I got up before dawn yesterday morning, after a night fretting about Sheila and decided to bring her home. That is that, I thought. Bad weather was coming again. She was not well.
I told the nice young fella that I was worried about the limping and her wound and I might come and take her home that afternoon. He replied that she was too overweight to breed anyway. I do believe that man just called my big fat pig: FAT. Ah well.
We hitched up the Black Mariah and off we went back into the (well I would say hills but there are no hills here) we drove into the hinterland.
On hearing the truck and seeing the trailer, Sheila, for the first time since I took her there launched herself out of her sleeping hut at speed. She hobbled down to the gate and began to bark. I knew you would come with the trailer, she called. Break me out. Break me out! Head up, as animated as I have seen her since she had the fight with the Boar. Here, she shouted banging her snout on the gate. Here, pull that pin – lift that catch! Here!
First I opened the big door to the trailer, told John to hold the bucket and the trailer gate open so she would veer towards him and the trailer, instead of the gap in the fence that opened onto the hinterland then I opened her jail gate and got ready to lead her into the trailer.
She revved up, squealed, limp forgotton, shot past me, past John and the bucket and straight into the trailer. Quick, she called over her shoulder, shut the gate, come on, come on. Get me the hell out of here! Hurry before the guards sound the alarm! Move it up, she barked, faced forward, feet solid on the deck, eyes shining, standing strong in the back of the trailer. Like the captain of the ship. Let’s get a move on.
Once home, she jumped out of the trailer instead of using her ramp, tripped over her bad leg then rebounded and trotted with gleeful determination down the corridor to her room. Hullo, Ugly Mongrel Dogs, she called as she passed Ton and Boo, pushed the unlatched door open with her snout and shouldered past into her pen.. Then she stopped, turned around and sighed. Have you ever heard a pig sigh? It is a lovely sound.
She turned round in a circle scattering chickens and proceeded to clean up her bedroom. She rearranged the straw, bashed at the bales, pulled the sacking out and stuffed it in new corners. She found a bone that a bad dog had buried while she was gone and threw it out the door. She pushed and pulled all the straw about, enjoying all her home smells. She barked at Daisy and Queenie and told the sheep to quit bleating or they will send YOU to jail. Fat cows, she chortled. Meadow you are getting fat too, girl.
The wind came in and the snow started to fall and she lay herself down and waited to be covered up and said you can shut the door now. And off to sleep she went.
Later as I worked to and fro in the barn, she made her usual little conversational grunts from deep in her straw bed. What are you doing now? I am cleaning out the cows pen, I answered her. What are you doing now? I am checking the sheep. What are you doing now? I am going into the loft to get the hay. What are you doing now? Say Ni Ni Sheila. Ni Ni miss c.
Don’t let the door smack you on the –
Sheila, if you finish that sentence I am going to give you a smack bottom
He he, she said into the straw and wriggled down a little further.
Good morning. I feel better now that I have our Sheila back home. Not pregnant but home. We will go to Plan B (AI) when she is better.
You all have a lovely day. Lovely, lovely.
your friend on the farm
celi








120 responses to “Guess who has come home!”
Cinders, that is the best news I’ve heard in a loong time! Our big fat girl is home! love love! I sold two of my goats a long time ago…Sam & Dave…for one week! All 3 of us cried for one week, till I went back and brought them home….I know the feeling!
Ooooh! I’ve heard goats are really really attachable. (Right word?) Glad you got them back.
you bought them back?
So glad that your Sheila is home! She is a smart and wonderful piggy and knows where she needs to be. We also had one of our does go to live with friends, and it was not working out and she came home. She will never leave this farm again! Sometimes you just have the feeling…
It is tru…. that feeling
Yay, Sheila is home!!! She knew that wasn’t the plan for her. Fat! I’ll show him Fat, watch your mouth young man!
It’s good to see Sheila home, and to hear how happy she was to escape into the trailer to be whisked away by her fairy godmother.
What a happy post! Hopefully spring will bring her into heat. I’ll be anxiously waiting with you.
Yes, I bought/brought them back home. And yes Equus, they are very, very attachable…I didn’t realize how so till I let them go. It’s true, sometimes we just have to follow our hearts!
Oho! Sheila is an Empress, like me, and she Will Have her subjects and her fiefdom in order. Amen, amen. I am as glad as she is that she can be happy holding court at home again. AI will do just fine, I’m sure, and no crass boors, oops, boars to muck about her Highness. Happiness abounds.
xo!
Goodness, you really love that pig!
What a happy home-coming! Sheila looks so snug there in her bed of hay.
Oh, I am sighing like Shiela, after reading this wonderful story about her return to the homefront. What a happy pig she is and what a relief to all your readers that she is back where she belongs. 🙂
You tell this so well – her personality and her hurry to be home – giving orders.
Happy home! (and they do have such a sigh)
Ah, so happy for you all. She’s a liitle home pig and I’m sure AI will be a whole let less traumatic for all!
oh this is such a sweet story, how I love this sow and how you write about her behaviors! This post could really be turned into a lovely kids book. Sheila. I think we’ll give one of piglets this name, it’s lovely.