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Ah, Clover. Clover, my compatriot, my enemy, my beloved, my nightmare. From the first tablespoon right up till the last one, you were a kick. Literally.
We had our good times.

And our bad.

We went from that scant tablespoon to a pint and a half on our best days. We moved the milkstand, tied and retied ropes every which way, changed feeds several times, and made a hundred other near-daily adjustments. We perservered, did we not?
Not that you ever quite adjusted to the personal violation of being milked, I know that. You perservered, in fact, in a totally different direction. You thought up every way under the sun to foil my efforts. I admire you for that, Clover. You are a formidable opponent.

In the end, we approach a truce not by force of will but by nature. Your milk, once abundant, began to decrease as you fought to throw off the shackles not only of my milking but that of your babies. I think Nutmeg and Honey would have to tie you up now, too, to get you to let them nurse you. Faced with milking you twice a day to bring back up your production, I seek instead a peace.
I have gained so much from you, Clover–an unforgettable learning experience, and gallons of milk stacked up in my freezer to use in practicing my cheesemaking skills for months to come. Let’s put aside our differences now and instead look to the future. I’ve got it all planned out, how I’ll stagger breeding you and Nutmeg to keep one of you in milk all the time next year. You first, then Nutmeg, as she still needs more time to grow. But you! You! Toward the end of the year, we’ll get you nice and knocked up just in time for a late spring delivery. I know you need this time off in the next month or two–to relax, to work out at the gym and regain your girlish figure, to knit some booties for the new babies. We’ll work on a separate, improved milking pen for you and get some fresh ropes, maybe a little satellite TV. We step away now, living to milk another day.
Soon, we’ll go Round Two.
You’re thinking about it, too, aren’t you?

No. NO! For the love of all that’s holy, STOP THINKING!!!
P.S. See all my milking stories here.
Posted by Suzanne McMinn on October 18, 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!
Pin the map!
Your recipes! (Contributed by forum members.)
I'm a paperback writer.
by Flatlander on November 20, 2009
by AsTheNight on November 20, 2009
by BuckeyeGirl on November 20, 2009
by Leahld22 on November 20, 2009
by Pete on November 20, 2009
November 2009
"First it's glowing, then it's snowing! A pause, then screaming squalls and williwaws. Bright but bitter, then a thaw. Yet again it's cold and storming: What ever happened to global warming?"
Friday, Nov 20
Fair
Currently: 39˚F
Feels Like: 39˚ F
Hi: N/A˚, Lo: 34˚
weather feed courtesy of weather.com - thanks!
And we readers of your Blog never tire of your wonderful pictures and stories of all your sweet animals! - Liz in PA on Rush
- Amy on How (Not) to Start a Fire in a Wood Stove
"Cookies are good." Read my barnyard stories....
Entire Contents © Copyright 2004-2009 SuzanneMcMinn.com. Text and photographs may not be published, broadcast, redistributed or aggregated without express permission. Thank you.
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:flying:
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I look forward to reading about your goats and new babies in the spring. I really enjoy reading your blog.
LeaAnn in SW Illinois
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Maybe next time around she won’t be so, uh, stubborn?
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Oh yea the picture of the day… they are soft, fluffy beautiful Alpacas. Perhaps Clover could use their fur to make those baby booties.
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(If someone’s reading this and wondering why we’re talking about alpacas–they’re here.)
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Aren’t you glad the chickens are more cooperative than Clover?
Aren’t they?
Well, at least you don’t have to tie them up!
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Somehow I originally missed the picture of Clover in your boots – lol.
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That last picture looks as if Clover is saying, Ok, Whatever! Now, can I have a cookie?
Looking forward to the sweet new babies.
Jake’s a Girl.
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“If you are dreaming off all that,MISSY, you had better get stocked up on cookies, bigtime!!!! Or it will be WISHFUL DREAMING!” :mrgreen:
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ha
Tresh in OK
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