Yesterday morning during chores Bauble's pretty little face made me melt, so I tried to get a good photo of her. That led me to photograph ALL the lambs' faces (except for Bridger's, since he's leaving soon), and then Blaise's for good measure, because she's a pretty girl, too – I just love her tiny ears (which Bauble didn't inherit :-).
Then after work and before agility class, I went down to check everyone's water and hay, and saw this:
Uh-oh; I must not have securely latched the boys' gate after refilling their water bucket yesterday morning. I didn't have time to get the boys back in their quarters and figured a few more hours wasn't going to change anything, so Sanson and Bridger got to hang out with Boop and Broadway until last night. Hopefully they were all 'just friends.' I'm not too worried; Shetlands are seasonal breeders, and I've never had one settle earlier than mid-September. But in those photos above, they look a little too . . . 'intimate.' Later, when I went down to do chores and segregate the "young people,' big mouth Broadway (seriously, the LOUDEST sheep I've ever had) was uncharacteristically quiet. Hmmm....
This morning Bridger, usually skittish and hyper-alert, was lying there like a man reclining in his smoking jacket. 😳 When I checked water buckets at midday? Boop and Broadway were schmoozing around in the Ram-ada Inn when they are usually out in the wooded lot.
Okay, so maybe I'm just a bit worried that 'shepherd's Christmas' and actual Christmas could both occur in December this year. If Sanson had been the only frat boy, it wouldn't be an issue; he was going to be introduced to one or both of these girls in a few months. But Bridger is their half-brother, and a second possible sire (who is bigger and more mature) means genetic testing to determine parentage. Oh well; I'll cross that bridge (heh) if I come to it.
The Tour de France/Fleece ends Sunday, and I think I'll finish the last of Rechel's roving by the end of that day. I've spun six 'turtles' of singles on my two Larks, and have 57g to go. That's too much to fit on a Lark (its toes were perilously close to disappearing with 50g), so I switched to my first Aegean for the final stretch.
We're still having assorted mechanical problems here. Our worn-out Kubota tractor is still dead in the driveway, Rick's vet truck was in the shop a couple days this week, and now Brian's car is dead at his place of employment. Rick is fabricating ramps so he can haul it home on our trailer, although I'm not sure why he doesn't haul it to a pick-&-pull place if Brian's assessment is accurate. That situation adds layers of complications and possible conflict to our lives, but I'm trying not to borrow trouble. "Sufficient to the day is the evil thereof," the good Lord said. And every day brings blessings as well. Like abundant cucumbers and zucchini from a neighbor's garden, a bouquet of roses from my sweetheart, and two sweet dogs to share our lives and provide entertainment: