. Foxfire Fiber & Designs. All rights reserved.

Categories: Uncategorized.

Holly’s Fiber Farm

This week Holly took the reigns at the farm so Mike and I could escape to Orlando, Florida to celebrate our son's birthday. We left Monday and arrived just in time to experience a week of record low temperatures for this time of year. Lovely.

Sunshine, green grass. palm trees and flowers made up for the lack of actual warmth. And it's always great to visit our son, Caleb, who works at Disney's Animal Kingdom. We often remind him that  we have our own little animal kingdom right at home, and he's welcome to work here anytime he wants. 

Holly knew how much I would miss farm chores this week. She thoughtfully sent some pics yesterday, just so I wouldn't be homesick.  Here's Butch waiting for breakfast and Gypsy, having hers.

Holly's pic butch gypsy

And Crackerjack, the world's greatest lamb nanny.

Holly's picture of crackerjack
And then she sent this mysterious/alarming image, with no explanation at all. While I know she would have called immediately if there was a problem, I had to phone her right away to ask "what's up?". She spotted these tracks just outside the pasture fencing yesterday. Being a good little detective, she checked it out and found evidence of a small animal killed, probably by coyotes in the field not far from the barns. It's not the first sighting of predators cruising close to the barnyard this winter. A few weeks back a neighbor called to say he spotted a wolf just downhill from the carriage barn paddock, which really made us anxious. It's really not surprising. With the amount of snow cover and harsh cold, this winter's been hard on all living things.

 I'm grateful for Holly keeping a sharp eye out for fresh tracks in the snow – and for so ably taking control of the farm for a few days, so we could take a breather.

Holly's pic paw print

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copyright 2009, Barbara Parry. Foxfire Fiber & Designs. All rights reserved.
photography by Holly.
Categories: Uncategorized.

February Thaw

Temperatures rose above freezing for the first time in weeks as we turned the calendar page on Sunday. It felt like tee shirt weather. The sheep  who have been suffering from cabin (barn?) fever along with the rest of us were absolutely giddy. Lots of silly head butting for no reason and crazy side-ways leaps on the way to breakfast. They are still tentative about walking on the brittle snow crust, so I broke some fresh trails and told them to go play outside. Who needs a Thigh Master when you have a pair of snowshoes and a foot of heavy snow?

Red barn, border leicester sheep

Last weekend  I got to play inside with a group of fellow color addicts who attended Dyeing to Spin, a hand dye workshop I taught at Webs. I set up a mini dye studio for Kim, Judy, Jean, Gail, Mali, Bonnie, Cindy, and Eileen and  we worked our way through as much color and fiber as you can possibly fit in 6 short hours. I took took some fiber home to steam, since we ran out of time. Here is a sample of their handiwork. I gave it a little test spin, just to make sure it was good to go!

Cormosilk roving, spindle

As some of you know, in early May my most ambitious dye studio project to date makes its debut. I spent last spring, summer and fall (and actually part of this winter too) writing a book for Wiley Publishing on one my greatest passions: hand-dyeing yarn and fiber. The book is part of Wiley's Teach Yourself Visually series, which means it is absolutely loaded with detailed photography, nearly a week's worth shot in my studio last September. 

As a teacher, my goal is to simply the process of hand dyeing for beginners while providing a range of creative techniques for dyers looking to try something new. Writing a book while running a farm and operating a business was challenging, but it was also an adventure – and a great excuse to immerse myself fully in what I love doing most: working with color and fiber : ) . For more details, you can check here , or here.

Here's a sneak peek at the cover, which features a basketful of colorful dyed skeins from my flock.

0470403055 cover

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copyright 2009, Barbara Parry. Foxfire Fiber & Designs. All rights reserved.

image of book cover courtesy of Wiley Publishing
Categories: Uncategorized.

Just a little off the top, please

Some sheep are in dire need of winter haircuts. The wooly top-knot that covers the head like an afro is 4 inches thick, nearly covering his ears and eyes. When it begins to cascade downward toward the nose and over the face, it acts like a visor making it awfully difficult to see what's happening in the world. This condition is called "wool blind" and is easily remedied. When we noticed Cody stumbling around the barn like Mr. MaGoo we knew it was time to take out the scissors and get to work. 

Check out his salon makeover before & after:
 

Cody's Afro

Cody'sCoif

Ta-dah! Whatta handsome guy.

Not everyone needs a winter trim. Some of our Cormos (mostly Trumpet offspring) have nice open faces because of the shape of their heads and top-knots that sit well back and do not migrate over the nose. Our crosses are all open face, due to their partial Border Leicester ancestors whose faces are clear of wool. Teaberry, our main breeding ram has a big daddy-o top knot which makes him look much taller than everyone else. He's passed this trait to his offspring – Cody and his sisters – who require an occasional trim of the bangs.

Open face sheep

A nice open-face group of ewes – no trim needed!

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copyright 2009, Barbara Parry, Foxfire Fiber & Designs. All rights reserved.
Categories: Uncategorized.