We went camping over the weekend and are still recovering and unpacking. Hopefully we'll get organized soon. It was great being out under the big night sky, even if Desert Boy was afraid of the dark.
Sunday, May 17, 2009
Went Camping
We went camping over the weekend and are still recovering and unpacking. Hopefully we'll get organized soon. It was great being out under the big night sky, even if Desert Boy was afraid of the dark.
Friday, May 15, 2009
Out in the Boonies
Yippee, I'm leaving the boonies today for a trip to town! Town in this case consists of driving nearly 100 miles without passing a single abode--but it is on a paved highway. The town we're going to has a whopping population of about 5,000. Desert Boy and I are ready to do all the fun things you do in town--walk on sidewalks, wait for traffic lights to change, people watch, and of course wonder how people can manage to live so close together.Oh yeah, we'll also get in lots of shopping and playing on different playgrounds. The tricky part is taking enough coolers and ice to get the ice cream home still relatively frozen.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Grandpa and the Big Loader
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Spring is a Time for Love...Sort of
You've probably seen the birds chasing each other around in their pretty breeding colors, heard frogs croaking away in wetlands indicating their love, and maybe have even seen dragonflies in their mating dance. Well, I'm here to inform you today that there is even more going on in the world of spring love. Let's head down to the ranch.
These are a bunch of heifers, female cows who haven't yet given birth. They have orange stickers on their rumps. Orange is good. Orange means that they are ready to mate, and other cows have been jumping up on them and have rubbed the gray coating off that sticker. If a bull was turned in with these heifers, he would go crazy. But that's not going to happen (yet), because not just any bull will do.
A bull must be carefully selected from the bull catalog. They even have names like Enhancer and Magnum. There's a short description next to each bull, telling all about his important characteristics. Some of those are ease of birthing his calves, weight gain of those calves, and overall beauty. Okay, not really the last one, but the other two are true. When you go through this catalog and select a bull, you don't get the entire bull, though, you just get some of his semen.
When the time is right, a little of the frozen semen is extracted and put into a thermos of warm water, otherwise known as the "semen warmer."
Here's my brother-in-law getting one of the semen sticks ready. Even after the semen is taken out of the semen warmer, it needs to stay warm, and one of the ways to do that is stick it down your shirt. Each vial is cared for, as each costs about $10-$15 (depending on the bull chosen).
Here's the guy who came to help with the AIing (artificial insemination). He has the semen stick in his coveralls and is encouraging a heifer to go down the walkway into the chute.
Then it's time. The gloved arm is going into the anus to feel for the cervix (apparently not a very easy thing to do), so the semen can be inserted in just the right spot.
And then in a short while, a "cleanup" bull will be let loose into the field to breed any cows that didn't have success the first time around.Ah, so love on the ranch may be a little different then some of the other springtime love you're observing. It should result in the same thing: cute little babies, full of energy and zip.
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
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