Thanks for your posts, they made me smile. Yes i will try to put some pics on, she is not the prettyist lamb, but so sweet, and i think she is lovely! She has a woolover felted wool tiny calf cover on at the mo, and that has helped alot, Marches farmer i might try that on my old wether whose wool is not so brilliant this year either.
My story... those sad little waifs that get left behind, that no one believes will survive get obsessive loving care and ussually make it through to become giants! Kind hearted farming friends, kind hearted strangers... word gets around! and the vet i go to is so kind and helpful.
But at the moment Lily is the last I can take, as i need to keep the number manageable! I find it very hard to say no, but apart from lily and her mum have had to say no this year. I find that quite hard, as animals at my place have their whole lives to enjoy, but i cant give that to the millions of sheep in nz, so do what i can!
Seems blind lambs happen on most farms now and then, mainly from pink eye, which can be treated and eyesight saved if caught early enough which is fabulous to see a bind lamb get its eyesight back. Just with orbenin cream.
Im looking forward to the day when i can make a nice warm small barn for them for bad weather of which i get alot. But starting out here (7 years) and as everyone knows it is a slow process. So making do with a big shipping container with bedding. It works well. Farming is quiet different here in Nz to in europe, mass scale so much less of the individual care, and bringing in of animals in bad weather.
Sheep are fabulous though and incredily smart. Sometimes too smart when it comes to trees! Alice and Lily do have a special paddock -new fencing, no sharp bits of wire sticking out of fences, no holes, or water they can get into, and good shelter. The water bucket stays in the same place, but if it is moved Alice can quickly find it. I lead them by shaking sheep pellets in a plastic container ( sharp sound upsets them), Alice (now 7 was left by her mum on my friends farm) knows her way around her area, and also across my drive to another paddock, but i always talk constantly to her when i move her so she can follow. Plays like a lamb when she is with two of her mates. But always very careful. Lily is still at the carrying stage as i have to take her a wee way to the little paddock with decent grass. and she is too slow to walk... eating all the way. Im getting strong!