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Milking, Day Three.
Me: “Clover, I want more than one tablespoon of milk.”
Clover: “Where is my makeup artist and my personal stylist?”

Me: “YOU DON’T NEED A MAKEUP ARTIST AND A PERSONAL STYLIST! THAT IS NOT THE PROBLEM!!!!”
I believe, in fact, that I have identified the problem.
Make that TWO problems.

The babies are taking all my–
“Honey?”

“Honey???? What is that on your head, Honey? WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO WITH YOU?”

“THOSE ARE HORNS! Did we not just have you disbudded for the second time, Honey?”

“CLOVER!!!”

“Okay. I know. Kids today. They are out of control. Witness the fact that they keep taking all your milk.”
Plan B. Or are we on Plan T? I can’t remember.
We’ve tried figuring this every which way. We can’t get the babies separated from Clover. They are still so little they can slip through the wire when we try to put Clover in the night pen to get her away from them for a few hours. They don’t like to be separated from mama. They will contort themselves until they squeeze in there. We could put more, even smaller, wire on the night pen, but we are some fenced-out people and if you show us any more fencing material, our heads might explode. If we wait a few more weeks, the babies will eventually get too big to squeeze through. Yes, I’m lazy. I won’t go to Ohio for a milk bucket, either!! I also don’t want to even attempt to separate them at night. That sounds heartbreaking. They would all be so upset. I’m too sappy to be a farmer!! (I don’t know what we’re doing about Honey’s re-re-sprouting horns either, by the way.)
I’m only trying to milk Clover once a day, in the evenings, so as to leave the morning milk for the babies. They’re five weeks old, so they do still need her milk. But they don’t need ALL of it!!! I just want a little in the evening……. Then as the babies get older, I’ll start milking her twice a day. But the babies aren’t even leaving me that much, one milking!
So I tried giving an extra feed ration in mid-afternoon, straight to the babies. They ate. Then they climbed under Clover anyway……. So maybe right now, until they get older, I’m just milking Clover for practice, to get Clover used to being milked, to get used to milking myself. Or maybe I’m just milking her BECAUSE I’M INSANE. Because I love filling my fridge with little jam jars with a tablespoon of milk each.
But can’t I have more than one tablespoon? Is TWO tablespoons too much to ask?!
Day Three, Clover scampered onto the milkstand and stuck her face in her food.

She kicked me a little.

And tried to sit on the pail.

I perservered.

See my “chore” boots? Oh. Where ARE my chore boots?

Princess wasn’t wearing chore boots, either.

No wonder this goat doesn’t take us seriously.

Then Princess wanted to try.

All right! She wants to milk! I’m all about having a backup. This milking thing is hard.

ESPECIALLY WHEN ALL YOU GET IS A TABLESPOON.
Posted by Suzanne McMinn on August 13, 2008
"It was a cold wintry day when I brought my children to live in rural West Virginia. The farmhouse was one hundred years old, there was already snow on the ground, and the heat was sparse-—as was the insulation. The floors weren’t even, either. My then-twelve-year-old son walked in the door and said, “You’ve brought us to this slanted little house to die." Keep reading our story....
Make friends, ask questions, have fun!
Take Clover with you in 2010!
Be a part of something big.
Your recipes! (Contributed by forum members.)
I'm a paperback writer.
by LK on March 13, 2010
by Suzanne on March 13, 2010
by lavenderblue on March 13, 2010
by Pete on March 13, 2010
by rileysmom on March 13, 2010
March 2010
"Lamb-y, then whammy! Get some tickets to Miami! Snow is easing, but we're still freezing. It may be spring by the astronomer, but not by the thermometer. Mighty fine, then leonine."
Sunday, Mar 14
Cloudy
Currently: 44˚F
Feels Like: 39˚ F
Hi: 47˚, Lo: 37˚
Walton, WV
courtesy of weather.com
- Nancy in Iowa on Totally Qualified to be a Farmer
"Cookies are good." Read my barnyard stories....
Entire Contents © Copyright 2004-2010 SuzanneMcMinn.com.
Text and photographs may not be published, broadcast, redistributed or aggregated without express permission. Thank you.
6:16
am
Where’s your milking stool? I think you’d get a much better result with one. It will change the “pull” on things.
7:23
am
7:26
am
and a stool, like C said. Boy when you get the hang of this you are going to have cheese coming out of your ears.
You know it is totally ok to just have goats. You can use them for weed eating.
I can’t wait to see a full pail.
:flying:
7:42
am
Though that is weird with his horns coming back yet again.
Stubborn little fella ain’t he?
I thought having them de-budded took care of that for good.
Well maybe third times a charm?
7:43
am
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am
8:01
am
at first is more humane than weaning them cold turkey, plus there won’t be any decrease in milk production. If the babies aren’t nursing, Clover’s milk will dry up. With them nursing part time while you milk in the morning, you will keep the milk production going. The voice of experience speaking, and whose goats milk supply dried up! Live and learn!
8:36
am
8:46
am
It’s all about the boots… :rotfl: Milking is when crocks come in VERY handy.
I agree with Gail…..you will need to milk her at least once per day (preferrably every 12 hours) — or she will dry up. You will be AMAZED at the amount of milk those two little ones were “stealing” from you.
8:52
am
Well, we can now see 52’s lower best! Ha!
Suzanne is that a black toenail I see with your sandalls? Did Clover step on your toe? (smile)At least you have sandalls on and are not barefoot like last picture!
It’s really funny – you’ll get there…these are all memories in the making – one day you’ll have a good amt. of milk! I cannot believe Honey’s buds are grown again!!!!
One day there WILL be goat cheese – I just know it! I can smell that pizza now, with the goat cheese, sliced tomatoes, Basil…olive oil…sauce…mmmmmmm!
8:58
am
9:18
am
I think you’re doing a great job at milking Clover.
9:26
am
That’s toenail polish, by the way, LOL.
9:33
am
9:34
am
I know it’s hard. But, you’ve got to admit…it’s also very funny. Not so funny, if your poor, starving family was waiting for that milk. But, as it is…funny, funny, funny.
Are Honey’s horns a hormonal thing? I’ve forgotten…does he still even HAVE hormones? So much to keep up with on your farm!
9:37
am
Didn’t they come to you in a big dog carrier? Was that yours? Are the babies too big to sleep in that at night?
I had it easier than you because my poor little goatie miscarried, and I started milking her the next day. She decided I was her baby, and nothing made her happier than for me to milk her. She would escape her pen, come to the house and go from window to window, peering in to find me.
10:04
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11:07
am
By the way, I’m sure the place they are talking about in Ohio must be Lehmans. They have a catalog, which I love to drool over. Perhaps that bucket would be just what the goat ordered?
http://www.lehmans.com/
11:19
am
She’s sitting and milking. Perhaps you need to relax and become THE GOAT WHISPERER!!!
The pack leader, the milk maid.
http://smg.photobucket.com/albums/v423/Suzanne57/?action=view¤t=elizabeth-milking.jpg
- Suzanne, the Farmer’s Wife
11:24
am
11:27
am
I think Honey is going to be the trouble maker of the two Kids. You just keep on trying and Clover is bound to give in. Does 52 realize he is giving us a little more of a glimpse? I for one am giving him a big :thumbsup:!
12:46
pm
Hey that’s not a wedding ring on 52’s hand is it??
12:53
pm
1:05
pm
Good luck with the next debudding too.
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1:51
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I think Clover’s just havin’ a little fun with you.