And the vet and six students returned

Gertie is crawling around but not standing. She had a steroid shot this morning with more to come (delivered over the coming days by us along with some extra antibiotic injections).

Her temperature and reflexes and heart rate were all fine
But ultimately if she can’t walk then she won’t have any quality of life

A difficult year for lambing at The Gables

Last year was a record year for lambs with 24 born and 22 surviving from 14 sheep. This year we only have 13 live lambs and I’ll explain why

We had to help several of the ewes to deliver. That’s usually the exception rather than the rule here. Of those assisted deliveries many of the lambs were stillborn. On Friday our lovely sheep Spot was in labour all day and we began to get concerned. I called the vet and of our regular vet attended and delivered two lambs who exhibited deformities in their leg joints. He explained that there is a virus which has been infecting cattle, sheep and goats called Schmallenberg virus (named after a town in Germany where it was first noticed). The virus infects the animals through midge bites. If the sheep is bitten and is in the first month of pregnancy the foetus will be reabsorbed. If the sheep is infected after that then the virus produces lambs with deformities. The vets are all teachers at Cambridge veterinary school (part of the university) and they have a small flock of sheep at the vet school. Their flock has been similarly afflicted this year. The good news is that following a midge bite that is carrying virus the sheep become immune to the virus for up to five years.

Last night at 10 o’clock we went out to give the three bottle fed lambs their last feed and to check on the one remaining pregnant sheep, Gertie. She was lying down with a dead lamb next to her snd was still in labour. I had to pull the second lifeless lamb out of her after which she was exhausted and stayed on the ground. We lifted her gently onto a wheelbarrow and wheeled her, by torchlight, to a pen in the barn where we made her comfortable. This morning she was still lying down looking the worse for wear. I called the vet school and another vet we know came out this afternoon with six final year students. They examined Gertie and found a third lamb inside her which they pulled out – lifeless with a twisted head. Poor old Gertie. We have been given injections to administer this week and hope that she will revive.

I’m glad that lambing is over this year. I think that we will retire some of our old girls and just let them live out their days as old ladies at The Gables.

Thanks for the company little friend

I’ve spent the morning shovelling wood chippings into a wheelbarrow

And spreading it over one of the rhubarb patches to suppress the weeds

It has been raining but I’ve now covered it all (this photos was taken when I was about a quarter of the way through)

I’ve been glad of the company of this little Robin and also disturbed by the interview on Woman’s Hour on BBC Radio 4 (last item on today’s programme if you want to use Listen Again).