Hykue
Chillin' with the herd
So, one of my ewes surprised me by lambing a few days early this morning (the breeder told me "not before May 24th"), the day before I planned to lock them in the smaller pen. She was easy to find, has a ewe lamb who was dry and up-and-about when I found them. I'm relieved, because it froze last night.
Anyway, Sand (the mama) is interested in her lamb, licks it, and got really upset when I carried to the barn - I stopped and crouched every few steps so she could sniff it and see that it was okay and going towards the barn. I watched them for about 45 minutes before I moved them, and the lamb seemed uninterested in suckling - I assumed because she already had a belly full of colostrum. Then I came back to the house to get some warm water for mama, went back out, mixed it with molasses, gave it to her, watched for another 15 minutes. I kept on coming and going, sitting calmly when I'm out there . . . Sand trusts humans and didn't act too nervous - she would lay down by me. I watched them for about 3 hours altogether and never saw baby successfully suck - I saw her try maybe twice, and both times Sand turned to sniff the lamb's bum, thus moving her udder out of reach. Sand is a first-timer. Baby's tummy looked rounded enough when I first saw her, but looks a little bit more sunken now. Baby is moving around quite effectively . . . and she's peed twice that I've seen.
How do I know if she's actually getting colostrum when I'm not around? Should I just stick mama in a headstall and help baby nurse just in case? I'll get less nervous with experience, right?
Anyway, Sand (the mama) is interested in her lamb, licks it, and got really upset when I carried to the barn - I stopped and crouched every few steps so she could sniff it and see that it was okay and going towards the barn. I watched them for about 45 minutes before I moved them, and the lamb seemed uninterested in suckling - I assumed because she already had a belly full of colostrum. Then I came back to the house to get some warm water for mama, went back out, mixed it with molasses, gave it to her, watched for another 15 minutes. I kept on coming and going, sitting calmly when I'm out there . . . Sand trusts humans and didn't act too nervous - she would lay down by me. I watched them for about 3 hours altogether and never saw baby successfully suck - I saw her try maybe twice, and both times Sand turned to sniff the lamb's bum, thus moving her udder out of reach. Sand is a first-timer. Baby's tummy looked rounded enough when I first saw her, but looks a little bit more sunken now. Baby is moving around quite effectively . . . and she's peed twice that I've seen.
How do I know if she's actually getting colostrum when I'm not around? Should I just stick mama in a headstall and help baby nurse just in case? I'll get less nervous with experience, right?