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Keepat the Inn (9/22 - 1/22)
thru 12/31/08

Wintering Animals in the Rockies

by Jon Remmerde

Nine horses and two burros stand in the sunshine by the haybarn and cast baleful looks toward the house, toward us. Actually, their looks are bale-less, since we’re getting a late start this zero degree morning. They want us to get out there and cut wires on baled alfalfa and spread it around the barn so they can break their night’s fast. Their food is their furnace; the colder the weather, the more they need to eat to keep warm, and I sympathize with their situation too much to slow down the donning of insulated coveralls, boots, hat, gloves and scarf, even though I feel tired and lazy after a long day’s work yesterday.

Juniper and Amanda climb into warm clothing and fill water jugs to provide for the small animals, two chickens, four ducks, five rabbits, three goats, one shoop. (Shoop is the singular of sheep, as also goose and geese, though my daughters say it could as well be shoup, as also mouse and mice. These philological discussions don’t slow down our preparations to feed, the animals are pleased to know.)

Caring for the animals is part of our responsibility as caretakers of this 460 acre, fifteen building, four tent unit Girl Scout ranch 8,800 feet up in Colorado’s Rocky Mountains. Animal care has become part of our family adventures and part of our home schooling.

When summer’s resident camp closed and the animal-care specialist headed back to college in New York state, Laura and I made a deal with our daughters, that they would take care of all the animals and receive $20.00 a month each in wages. For the time it would take, it was a low wage, but Amanda and Juniper were willing to have part of their work be a contribution to the family’s welfare and part of their education. Besides, they like all the animals, and they enjoy interacting with them. They willingly undertook the daily care of the animals.

Then it snowed, and we had to start giving the horses hay. There were no objections and no requests for a raise, but I decided Juniper and Amanda should get $40.00 a month each, and Laura agreed. They were pleased when we told them. I particularly liked the figure, because, in all the cowboy novels I’ve read, forty a month and room and board is the standard ranchhand’s pay, and that made our arrangement seem appropriate.

Then came up the wind that rips down through this small valley at 30 miles an hour or more. Cold feet were one result of the cold winter wind. I instructed Juniper and Amanda to put their boots on just before they went out and to be sure their boots were cold when they put them on. The absence of sweating feet kept their socks and boots drier, and their feet stayed warmer.

But Amanda particularly began to feel pressured by lack of time. She is learning to play the piano, and Juniper is learning to play the violin, and they need time to practice. They need time for their at-home schooling in other subjects. They need time to write and time to read for enjoyment and time to play and be children.

So now I feed the horses, and Juniper and Amanda feed the small animals. We work together when Banner needs medication for an infection from a cut on the face and when Diesel Smoke needs shots for a kidney infection. The arrangement satisfies all of us, except, possibly, for the equestrians, since I often do get there later than Juniper and Amanda, though my daughters lately tend toward my winter practice of staying up late and sleeping late.

The shoop and the goats usually come out of the fenced barnyard in the daytime and eat with the horses. These small ruminants, two wethers (neutered males) one small female goat and the shoop, are charming animals. Burros are quite territorial, but when we put the small animals on pasture, it was only a few days before the burros changed from trying to run the small animals out of the pasture to allowing them to stand under their necks and share warmth and companionship.

The animals’ needs change as the days change. Cold winds begin, and we carry the rabbits and their hutches into the small barn. We’re satisfied that the rabbits are much better off there, and they seem to be satisfied too. There are enough windows for sufficient light, and there is no wind inside.

Then snow falls day after day and accumulates to nearly a foot deep. The ducks’ legs are shorter than the snow is deep. Juniper and Amanda say the ducks walk a little, then flop down, with their feet tucked under their wings, obviously in distress. So they pick them up, one at a time, and move them into the barn and confine them to an area where there is plenty of straw spread underfoot.

I have never heard these ducks say “quack.” My daughters said that when they captured and carried the ducks, one held her head up quite high and said, “Pow, pow, pow.” Another, when being carried, said, “Help, help, help,” but it was relieved to be delivered unharmed to a warmer area. Their calls, when we enter the barn and move around their area, somewhat approach the sound of creaking hinges, though considerably more melodious and repetitious.

The chickens, Biddy and Higgledy Piggledy almost never come out of their small house. The snow does not please them, and they seem content to wait until spring before they make contact with the ground again.

We clean horse hooves and trim goat and sheep hooves when necessary. Amanda and Juniper take the rabbits out of the cages and let them run around the barnyard for exercise. We make sure every animal has enough water and food, and we keep living areas clean. Sometimes, Juniper and Amanda ride horses, though that has dwindled with the winter’s short days and crowded schedules.

Troops come up for weekends. Some of them arrange to have Amanda guide them through the barnyard, so they can see and pet the animals. Otherwise, the animals spend all their time being animals, living contentedly enough toward spring and summer.

Our family lives contentedly and harmoniously winter day after winter day, learning, adventuring, living toward the warmer days of spring and summer.

About the author:
Jon Remmerde has been writing and publishing essays and poetry about family, homeschooling, wildlife, and the joy of existence for more than 30 years. His website, www.remmerde.com, has samples from his books, which can be ordered online or from any bookstore. Somewhere in an Oregon Valley is about his family’s eight and a half years taking care of a remote cattle ranch in northeastern Oregon. Quiet People in a Noisy World is a collection of 72 essays, 54 of them previously published in newspapers and magazines. Visit his web site:http://www.remmerde.com

10/08 - 4/09
thru 8/2009
thru 12/31/08

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