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Rains & Ramblings

6/26/2018

5 Comments

 
Glorious greens fill every view. Sparkling, juicy, saturated, verdant, lush . . . all my green adjectives fail to express this land's explosive response to serious rain.  As Nettie sang in Carousel, "June is bustin' out all over!" (Although our corn remains far short of the "elephant's eye" in Curley's Oklahoma!)

That recent moisture, the passage of time, and a few days away from 24/7 reminders of Weed have encouraged me to emerge from sadness and anger and choose optimism.  My getaway was five days in Gillette, WY at the National Columbia Sheep Show and Sale, traveling and sharing expenses with two friends who also raise Columbia sheep. We lugged bags of fleece with us, four from Eller ewes to be used in a skills contest for junior Columbia Association member and two from one of my companions to enter in the competitive wool show. Those latter two earned 1st Place Ewe, 1st Place Ram, and Overall Grand Champion fleece awards. That Montana sweep of the fleece show and our relentless evaluation of the show sheep as a threesome led us to be referred to as The Montana Mafia. We enjoyed touching base with MSU's former sheep specialist as he ultrasound scanned ribeye areas of the production ewes and rams. We spent the better part of a long afternoon at a remote ranch south of Gillette to look at a pen of impressive Columbia non-show rams. We enjoyed pricey dinners out, followed by M & M's before bed. None of us followed news from D.C. The break was much-needed by all three of us and we all found sheep to bring home. Of the four I sought, all exceeded my price ceiling during the auction, but I negotiated for a fifth one, a yearling ewe from the same producer as the four that were too rich for my pockets. (Now, a week later, that ewe remains in the trailer parked under a tree while I continue efforts to win her acceptance. She tolerates me as her sole source of feed and water, but does not appreciate my overtures of companionship. I'm thick skinned, however, and unfazed by her selective rejection. In five days, she gets a second dose of pour-on insecticide; then, and only then, can she join companions more to her liking. In the meantime, I shall persevere with my efforts.)

Bidding at the banquet fund raiser was brisk and I was tickled with the price paid for my donated drawing and painting. Equally pleasing to me was a commission that resulted from my donation. After the auction, a woman from Illinois, unknown to me, told me that she loved my watercolor and asked if I would paint a similar piece based on the sort of sheep that she raises--Dorpers. She subsequently sent photos and I have been immersed in efforts to capture the sturdy heft of a Dorper ewe with twin lambs on my new favorite gesso-coated paper. I may need to tone down the blues and purples on the ewe's nose and the center lamb's head, add a hint of foot on the ewe's currently-hidden hind leg, reveal a bit more of hooves in the foreground, tweak here, add a shadow there . . . but this is the state of the project as of today.  
          
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5 Comments
Vicki Anderson
6/27/2018 12:01:22 pm

As always, a funny and very informative! LOVE the painting!

Reply
Margaret Eller
6/27/2018 09:53:27 pm

Thank you, Vicki. Our dose of rain gave me a window to both paint and write, rather than irrigate and hay. What fun.

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Toneybeth Clark
6/27/2018 05:06:55 pm

How exciting that your painting and drawing elicited good prices AND resulted in a commission. Dorper sheep? Those are the weirdest sheep I have seen with their clean line of coloration between head and shoulder. Why have I never heard of Dorper sheep? Of course I googled them and found lots of photos, some showing pinto hindquarters, some shedding, sloughing, moulting their hair/wool. Clearly they are not bred for their wool (maybe that's why I've never heard of them). Your painting captures their distinctive and distinctly odd appearance. What was a Dorper sheep raiser doing at a Columbia conference?
It sounds like the Montana Mafia had a great road trip. I'm glad.

Reply
Margaret Eller
6/27/2018 10:23:37 pm

I and my mafia consorts did, indeed, have a jolly jaunt to WY.

Because we've used a Texel buck w/two thirds of the ewes for the past several years, I am partial to those early-weaning, meat-packing terminal breeds, such as Dorpers. Their wool is of no consequence, equivalent to the other meat breeds, like Suffolk, but their rate of gain and feed efficiency are stellar. That efficiency allows us to market the terminal crossbred lambs at least one month, and sometime two months, earlier than lambs sired by dual-purpose rams. That's huge when pastures are lean and hay scarce. Texel rams look like market hogs, but the easy pounds that their progeny gain count. I also love their temperament: bold, confident, and cheeky, Perhaps that's why they are not popular as sires within western range flocks; the lambs approach rather than flee in panic, a sure bet for coyote enjoyment. I've never owned a Dorper, but I rather like their crisp black head and neck, and I suspect I'd like their attitude. As for why a Dorper producer was in WY at a Columbia show, I have no idea. Perhaps she had a grandchild showing Columbia sheep.

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Margaret Eller
6/27/2018 10:27:45 pm

Second thoughts: I don't know if Dorper sheep are a hair breed or have wool.




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    Margaret zieg eller

    ​For 25 years, Prairie Island has been my anchor, my core, my muse. The seasonal rhythms of land and livestock sustain me. The power of place inspires me.​  

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