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and the cycle starts again…

Posted by kenleighacres on August 15, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. 6 Comments

Ok, so it is a little earlier than I had originally planned…but life happens like that 🙂  Yes, we have started breeding season here at Kenleigh Acres.  That means lambs will be arriving the first week of January – yikes!  It all started when Joan from Mud Ranch told me that they were done with Douglas aka “Dudley”.  Their flock consists of a lot of his daughters, so we made the decision to bring him back because of his bloodlines.

He has a very unusual head and he likes to use his horns for destruction, so the plan was to bring him home, breed him in a few weeks, and then butcher him.  I know it sounds a little cold, but I don’t have much tolerance for rams that don’t mind their manners.

We attended the JSBA’s AGM in California (hopefully I can write about that tomorrow) and met up with Joan and Simon there.  Douglas was a gentleman all weekend and I thought that boded well for when we got him home.

We arrived home late Sunday night after driving for 9 hours.  We hauled a few lambs for some other people along with a Shetland ewe.  We had to set up some pens in the front of the barn to keep everyone separate.  Unfortunately, due to the late hour and exhaustion, we forgot to attach Douglas’ pen to the barn.  Due to this over site, I found Douglas in front of the barn Monday morning – oops!  The really strange thing was that the barn gate was still shut!  On my way out there I was going through the scenarios of what may have happened and I was really afraid that he punched a hole in the side of the barn.  I was relieved to see that this hadn’t happened.  I found the pen pushed away from the wall and fixed it before putting him back in.  Unfortunately I also realized that he had climbed up on the hay and jumped through the window!!!  So, I put him back in the pen and thought all was well.  I came back to the house and turned around and lo and behold there he was in front of the barn again – what the…???  So, back to the barn to figure out what he did this time.  He jumped everything this time!  Now a little panic is setting in, what in the world am I going to do with a jumping ram???  So, he got tied in the pen because I had to go pick up my son.  When we got back I went out to check on him – guess what – he jumped the panel – tied.  Luckily I left enough slack that he wasn’t hanging.  But he can’t stay tied until breeding season.  My poor husband was at work and was getting very frustrated calls from me, of course he couldn’t do anything about it.  And he pointed out that this was my idea.  So, why did I do it – for the bloodlines…his sire is bide a wee Kell

who is out of Spahr Farm Silas

and his dam is Zettle’s Blackberry

who is out of Zettle’s Diego.  My husband agreed that we should try to breed him to a few ewes before we butcher him.  Thus the reason why we will be expecting lambs the first week of January, we gave into him and gave him a handful of ewes.

We are experiencing some really HOT weather right now and we didn’t expect him to breed any of the ewes for awhile, boy were we wrong!  He has bred 3 of the 5!

I told him that he better pace himself because as soon as the girls all have green on their butts, he is out of here 🙂

Meet Danica – “Kentfield’s The Race is On”

Posted by kenleighacres on July 30, 2008
Posted in: whippet. 1 Comment

She joined our family 2 weeks ago (boy the time has flown by).  She is a very happy puppy with a fun personality.

Paisley is so happy that I got her her very own whippet puppy 🙂

It’s amazing how similar in color they are…

Our son also thinks she is pretty special.

He did a great job leash training her.

She has already been to race practice and is VERY keen on the lure.  I am excited about racing her in the future.  Thank you Merril from Kentfield Whippets for letting this special girl come live with us!

A Trip to the River

Posted by kenleighacres on July 10, 2008
Posted in: family. 1 Comment

My husband’s family owns some property along a river in the area and it has been turned into a camping place for the family.  Each site sits above the river and has stairs leading down to the river.  It is a beautiful location and a wonderful get away…

We spent the recent holiday weekend there.

The weather wasn’t super hot like it has been, but we couldn’t keep our son out of the water!  Saturday afternoon we caught 21 crawdads – it was a lot of fun!!!

Handsome boys 🙂

They recently blasted the hill across the river to put in a better road and the swallows took advantage of the holes to build nests in.  The rock wall was alive with chirping.  Here are some more pictures from my daily walks…

the foxglove were beautiful…

I don’t know what kind of flowers these are, but they are very pretty…

and this one is my favorite!

My very first blog award!

Posted by kenleighacres on July 10, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

Wow, my very first blog award! Mud Ranch awarded me the Arte y Pico award.  What an honor especially coming from Joan. Her blog is what gave me the inspiration to start mine – thank you!

What a neat award the Arte y Pico award is.  Here is the description and rules:

The origin of the Arte y Pico Award: “This prize has arisen from the daily visits that I dedicate to many blogs which nourish me and enrich me with creativity. In them, I see dedication, creativity, care, comradeship, but mainly, ART, much art. I want to share this prize with all those bloggers that entertain me day to day and to share this prize with those who enrich me every day. Doubtlessly, there are many and it will be hard to pick just a few. The people I will name today deserve this prize, as do the very long serious list of bloggers I also enjoy to read. But I will name the first 10 and leave the rest of the work to all the bloggers that visit other’s blogs and are nourished by them.” “Arte Y Pico” blog so that everyone will know where the award came from.
Here are the rules, if you decide to pass the award further to remarkable blogs in blogosphere worth to mention:

The rules:
1. You have to pick 5 blogs that you consider deserve this award through creativity, design, interesting material, and also contributes to the blogger community, no matter of language.
2. Each award should have the name of the author with a link to their blog.
3. Award winners have to post the award with the name and link to the blog of the person who gave them the award.
4. Please include a link to the Arte Y Pico blog.

5. Show these rules.

The 5 blogs that I believe deserve this award are:

Mountain Dweller – I love her pictures and tales of life on a farm in the French Alps!

Sugar Mountain Farm – A truly inventive family living on a farm in the wilds of Vermont.

Knitivity – An artist in the fiber world. His yarn is beautiful.

Dog Face Girls – An inspiration to me. Their felted sculptures are amazing!

Cowbelly Pet Photography – A team of pet photographer’s in the Seattle area. Their photos are so much fun!

Black Sheep Gathering

Posted by kenleighacres on July 7, 2008
Posted in: Fiber, Jacob Sheep, sheep. 4 Comments

We look forward to The Black Sheep Gathering every year, but this year was extra fun because Robin Lynde from Meridian Jacobs came up from California with a group of friends.  They all stayed at our place!

The event starts on Friday morning and goes through Sunday afternoon.  The Jacobs are shown on Friday afternoon.  This year there were 6 breeders with Jacob Sheep.

My sister helped me show our sheep…

We had an awesome year showing –

Our ram lambs took Champion Ram, Kenleigh’s Reno, and Reserve Champion Ram, Kenleigh’s Torrent.

We had 1st place in the young flock class

and Reserve Champion Ewe with our ewe lamb, Kenleigh’s Infiniti

I was telling my sister that it is so rewarding to get recognition for the blood, sweat, and tears that go into breeding sheep – I was half way joking – but then I remembered that Infiniti was one of the lambings that I had to assist with this year.  You might remember the post about the twisted lambs that tried coming out at the same time.  She is such a pretty girl and I am really happy I was there to help!

We also participated in the Spinner’s Lead class.  The criteria are as follows:

  • Entries may be hand or machine knit, woven, crocheted or felted.
  • The articles may have been completed at any time; it is not limited to items made during the past year.
  • Someone other than the entrant may make the article, although the maker of entered article must be identified on the entry form.
  • Articles must be at least 80% wool, mohair, or rabbit.
  • Garments should represent the breed of animal being led.
  • Entrant doesn’t have to own the animal used in the lead.

You wear or carry your article while walking a sheep around the show ring.  It is a lot of fun and always inspirational.  It was extra fun this year because my son also participated.  He was so cute!

He was in my sister’s wedding earlier this year and he helped me felt the ringbearer’s pillow that he carried.  So, he dressed in his little suit and walked Reno while carrying the pillow…

He is 4 1/2 and did a fabulous job walking his lamb all by himself.

I made a felted vest and was very shocked to receive 1st place in the class of 22 entries!!!

It was fun to see so many Jacobs in the Spinner’s Lead class…

There’s never enough time to see everything and catch up with friends.  I’m already looking forward to next year 🙂

I couldn’t help myself…

Posted by kenleighacres on June 25, 2008
Posted in: Alpaca, Fiber, sheep. 1 Comment

This past weekend was the Black Sheep Gathering (a post for another time) and a few friends from California stayed with us. On Sunday morning they wanted to visit Ingrid Painter at Puddleduck Farm. They asked if I wanted to join them, I said “sure”. I was just going for the ride and I love visiting with Ingrid, but I certainly wasn’t planning on coming home with anything. This little guy was more than I could resist…

He is a Blueface Leicester/Jacob cross lamb. This cross usually produces black lambs, but he has a blue pattern on top of the black. He has a beautiful fleece that is a lovely pewter/silver color with a lot of crimp and luster. I can’t wait to blend his fleece with this guy’s fleece…

I have a nice little flock of fleece wethers now.

My poor husband just rolls his eyes at me 🙂

Changing with the times…

Posted by kenleighacres on June 23, 2008
Posted in: Farm Life. 1 Comment

Wow, I have a lot of catching up to do!  I have been experiencing internet service issues and it has made it frustrating trying to check e-mail let alone post blog entries!  I have a lot of blog posts rolling around in my head, but for now I would like to share an article in the Local Harvest Newsletter that I receive.  It is a refreshing and optimistic approach to our ever changing economy –

Welcome back to the LocalHarvest newsletter. What a month! Things are different. You feel it too, right? With gas prices soaring, Iowa flooding, salmonella striking tomatoes, and a global food crisis threatening, it seems to us that America is finally, slowly waking up. The world is not what it seemed to be. Change feels inevitable in ways it didn’t even a few months ago. The question now is not so much whether the collective we is going to change, but how – with what frame of mind. As we alter our consumption patterns, food and otherwise, we must be aware of how we approach change. We can be anxious or relaxed, defensive or curious, fearful or joyful. The differences are vast and vital.

Many of us live lives that are overly determined by convenience. Day to day decisions are made as if expediency and ease were our highest values. So habituated are we to these conveniences, so dependent on our luxuries (chocolate, coffee, bananas), that the idea of going without them actually makes us feel afraid. But fear – of scarcity, of change – is a terrible master. It makes us forget our own creativity and adaptability. We mistake the way it is for the way it has to be.

In that mindset, there is no way to discover something that might be better. Last month LocalHarvest was featured on a radio program out of Sacramento. The host started with the usual questions about how to define ‘local’ and how the website works. Once the conversation turned to actually buying local food, though, it became personal and he was stumped. Northern California offers astounding agricultural abundance, but this fellow could not see his way to buying this extraordinary produce directly from a farmer. He was used to shopping at Safeway, and the idea of deviating from the safe way (ironic, isn’t it?) made him tense. Shopping at a farmers market requires too much trust, he said, plus it’s an extra trip and the veggies would sit in the frig drawer and rot anyway. Hmmm…

That interview stands out as an example of the kind of thinking we as a nation need to leave behind. If we greet every new idea with excuses that aim to defend our old ways, we will be lost. The future belongs to those who can walk lightly, willing to shift as needed, alert for the next ingenuity. If we let ourselves be afraid of this rapidly changing economy, it would be easy to lose site of the great beauty and new opportunities that surround us. If we keep ourselves relaxed and open, we will find ourselves reveling in the great gifts of this life: the beauty of nature, the comforting joy of friendship, the spark of creativity, and the civility of true community. And then we will be fearless.

Please take us home!!!

Posted by kenleighacres on May 20, 2008
Posted in: Jacob Sheep, sheep. Leave a comment

We usually keep our rams 1/4 mile up the road at Tony’s cousin’s house.  They have 5 acres on a hill with lots of trees, grass, blackberries, rocks, and a big pond.  It is the perfect place for our boys!

Unfortunately, the neighbors that live at the bottom of the hill had one of their sheep killed by a coyote.  So, we decided to bring the boys home.

The funny thing was that when we got up there they were more than ready to come home.  We barely had time to open the door on the trailer.  They ran from the bottom corner of the pasture and jumped in the trailer.  Kate, my border collie, looked at me with this puzzled look on her face.  She was a little disappointed that she didn’t get to go to work.  They aren’t usually hard to get in the trailer, but it’s never been that easy!!!  After inspecting the banks of the pond we found a lot of coyote prints.   I am very thankful that Gallo, one of our llamas, was up there with them.   

Halucinating Ducklings

Posted by kenleighacres on May 15, 2008
Posted in: Ducks. 1 Comment

This is a baby duck…

This is a baby duck high on morning glory…

You can imagine my shock when I went back to the pen after just feeding and watering them to find 6 of the 8 ducklings on their backs flailing around!  After doing a little bit of detective work and a lot of freaking out – I found that morning glories have a halucinogenic effect 🙂  My baby ducks weren’t dying they were just high on morning glories.  I had to sit out there for an hour flipping them over.  Poor little things! 

Playing with the dogs!

Posted by kenleighacres on May 6, 2008
Posted in: Border Collie, Cardigan Welsh Corgi, whippet. 1 Comment

Here are some pictures from our play fest this morning…

Poor Darby really doesn’t have a chance to get the ball 🙂

So every once in a while Paisley had to be held back.

“Yay – I got it!”

“Throw it please, throw it please, throw it NOW!”

Kate decided to sit this one out, a little too immature for her this morning 🙂

Have a good day!

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