The real cold is coming

Boo loves snow and has no interest in any discussion about cold that may result in the curtailment of his outdoor ventures.

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We have snow again. Just a few inches.

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It blew snow showers all day yesterday, so the north doors had to be closed. Sheep hate to be locked inside but the barn would be filled with snow if I did not shut their big door. Mama has shown real signs of good strong recovery in the last week.  I think she is almost back up to speed. Just in the nick of time too. Bad winter is coming to give us ‘the bash’.

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Last night it was forecast to go down to -3F(-19C) – and  by Sunday we will be at -14F (-25C) with a bendy tree. These temperatures are pretty extreme for our neck of the woods.   And though I am not concerned for our wooly flock…

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I am concerned for our  Pigs. They do not have wooly coats. Though the Hereford breed does have quite long coarse hair and are known for their hardiness. Everyone is fat and healthy though and that is a good start.

Once again today Sheila picked up her bowl and carried it (full of food) into her bedroom to eat. Too cold out there in the snow evidently!

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I can’t wait until she does this when I have a camera in my hand.

Today I will continue to line her bedroom with straw bales so she sleeps down in a draft free space. She will have two blankets  and both she and the plonkers have a heat lamp that they sleep under. But I don’t know. Minus 14 with a bad wind is freaky cold for a piggie.

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Queenie and Daisy also have deep beds. We scoop all around the two areas designated for sleeping. They are not fed where they sleep so they don’t tend to loaf about and make a mess in there, well not too much, so on either side of their big pen are two big deep straw filled spaces. I keep clean straw on top. In these temperatures when they poo it immediately freezes. So it is easy to take the manure out in these frozen piles (unless it hits the concrete floor then it is there for the duration) but I can keep their straw beds clean.  They always sleep in the same place. In their own corners, so Daisy has the super size extra king and Queenie (of course) has a Queen sized bed.

When it thaws we do a big clean up and start all over again.

I hope you have a lovely day.

Your friend on the farmy,

celi

57 responses to “The real cold is coming”

  1. Stay warm, Celi!

    Phoebe is in the same camp as Boo. When she realized it was snowing, it meant lots of extra trips outside to play in it. She pretends she really has go do her wees, when really, she’s ready to run up the road and see if the foxes want to play in the snow with her. She doesn’t believe me when I tell her they don’t.

  2. I think if I was Miss Sheila, I’d be taking my breakfast back to bed and tucking up warm too… -14 is very cold, even if you have a nice thick layer of lard under your pigskin coat. I worry about the tip of her snout and her ears getting frost-nipped. I have visions of a nice furry bonnet to keep her cosy, and a fabulous quilted dressing gown, perhaps with some tasteful roses. OK, now this is getting silly, and it’s time to stop!

  3. Brrrrr. -25 is cruel. Interestingly enough, Hereforedshire and Shropshire regularly record the lowest temperatures in England. I can remember several instances of -16 when we lived just over the border in Worcestershire. That is where those pigs were bred, so at least they have a fighting chance with your lows! We are still wet and windy but not too cold but the ferry to take my family home has been delayed at least 2 hours, which will leave them driving through the night on the other side, arriving home around 7am.

    Your yesterday’s post appeared in my email inbox but was unfindable on your blog. Weird. I can’t remember a day without a dose of farmy news.

    Wrap up warm.

    Love,
    ViV

  4. Now here is a brilliant idea…old cardigans .put jumpers and cardigans on Sheila and the plonkers ..that way they will stay warm….I used to keep my skinny dog warm using a cut off fro my stretch pants…that is getting real cold.so longjohns on to keep bottoms warm

  5. We were all complaining bitterly last Sunday when our (summer time) temps dipped to (+)15C – can’t even begin to imagine how cold -25 C is. Sensible Sheila – what a magnificent pair of double chins she has 🙂 Keep warm Celi – do whatever it takes 🙂 Laura

  6. That is what you call cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey… and that is not rude… google it to get where it comes from./… but it would freeze a ball or two I’m sure…

  7. OH look at Boo Baby! You know, he is still just a kid at less than 1 year old. Our yorkie is crazy for the cold weather also – 4 lbs of holy terrier!

    Bundle up and tuck everyone in. I would so want to cuddle down in the barn after you described the bedding for the family -> and I want a heat lamp!

  8. Rufus is just the opposite – he nearly wouldn’t go out to do his business this morning. He actually cried when I opened the door!
    We have blowing snow (about 8 inches, I think) and a -15 windchill this morning. Hubby’s out on the tractor, and I’ve been making brief forays out to shovel…then back in to make sure all is well (and Warm!) inside…
    But even that pales in comparison to what I heard was coming to your neck of the woods…thinking lots of Good Thoughts for you and the denizens of the Farmy!

  9. Will Sheila have a chance to be a mother when the temperature warm up? I bet she’ll make a super one! Did I tell you Roxie, our big pig, (the mother of Daisy Mae, who just had 8 piglets) is due to have her second litter in the next few days? Hopefully she’ll wait until the temperature warms up a bit! 🙂

    • I hope so, i will try to breed her myself.. I don’t have room for a boar.. you are a real pig farmer now!! Do you keep the piglets inside, in heated rooms?.. c

      • Sadly we don’t have a barn with heated rooms. Our old…very old, barn has only one side for the chickens and guineas, and the other side for our goats. The middle, open part holds everyone’s food and our rabbits. GOS pigs are quite hardy, and so far they are doing well. BUT, it’s getting down to 4 degrees F tomorrow night, and only 8 degrees the next night. We are hoping Roxie waits until the weather breaks to have her babies.

  10. Rather you than me with those temperatures! Interestingly, it would seem that your super cold temps meeting up with lovely warm conditions further south are creating a super-fast jet stream which is delivering all our current storms! Wrap up!
    Christine

  11. My goodness! You just have to press on and deal with those extreme temps – there is no choice about it. I can just feel the icy draw of air in the lungs and skin chapping and cracking as I read your post. You’re a good mama, caring for the critters and seeing to their comforts.

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