Piglet Paradise

14 January 2009
Another year begins and our block is bursting with animal life. We now have 6 piglets running around full of the joys of life, constantly docking in at the Joy station for a regular feed. We lost 1 piglet at only 5 days old. We’re not sure how as it was outside the back of the shed. There were no marks on its small body so we have to assume that maybe it was crushed and that Joy then moved its body outside the shed. It was a sad loss and having been the one to discover it, Aaron found it quite hard to deal with. The next day Aaron was at home. Completely paranoid about losing another pig he spent much of the day checking and rechecking the piglets. And then he discovered another lifeless piglet beneath Joy’s back leg. He picked it up and tried to wake it but without success, and so, not knowing what else to do he massaged it’s little heart for what seemed like an eternity before the piglet eventually came back to life.
And now the wee piglets are 2 weeks old. Since they reached the 1 week milestone they have been ripping around the paddocks with mum. This is both a little scary and amusing to watch. The grass is quite long and the terrain hilly and rugged and yet despite the obstacles and possibility of getting lost they show little fear. They stumble, trip and roll and zip around the paddocks in a style reminiscent of a younger Phyllis. Spike and co are also currently sharing the paddock with Joy and piglets and so far it all seems very harmonious. I have seen the sheep watching the piglets racing around outside the shed and they seem bemused but unfazed.
At only 12 days old the piglets learnt how to wallow. This is scariest of all when they clamber into a big pool of mud with mum and slowly submerge themselves next to her. I do not know how they have not been rolled on or sucked under as she moves or stands up. I have spent a lot of time with them on a daily basis and they are becoming quite used to human company. Even at 3 days old I had a couple of them sniffing my hand and scratching their ears on my gumboots. They still don’t like being picked up (I’m not sure any pig does) but occasionally I’ll get to rub a little tummy or scratch a back. Overall Joy has been a reasonably good first time mum. She’s had to learn a few things very quickly and gets some stuff wrong but she seems to be coping well. The thing I have been most impressed with though is her complete trust in both me and Aaron. I have read numerous things about the protective and aggressive nature of sows with babies but not once has she displayed any aggression at our involvement with her litter. Occasionally she’ll tell me off for outstaying my welcome but other than that she’s been good. Phyllis is due in about 5 weeks time and she misses Joy terribly. Although they can see each other across the drive Joy has little time to spare for idle chit chat through the wires. At the moment our plan is to reunite Joy and Phyllis in a couple of week’s time and then separate them again a few days before Phyllis is due. As always we will be approaching this with some trepidation. We figure the piglets will be fast enough and strong enough to avoid mishaps with their aunt but I do worry there may be some unwanted aggression or jealousy aimed at the piglets. Of course what I do find is that when I worry about something happening it doesn’t but when I don’t worry it does. Go figure… The Flock Increases Thyme our adult matriarch sheep blessed us with another little lamb last Wednesday. It was something of a shock. I’d realised 2 weeks prior that she was pregnant but had somehow calculated that she had a good 7 or 8 weeks to go. It was quite a shock to take the dogs for a walk after dinner and discover this cute little black and white spotted thing by its mother’s side. Hazel and Tulip are also due and I am surprised it is now a week later and they have not yet given birth. We have fingers crossed for Hazel’s baby as the last one died after only 2 days. It had been so big we can only assume it was injured during birth. If it happens again Hazel will be sent to the butcher with the lambs we are sending off in March. I have high hopes that things will be okay though as her first lamb Treacle is now a very healthy and robust ewe. A Box of Quackers Last Friday afternoon Aaron arrived home with 2 boxes containing 11 young Indian Runner Ducks. We had ordered 15 but the breeder had lost a lot of eggs to rats. Over the past few months we have fenced an L-shaped section of land in front of and to the side of the house. It contains our 2 orchards and an area planted in mainly native trees. With our complete inability to raise chickens successfully we felt we needed another option for keeping our gardens free of insect pests. So we decided on ducks. So much nicer than chickens. What could possibly go wrong? We’d spent hours digging out an area of the gully below the house and creating a dam so that the ducks could have a pond. Next we’d built a rather nice duck house next to the chicken coop and I’d painted it black with diesel oil. The dogs loved it, spending several hours in there while I scrubcut paths down the hill to the pond. Quite frankly, it was my idea of duck heaven. I had assumed Aaron would place a bowl of feed next to the duck house and release the ducks into the house and then leave them too it. We hadn’t discussed it though and Aaron decided to take the boxes of ducks directly down to the pond. He opened the boxes and out the ducks ran. Unfortunately they kept running, straight through the first post and batten fence and then through the deer fence and into Frank’s property, where upon they split up, ran in different directions and went into hiding. My phone rang at work “Hello” “Well that was a waste of f***ing time wasn’t it?!” “What??” “The ducks! They’re all gone. They were ours for all of 30 seconds” And so there it was, our latest animal disaster. Not to mention our latest financial disaster. I doubt I could have lost $200 that fast at a casino. There was nothing to do but to leave work early. The boss was obliging but I was still an hour away from home. An hour’s a long time for a duck on the run. All the way home I begged the higher forces of nature, deceased relatives and friends, and even passing spirits to help out. This was one loss too many. I just couldn’t cope with another failure I needed help and I just couldn’t do it on my own. Eventually I got home, raced inside, got changed and raced outside again. Aaron rang Frank and we climbed over the back fence into Frank’s deer paddock. Frank appeared with a fishing net containing a duck. It was injured and pouring blood from a head wound. I clasped it to my chest and it seemed to take comfort from the gentle strokes down its back. We walked the fence line and I discovered 2 ducks hiding in the tall weeds between the 2 fences. Aaron captured one with the net and the other ran back into our property and hid in the gully. We had a look around for a bit longer but quite frankly the area to search was vast and the search seemed futile. “What is it with you two and animals?” Frank was laughing. I have no doubt we are an endless source of amusement for our neighbours. “Actually Frank, I’m thinking we should move back to the city and periodically burn $100 bills. We’d be less stressed and be achieving the same affect”. The duck I was holding had stopped bleeding. I looked at Aaron, “What do we do? Take it inside?” “Nah. It’s better off with its mates. If it doesn’t make it it doesn’t make it.” Aaron took the 2 ducks and put them on our side of the fence. They ran towards the pond. The duck in hiding appeared and then 2 more suddenly shot out of the grass. They all leapt into the pond. We had 5. 5 wasn’t as good as 11 but it was definitely better than none. We thanked Frank and called it quits. We went back to the house and grabbed food, vegetable crates, hay, coffee sacks and roofing iron. Down at the pond we hastily erected a temporary house and placed the food next to it. The ducks were in hiding behind the dam so we left as quickly as possible. Back up at the house we periodically peered down at the gully. The ducks were quacking noisily and spent much of the evening swimming and bathing. By late evening we had 8 ducks. I was feeling better about the situation. If they liked the pond maybe they’d stay and maybe they’d all return safely. The next morning we tried to count the ducks by standing on a picnic table on the patio and peering through the trees and long grass but it turns out the ducks have excellent vision and as soon as I tried to look they would see me and quickly hide behind a tree. Eventually I went to take them food. I did this by sneaking down the back fenceline and then calling out to warn them I was approaching. They heard, they saw and they ran. As they quickly disappeared over the back of the dam I swear I counted 10. I put the food out and went back to the top of the hill. They returned about an hour later and as soon as I heard them splashing in the pond I stood back on the picnic table and peered down the hill again. I could only see partial bodies but I was sure there were 10. I had assumed we would be getting the rather beautiful brown or fawn coloured runner ducks but again I had not communicated this to Aaron. He thought they only came in white. White is what we got. White with bright yellow beaks. I realise now that this was a blessing as it would be impossible to see the ducks in the grass and trees if they weren’t white. As for releasing them by the pond, well that was another fortunate incident as I am sure it is the pond that makes them stay. Perhaps I should not talk to Aaron more often! On Sunday I had less success with getting the ducks to see that I was a provider of food. One sight or sound from me and they were off running behind the pond and up into the overgrown native plantings. They disappeared for hours, letting out only an occasional quack. I took a walk down the drive and into Spotty and Stanley’s paddock. I crossed the gully and walked to the top of the hill. From there I peered through the trees. There they were, not hiding as I expected but very comfortably seated in a group under a manuka tree on a grass patch they had nicely flattened out. They looked very settled. This was a good sign. They have continued to run off at the first sight or sound of me except for this evening. Finally they decided to hang around and watch what I was doing, quickly running to their food after I left. I’m starting to feel good about this situation now.

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