Okay, so there’s been a lot of grumbling going on at home and at my work (Barb) about me being a slacker on this blog so I decided I should get off my ass and post something.
Based on the limited feedback I’ve received, it would appear
goofy stories about my childhood seem to be the favoured reading material. In
light of this, I thought I would tell the story of the first farm animal my
family ever purchased – Lilah the Holstein 4H cow.
As I believe I mentioned in an earlier blog posting,
although my father was a businessman in his younger years, under his shirt and
tie beat the heart of a farmer. When I was about five, we moved to a 50-acre
farm adjacent to the Hatchley swamp (I’m not joking), located on the southern
edge of Brant County in southwestern Ontario. My parents built a house on the
property, which had soil that ranged from pure sand to boot sucking clay and
produced the largest mosquitoes and snakes known to man. We moved in just days
before the Christmas of 1975. The next spring, my father set to work building a
barn. I believe he had it finished that summer and my mother spent her holidays
from her off-farm job painting the trim around the windows (which came from a
bus, I kid you not), swatting bird-sized mosquitoes and killing a steadily
growing pile of snakes (a story for another day).
After the barn was completed and hay and straw had been
moved into the loft, my father decided we should buy a cow. Now that I’m an
adult, I must admit I’m not sure what my father was thinking when he decided we
needed a cow, and a milk cow no less. Milking cows is a lot of work – they need
to be milked twice a day, seven days a week, 52 weeks a year, for as long as
they are giving milk (they usually dry up just before they have a calf, which
is typically an annual event on a dairy operation). That takes dedication and
skill, skill I don’t think we as a family possessed at that time. But it didn’t
matter – I was just a kid then and I was very excited by the prospect of a new
animal to maul, even if it did weigh 1,000 pounds.
I’m not sure how the transaction came about or where exactly
she came from or even how she got to the farm (I seem to remember something
about her walking behind the truck but that can’t be true) but one day Lilah
arrived at the farm. Lilah was huge – (well she looked huge to six-year-old
me), a large boned, black and white Holstein, a milking breed. And she was fat,
huge with a baby calf that was expected fairly soon. I was ecstatic – a
two-for-one deal! My mother was leery.
Lilah was moved into the barn and a pen was quickly
constructed out of straw bales. A pasture was also made near the barn in the
apple orchard using old fence posts and barbed wire. During the day, Lilah
would graze in the pasture and at night, she came into the barn. But since
there was no plumbing in the barn yet, my father had to lead her down to the
pond morning and night for a drink.
The cool thing about Lilah was she had been a 4H calf in her
youth, meaning she was halter trained and spoiled rotten. She had been brushed,
trimmed and coddled by the dairy farmer’s son and shown at fairs across the
region. She was basically a very large cow that thought it was a dog. My mother
would watch in horror as my dad tried to lead her to the water. Lilah would
jump and buck and kick in her excitement and basically drag my father to the
pond and then drag him back to the barn. She would lower her head and moo at
him, trying to butt him with her forehead (a common cow behaviour) and my dad
would have to hide behind a tree while she worked off her energy.
Lilah even came with her own urban … umm … rural legend: she
had saved the life of the dairy farmer’s son by pulling the drowning boy out of
an irrigation pond he had fallen in. Who knows if the story was true – I was
ready to believe the damn cow could fly – but Lilah did have an interesting
skill that not every cow possessed. She was broke to ride like a horse. Every
chance I could, I would beg my dad to boost me up on that cow’s back so I could
ride her around the field, clutching her built in “handle” – the bony ridge at
her withers. She would start off the ride gently but once she had enough, she
would take me under a low tree branch and knock me off.
I thought she was wonderful.
Everyday after school, I would jump off the bus, run up the
driveway and check on the cow. As the due date of her expected calf drew
closer, she was kept in the barn most of the time. One day, I came into the
barn and was met by a deep moo and then a smaller little croak. The baby had
come! Lilah was laying in the deep straw of her pen and beside her lay a little
black and white calf. I was so excited, I jumped into the pen to see the little
one.
Now, those of you who have a farming background already know
that jumping into the pen of an animal that has just had a baby is a very
stupid thing to do. No matter how tame the animal, you just don’t know how they
will react to a human being in the mix. I was a naïve six-year-old and was
clueless about animal behaviour. I curled up beside the calf and Lilah in the
straw to enjoy the newest member of the family. And Lilah just lay there,
chewing her cud.
About an hour later, my mother came home from work. My older
siblings told her all about the new calf. After doing a quick head count, my mother
asked where I was. Out to the barn the group marched and discovered me lying in
the pen. My mother thought I had been trampled. But I was just curled up beside
the calf, both of us sleeping while Lilah watched over us.
The little calf turned out to be a girl – a heifer – and we
called her Rosebud in honour of my mother. Unfortunately, not long after her
arrival, my dad had to sell Lilah, realizing there was no way we could properly
care for this milk-producing machine. A truck came and the pair were loaded.
I cried as they drove down the laneway.
I cried as they drove down the laneway.
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