The day it all fell apart

I went out yesterday morning to milk and discovered that things were not going to be as easy as I had imagined.  Daisy was in a fury because I was sharing her baby.  She roared into the barn,  heaving herself about. Rolling her eyes at me and startling as the chickens woke and fell-flew from their perches.  Her feet suddenly seemed enormous and filled the space with their shuffle.  Stomping in place as I washed her. 

Minty began  bleating  at the barn door. The peacock was screeching back.  I stood up to grab the dry cloth, Daisy  lurched and my sunglasses which were stupidly perched on top of my head as usual, fell to the barn floor and flew into too many pieces to pick up. Daisy seeing her opportunity flicked the tip of her filthy tail  straight through my eye.  It felt like a blade of razor sharp grass dragged across my eyeball but full of muck. Minty increased her volume to a piercing level and the calf began to low. 

Daisy’s  afterbirth still had not come away and was dragging. The cups would not stay on.  I set the calf next to Daisy and put my finger in its mouth to keep it still and worked one handed. Soon we righted ourselves and talking gently got everything around the right way,  the milk flowed and flowed and my eye throbbed.  Daisy strained at her leash and refused to eat.  Her body knocking against me and her calf. 

Once we were all untangled Daisy stormed out of the barn and spent most of the day marching up and down the North side of her field.  Until I  listened to the soft spoken Hairy MacLairy and put them back together.   All day I crashed from one job to the next thinking hard, what was I forgetting. Did everyone have water. Why was there no washing on the clothesline. That bed needed weeding.  I picked and chopped the cabbages  and brocolli plants for the pigs, then lost the garden knife.

I paused to watch Stinky the Second get a moment at the water bowl before the big chickens shoved them out of the way.  The day would not flow. I was in a state of flux as we reshuffled the day. I jerked from one thing to the next.  I kept losing my camera then finding it in ridiculous places. Bruising myself bumping into things  and my brain kept stalling trying to think what I should be doing next.  Why did I walk over here.  What was I doing. I got the tractor stuck.  It got hot then it got hotter. I squinted in the glare and wished for even a part of my sunglasses to wear.  I could not find the sprinkler or the hoe.  I cleaned and cleaned in the barn trying to eliminate some of the dust and failing. My eye hurt. I glanced into the cardinal’s nest to find that it had been shredded and the bird and her eggs were gone.  Just gone.  I could have sat on the step and bawled. 

Where had my balance gone.  I have taken on too much I thought. I am not going to be able to do this. The pigs needed hosing, they were panting in the heat and the lambs needed water, and the hoses were all the way on the wrong side of the property.  The bread needed to go to the second rise. Vegetables needed picking for dinner and soon I would have to milk again. I was not looking forward to that.

Then my teenager came and began to scoop out the pigs pen.  What is wrong with your eye, she said.  Cows tail, I said. She screwed up her face. Its all red. Damn, I thought.

I went inside to look in the mirror for the first time that day. Red. Half the white of my eye is a glaring red.  I watched the teenager’s little head bob past the window as she dragged the hoses around the side of the house, then heard the squeal of delighted Plonkers getting sprayed off on her way past.

Without warning the wind shifted. I could smell honeysuckle. The bees hovered around the tap. The bread started to rise. The cake came out of the oven and the red wine and thyme stew in the crockpot started to fill the house with the scent of dinner.

I took a big breath, filled my buckets with water and went out to milk Daisy.  Hairy stood quietly under the tree and watched as Daisy walked into the milking parlour and stood in exactly the right spot. She ate and we talked as I washed her teats,  gently pulling a little milk from each.  She turned only her head to watch me as I attached the cups the right way round, the suction held and the pump began its click, then we both paused to follow the milk streaming into the bucket.

When there was only a trickle left. I shut off the button and the extensions dropped off her udder easily and were hung on their handy nail hook. She finished up her barley and alfalfa while I washed and dried her chapped legs, once again lifting each leg for me, then I dipped each teat in iodine and unhitched her.

That’ll do boss I said and slapped her on her rump. She turned her vast body in that small space and two gallons lighter, headed out into the late afternoon.

There. I said to myself and set about pouring her milk into bottles for her calf and cleaning my equipment.  The barn was empty and quiet. All I could hear was the occassional chuckle from the shush sisters as they tried to entice another chicken into their run, then it became so quiet I fancied I could hear  the long-eyelashed slow blink of the new bobbys eyes as he watched me.

On my way back to the house,  there was this little fat pig, trying to fit its little fat body onto a saucer of water. His teenager leaning on the barn door watching.

See you tomorrow, she called.  Don’t forget you have that wedding to go to.  Crap, I thought.

Good morning.

Today will be better. Promise! Except I have to fit in a 3.30 wedding,  between chores. I am going to need to find my big French Hang Over sunglasses.

celi

 

 

 

109 responses to “The day it all fell apart”

  1. Oh Miss C, what a dreadful whirlwind of a day! I feel as though we went through it all with you, whipped up in the storm. I hope your eye feels much better today, perhaps a camomile tea bag will help soothe it? You don’t get time to drink a cup of tea, but maybe wearing it will be achievable.

  2. Reshuffling is a routine is so hard, especially when it requires the cooperation of Other Souls….Some Humans are just as unreasonable as Daisy.
    Wishing you a much better, smoother day today!

  3. It’s unsettling how quickly things can turn chaotic! Maybe you need to add a couple more teenagers? I know you said you are trying to get the farm to where it was in the “olden days”…but I’m pretty sure most farmers had a lot of children to help with the chores!

    I hope your eye is feeling much better today! And I will pray for a much, much, calmer day for you. 🙂

    ~April

    • Yup, I need a couple of my own kids really, who know how to get a job done and how i like it done.. training teenagers is like herding cats and everywhere they go the devices are beeping and calling! ! It will be a much better day today! c

  4. adding a new member to the clan can certainly upset the routine. hope your eye is healing. what a day, eh? it sounds like things are calming down already though. have fun at the wedding!

  5. Well, that certainly was a bummer of a day! Seems to me that The Fates wished to have you go through it all in one day, as opposed to spread out over a couple weeks. As a result, you’ve got some pretty good days/weeks ahead — even better once you get some sunglasses.

    A warm compress may help that eye … Today will be better, you’ll see! … Good morning, Celi!

    • good idea John, the trouble was that I was so busy i never really got to properly clean the eye, i let tears do it! I think this was a mistake! c

  6. One of these days… they come and go, but usually they don’t stay long.
    Hopefully the eyes will get better soon!

  7. Oooh, ouch. I hope you’ve got it all cleaned out, have you tried topical arnica cream or something of that nature? Hormones are not a pleasant thing to deal with in other’s behaviour but possibly make it excusable. I like how she knuckled down in the evening, maybe that was an apology of sorts! Sorry to hear about your bird’s nest too. So sad. Take care of yourself, don’t get down because you’re doing such a cracking job and enjoy that wedding. (Even if you lower the tone with your been-in-a-fight look!) 🙂

  8. In all seriousness, this reminds me of every day of my life (these days), as I struggle with a preadolescent daughter. Exactly the same. Whew.

  9. I have to second the comment of glutenfreeze above, regarding at least a couple of temporary helping hands. You do so much for others, it may be the time has come to call in your markers, as it were. We once had a cow behave that way in the days just after her twin calves were born. The vet drew a blood sample and diagnosed it as low blood sugar from the hormone fluctuations. It was easily treated with a big glug of glucose and worked itself out in 24 hours or so.

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