No, not Elsie. Our darling head tossing Elsie. She is not the Christmas Cow. (John asked why she is still wearing her halter – I still cannot get too close to her, so until she is quite calm with me, I need to be able to have that halter.)

There is another cow coming. Another Dutch Belted Cow. Due to calve late spring. She has a full white belt wrapped around her middle. I have not seen her. She is a Christmas present. She will arrive on the 21st of January – if all goes well. You and I will not be here. We will be in New Zealand celebrating the wedding of Senior Son. But Jake and John will welcome her and settle her and have her ready as our Christmas Surprise when we get home. A Christmas Cow, isn’t that wonderful? I think I might just call her Christmas.

Yesterday was full of sun. We all raised our faces to the sky as we walked about – lucky not to run into things. Sheila quite simply decided not to come in. So I left her out there until dark.
It was so warm I opened the doors and rendered some fat into lard. I need to make some soap. But the first step is a smelly business. However, once I have heated and filtered the lard three times, it will be ready for soap making. First I am making the ugly soap with lemon grass and sugar and coffee grinds for my daughter, it is her favourite!

Can you see the windmills, all this winter a whole stream of windmills will appear on the horizon – running along the ridge. I do understand that wind power is sensible but sadly they are lit at night. So from now on our night sky will be speckled with blinking bright red lights. Here is a close up of that shot.

I am grateful that they are not on our land, you have no choice if they decide to sequester your back yard, and the companies do pay for the land and also contribute money to the school districts and so forth, however I am still glad that they are not in my garden. Living under a constantly humming turning blade would be a bit tough. The enormous blades cast a huge moving knife shaped shadow over everything, circling and circling, I think that would drive me mad. But our swamp land is too low to be chosen thankfully.

Tima and Tane continue to enjoy this weather. Tima has little hooves that are growing upwards like the nails of Thai dancing girls, one in particular is misshapen, so for the last few days I have been following her about the barn on my knees, doing opportunist clips of her nails. I have found that very sharp secateurs are the best for this. She does not mind me trimming her nails, she just objects to standing still.

Today I am taking The Matriarch up to Chicago for her Christmas surprise. We are going to The Ballet. The Nutcracker Suite. Who can resist!? But I had better get a wriggle on, we leave for the train early and I have animals to feed first.
Do forgive me if I am not in with a Letter from the Farmy tomorrow. Getting up to the Big City and back takes a long day.
I hope you all have a lovely day
celi




47 responses to “The Christmas cow”
Beautiful image, Celi….the big country….
What a wonderful Christmas surprise C! A new cow! If you don’t name her Christmas, my mind immediately suggested Merry! I am so happy for you and the farmy! I hope you and the Matriarch have a wonderful time at the ballet! Snowing here this morning — forecasting a couple inches. Again so happy for you!!!!!
I second the idea of Merry for the new cow’s name…it just seems very right 🙂
I have seen those wind machines in UK and I think that they made do a good job but they are quite ugly and take up a lot of room. You do not realise how big they are until you see them close up….
Piggy Manicure Parlour..well I never!
And a new Christmas , that is wonderful. I was hoping that you were going to say that Queenie was pregnant but maybe its too early to tell.
I love that kitty with the blue eyes, mind you I love all the animals….big, small, short,tall, fat or thin..everyone is loved and cherished
What a fabulous Christmas present. You will soon have a Herd with a capital H instead of a flerd with a sall f.
You should be thankful for those red lights on top of the windmills: now no aeroplane will be fooled into thinking all that flat land is an airport runway!
Enjoy the Nutcracker – one of my fave ballets.
Love,
ViV x
PS, Jock’s Christmas present will come on Monday: A new (to us) car, which he’s been wanting for ages, a 5-year-old Citroen C5.
PS I think wind turbines are beautiful
Me too! They’re elegant and sculptural and so much more beautiful than a coal or nuclear power station…
Of course this area also has coal power stations and nuclear power stations, wind turbines are as well, as long as the demand for power keeps increasing all will be working.. c
Gosh, you are becoming a dairy farmer! Have a wonderful trip to the ballet 🙂
What a wonderful Christmas present! And how frustrating that you’ll have to wait to meet her, but some things are worth waiting for. It sounds as if Miss Tima needs some road exercise to wear her little trotters down a bit; the field and barn are probably a bit too soft under foot to give her hooves the wear they need to stay level. Hoof trimming is no fun with a wriggly animal; Ewenice and Ewedora used to hate it, but it has to be done.
A new friend! I can’t wait to see her.
Enjoy the ballet.
I haven’t seen the Nutcracker since my kids were younger, it used to be an annual/semi annual tradition. Have fun!
A jaunt to the city and a wonderful Christmas present! Enjoy the ballet. If only you could put Tima on a sandpaper covered treadmill machine to trim down her nails. That would be sight, wouldn’t it?
Elsie is a very fine looking cow.
I didn’t realise that people weren’t given a choice whether they get the windmills in their back yard or not. I’m a fan of them but I thought people had a choice! I wouldn’t want them in my back yard either unless I had a very large property.
I think you do have a choice but they will be coming through so either you have one or your neighbour gets one.. either way they are in your view.. but no whining on the yacht.. right! c
The lamb and tree shot is so lovely.
Enjoy the ballet – my grandmother used to take us every Christmas. I started that with my daughter when she was 3. Nutcracker just IS holiday!
Windmills. Don’t get me started. Miles of them on the once beautiful bluffs and open high plains of West Texas. (wish people would try living in their shadow for a few weeks before cheering and asking for more of them. There is noise and vibration. Do you know how many eagles, birds of prey, migratory bird they actually burn or slice each month? (despite all the companies’ eco noises they knowingly built these wind farms in CA and TX and across the country directly in the migratory path – which is against fed. protection laws, but….Now a real concern is how many bats are also being confused, harmed and killed. Bats are major crop insect control.
We see these windmill parts being trucked from the port to points north and west from here. The only one making money is the companies that make them and sell the idea. Wake up people – it’s not what they say. (Sorry, been watching/advocating changes on this issue for years…and if people start using electric cars? Not smart at all. All about profit not environment any way you look at it.)
It is terrible about the birds.. I know.. just use less power, that would actually solve the problem, turn the TV right off, unplug the chargers, thurn the lights off as you leave the room and turn the heat down.. simple really.. the reason these are all going up is because we are all using MORE power.. c
Using less power is the best solution until clean affordable energy is developed. (Reducing usage of vehicles is how the US has managed to lower emissions so quickly – more than any other country. Of course now that gas is cheap…keep cars tweaked and tuned and tires inflated)
Many of us were brought up cutting off lights/heat to keep bills affordable, and we really weren’t addicted to TV or electronics. Now not sure many are willing to do without – might be good for people, though. Miserable weather here this morning – hope you are having better!
I totally agree PhilMouse, here in the kettle moraine area of Wi., it seems every ridge is growing those things. Now many townships are regulating how far they must be from homes as there are many people saying they’re affecting their sleep patterns and general health. They are particularly ugly, a danger to flying creatures and really not too terribly efficient. And you’re right, if they were so wonderful why must they have government subsidies, if they were the money makers they claim there would be more companies invested in putting them up. We are not far from the Horicon marsh, a very important stop on migratory paths for all kinds of birds and the wind towers are right in that path too. As to the electric cars, fine, you don’t use as much petroleum but the electricity has to be generated some how and the turbines just aren’t up to it.
I have been quite absent. My sweet dog died very suddenly and unexpectedly ,right before Thanksgiving , and I really have been out of sorts. Slowly I am beginning to feel grateful for the 7 amazing years he graced us with…..phew it’s a tough one……
Bless you for each day I read about you and our fellowship. If you want to shorten the new cows name she could be Noel…….I am glad we are going to NZ…….a need to get away !!
Nanster
Oh Nanster that’s hard, we do get so attached to our beautiful companions….and unexpected is the pits. Welcome back 🙂
Oh you poor thing, that is so miserable. Losing your old dog. Much love to you and I am so glad that you gave yourself time to grieve. that is very important.. Good to see you again and yes in 18 days we go to NZ!!
thankyou
I’m with you on the wind farm…I am so thankful we live where we do…the wind is not steady enough here. What is happening in our part of the world is hydro electric farms…which so far is okay.
Linda
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Have you ever read Willa Cather’s beautiful story, “A Wagner Matinee”? I will send it to you. I love it that you can zip off to Chicago in a day and have a totally “other” kind of experience. That’s how we are here in France. We are deep in country. And yet, an hour and a half a way pulses Paris. It is an amazing possibility. Funny how rarely we grasp it. The country offers its own symphonies.
Sandy was beyond excited. She is a city girl at heart I think, we had great seats and she was just entranced.. just got back.. whew.. what a day!.. c