I keep meaning to update my journal, and then things get so busy...
The lambs are all growing and doing well. Rose's boys, especially, are getting big. I've been letting them out into the main pasture nearly every day after work, and they love eating all the weeds, trees and bushes they can reach. I love just being out there with them, watching them eat, occasionally pulling down a branch or some grapevines for them.
Gracie's twins, and Lukka's little single ewe lamb, have discovered that they can squeeze through their pasture gate, so they often get a head start, much to the dismay of their moms (Lukka seems more worried - I think Gracie enjoys the break

).
A friend came over a few weeks ago and held each of Rose's lambs while I used the emasculatome. I'd given them some pain meds from the vet about an hour prior. We were prepared for a major reaction when each cord was crushed, but they made very little fuss and it went well. 22 days later, when we wethered Gracie's ram lamb, we re-checked Rose's boys, and I was easily able to tell that the earlier wethering had been successful. I like this method, faster and much easier on the lambs than surgically wethering (I've never banded, so I can't compare to that, but I like the nearly zero chance of flystrike with this, even if done in the heat of summer).
Milking is going well, with an occasional day skipped due to poor weather or too much other stuff going on. I made my first batches of cheese, which I'll write more about in my milking thread.
I went to the Great Lakes Fiber Festival in Wooster, and it was a great weekend! The weather couldn't have been better, and it was nice seeing people I don't see often (hi Roving Jacobs

), going through all the buildings of vendors, seeing the sheep and bunnies and alpacas, listening in on some of the classes, and checking out the fleeces entered in the wool contest. There were some Finn lambs at one booth, and their 'baaaaa' just sounded so soft and cute, I had to keep reminding myself I already had sheep.
I got a couple of peach trees planted, one is doing well, the other was a bare-root that appears to have dried out more than it should have - it's growing, but only near the bottom, so I'll give it a chance (the growth is above the graft). The asparagus and rhubarb are doing well, and I will work tomorrow on getting the rest of the garden ready to plant tomatoes and zucchini (a bit late but not as bad as last year).
A nice spring so far, just brings a lot of work.