Thursday, October 9, 2014

Easy Keepers

Well I had a stressful week, so when I sat down to write, I had nothing. 

I was born in New York and my dad moved us to Michigan when I was about 8 years old.  I was married with children when we moved back to a family farm.  Growing up on the edge of the hippy movement, we wanted to be one with the land, homesteaders.  We raised sheep, partly because I wanted to spin and weave their wool.  I belonged to a group called Black Sheep (NY not Hartland MI) and in their newsletter was the following story.  It has been one of my favorites ever since.




Easy Keepers
Once upon a time there was a man, Call him the Good Herder, who thought of raising sheep.  Knowing nothing of such things, Herder journeyed the countryside, interviewing every sheep that crossed his path, asking each about the difficulties of keeping a few of their number.  All told Herder the same thing: “Sheep don’t need much; a bite of grass, a sip of water and a pinch of salt –that’s all we really need, really”.  Convinced by repetition, Herder decided to go ahead, and he did, buying 50 ewes and a ram.  Upon arriving at the farm with his new flock, he took them straight away to the pasture to show them where they would be living.  “It isn’t much, he apologized, “just a field with a fence around it, but the grass is good and there is plenty of water, and first thing in the morning I’m going into town to get some salt blocks”.  The sheep inspected the field, tasted the brook water and nodded approval; “This is all we need; we will be happy here, don’t worry”.  As for Herder’s lack of a barn, the sheep said “don’t be silly, we don’t need one, this is perfect for us out here”.

For the first months all went well.  The ram bred the ewes, the ewes ate the lush grass and the days shortened in to winter.  One day Herder noticed that there was not much grass left in the field and he went to talk with the sheep about it.  “Yes”, they agreed, “there isn’t as much grass as before, but don’t worry, we don’t need much.  Besides, we can always feed on those bushes”.  Herder would have none of that and forthwith bought hay for his flock.  The sheep were grateful, ate heartily, and quickly grew back the fat they had lost.

Soon Herder was beset with another problem and after considering how to bring it up tactfully, said “ I’m sorry to complain, but you sheep could save a lot of hay if you did not walk all over it”  The sheep not a bit offended, answered calmly “that is the way Mother nature has made us.  She taught us to always look for the very best bits of hay, and the means we have to walk around on it to find them”.  Herder understood, and then asked if the sheep had any ideas on how to avoid the waste, saying that he just could not afford it.  “Our last owner put his hay in feeders” replied the sheep, “that way we could not get at it to walk on”.  So Herder built some feeders and everyone was again pleased, sheep included.

Other sheep habits bothered Herder too.  One winter’s day he brought up their habit of crowding so close together; “when I want just a few of you to walk through the gate, all of you come rushing at once”.  “We know” said the sheep, “we are like that.  Mother Nature taught us to stick together so we do”.  Herder, never quick to tamper with nature, asked the sheep how he might manage to get them to do his will, and as usual, the sheep cooperated.  “You could build something called a ‘sorting chute’ and we could even teach you how” offered one old and wise ewe.  And they did, and he did, and once again peace settled upon the farm as winter deepened and ewes grew heavy with kids.

Lambing season began to the joy of all.  Herder herded harder now, hauling hay by day and moving about pasture by night, helping the ewes to lamb, bringing fresh water and clean hay to the new mothers.  It was exciting work, but he also got very tired, retracing his steps over the pasture many times each night, coming to the aid of yet another lambing ewe.  One morning Herder mentioned this to his flock; “Could you possibly come over by the gate when you feel you are ready to lamb?”  The sheep recognized Herder’s problem right away, and answered “but we are timid animals.  Mother Nature has taught us to lamb just as far from any disturbance as we can get, so that is what we do – we find a quiet corner way away from everyone else.  We cannot help it”.  Herder had no reply.

A couple of nights later, tragedy struck.  Two lambs froze to death in a far corner of the pasture, before the exhausted Herder to get to them, and that same night a lamb was carried off by the wolves that had begun to prowl the fence line.  Herder was in a frenzy but the sheep just shrugged: “we cannot fight wolves, we are just sheep”.  Unsatisfied, Herder asked for suggestions, and as usual, the sheep politely replied: “Our last owner had a barn he liked us to lamb in, It was always safe there and he never seemed to get so cranky during lambing” Herder was taken aback at the prospect of building a barn and he fumed.

“So now you need a barn, do you?”  The senior ewe between mouthfuls of hay, almost disinterestedly replied; “not at all, we don’t need a barn.  After all Mother Nature on expects us to lamb once or so in a lifetime and we can do that standing on our heads”.  Herder, scratching his own head awhile reached a decision and made a telling observation, all in one sentence; “I will build a barn then, for it seems that I expect a lot more of you than does your Mother Nature”.

The sheep knowing so much more about raising sheep than the Herder, designed the barn for him, or rather told him how to draw the plans, for they could not write, or at least they had never tried.  As the plan formed, Herder sensed that there was something wrong here, the drawings didn’t seem right to him, and he said so one day.  The ewes were busy tending their lambs and paid little attention as Herder went into details of the barn plan.  But he pressed on anyway; “these plans call for the barn to be only 4 feet high—that just won’t work because I am over 6 feet tall”.  The sheep yawned sleepily and answered “then build it higher.  We need only 4 feet, if you need more, help yourself.  But Herder wasn’t finished yet; and these doors, they are only 18 inches wide.  I can barely squeeze through and I could never get the hay inside”.  As you would by now expect, the sheep replied that 18 inches was all they needed and that if Herder needed more , he should build whatever he liked 18 inches or 18 feet wide.  “Eighteen feet?  Now there is an idea” said Herder, “that wide I could drive a tractor through it, if I had a tractor, to bring you the hay”.  Sheep, having little or no interest in machinery, paid him no mind; many of the ewes were asleep.

Herder became exasperated; “you sheep don’t seem to care a bit what I am doing for you; all you care about is a bite of grass, a sip of water and a pinch of salt.  At this, several sheep turned slowly to Herder and repeated what Herder now knew by heart; “As we told you when you bought us, we sheep don’t need much”.

Herder did not surrender.  He built his barn, a huge one with double doors, and he bought a tractor.  His flock grew and grew, becoming the pride of the county.  The sheep and Herder had no cause for worry now – he had built them all the chutes and feeders and barns and loaders that were required.  As he showed off the place to visiting neighbor, Herder explained how he had come to peace with shepherding; “Sheep don’t need much, it is true.  Most of this is for me.
The original story was in Sheep Canada Magazine and found by Bruce Clement and reprinted in the May 1980 issue of the New England Farmer.  

Hope you enjoyed the story as much as I do, have a great week

Pam 

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