You ever notice how some lessons just donāt stick the first time around?
Yeah, me too. Iāve got a short memory and donāt always learn from my mistakes. But once I make the same mistake again ā well, thatās when it finally clicks.
So, hereās how this weekās reminder went down.
It was time to take the boys out of the ewe group ā the ones (hopefully) bred for spring lambing. And of course, I was still buried in fieldwork and a pile of half-finished jobs, so I figured, why not save some time?
A shortcut. You know the kind ā seems brilliant for about 10 seconds.
Iāve taken this one before. It ended badly then too. But somehow that little fact slipped my mind.
Now, the proper way to do it wouldāve been to set up three pens and the chute system ā the whole works. Takes a bit of effort, but itās safe and orderly.
Instead, I looked at Anne and said, āJust make a little pen by the door. Iāll jump in there and wrangle the rams myself. Itāll be fine.ā
Famous last words.
I even added, āThey havenāt been very rammy lately.ā
Why I said that, I have no idea. Just last week one clobbered me hard enough to leave a bruise. Youād think that memory mightāve surfaced right about then, but no.
So in we went. First try, we got three of the five rams penned up quick ā smooth sailing, I thought. But as I grabbed the next one, those three decided that Anne holding the gate wasnāt much of an obstacle. Out they went again like it was a jailbreak rehearsal.
Round two.
We reinforced the gate, Anne down at the far end, me in the long narrow pen with the remaining rams and about thirty ewes milling behind me. I had a hold of one big fella and was slowly steering him toward Anne when ā wham!
Without warning I was airborne ā flat out, feet toward Anne, head away ā like Superman in coveralls and rubber boots.
One of the other rams had taken a full-speed run and hit me square in the posterior. Perfect aim.
Anne didnāt even get the chance to yell ā heād hidden his approach perfectly behind me, using my silhouette as cover.
Iām not exaggerating when I say I heard the bones in my back crack ā exactly like the chiropractor does it. I landed flat, stunned, and there he stood, calm as you please, waiting for a head scratch. Which, yes, I gave him.
Now, I canāt even be mad. It was my fault.
I know better.
Itās just their nature, and every time I try the āquick way,ā I get reminded of that ā usually with a sore back.
We did eventually finish the job, working under much higher alert levels than before. I figured Iād be laid up with a heating pad for days. But hereās the weird part ā I feel great. My back hasnāt felt this good in years.
So maybe Iām just getting conditioned to the abuse⦠but Iāll chalk it up to sheer luck.
Either way, that once-unnamed ram now has a name.
The Chiropractor.
Farmer Rod