29 April 2018

A Few Photos From Drumlee

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It's a mixture of sun and cloud here today, so when I popped over to Emma's to visit her animals I tried to stick to the shade. Anything I took in the sun looked awful by comparison. Only a photographer is grumpy enough to complain about a sunny day. Sheds are very useful on days like these - here are Jack and Emma:





Lambs have fully integrated themselves into life here, considering there haven't been sheep here before.

I went to photograph yearling colt Magee, but it was old Dash who was standing in all the right places.









I took a photo of just Emma too!



And then the Labradors.





At last we had it, from light to dark!

28 April 2018

Technicolour Triplets

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Last night I paid a visit to Bob's extended family. I was there mostly to visit Ever and her adorable triplets. Ever is a pedigree Zwartbles ewe, owned by Natalie. She was teaching her lambs about stranger danger and came nowhere near me.



Natalie is a trusted friend.



Ever knows her routine well, and walked straight for the shed where her family spends the night.



In the pink corner we have Belle, in the orange is Dahlia and Sunny is in blue.



Don't get left behind, Sunny!



Reunited and off they go.



Oh no he's lost again.







It's nice in the shed. The coats can come off.





Hugs for Belle.





And a little drink too.



(Under Ever's watchful eyes, of course.)





Another ewe and her lambs in for the night.





The ewes with the older lambs stayed outside.









This is Bruce. He was a pet lamb last year. He's grown so much!



And this is Darcy, Bob's younger sister.





I can see the family resemblance!

26 April 2018

Esther Lives!

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Flora and Martin did amazingly well in the kitchen.





And they were soon joined by another little lamb, the absolutely minute Esther.





Just to give you a sense of scale, Martin is the smaller of the twins.



The day after these photos were taken, Esther took ill. She was off her milk, and her poo was runny with blood in it. I took her to the vet, who gave her a few injections. She was very popular in the surgery - the vet took a picture of her, she thought she was so cute! The receptionist saw her too, and some dog owners stroked her outside the surgery. Esher had a high temperature, despite being inside the kitchen, and because she was so tiny it was touch and go. But I have good news!



Esther lives!



She showed signs of recovery the morning after her vet visit, and after a few days she was happily skipping around the kitchen!



She's the sweetest little thing! I'm so very glad her story has a happy ending.

24 April 2018

It's a Long Way to Connemara

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Over the past weekend some members of my camera club and myself went on a trip to Connemara on Ireland's west coast. It is an absolutely beautiful place. We set off on Friday morning around nine, and it was ten hours before we set foot in the hotel, simply because there were so many beautiful places along the way too!

The first place we stopped was here - Glencar Waterfall, in County Leitrim. After we had had our lunch in the lovely café, we walked up to the waterfall. It's very pretty.





It's all about framing up that perfect shot.



I'd brought my little Blue Belle figurine with me, partly for good luck, and partly so I could take some pictures of it wherever I went, like a little mascot for the farm.





I climbed a few more steps and there was a tiny flock of sheep. This was the first of many encounters with the Mayo Blackface sheep.



Next to the café were yet more sheep, so of course I had to take pictures of them too.





The waterfall and café are on the opposite side of the road from the car park, which looks out on - you guessed it - more sheep.



Turn around and there is a dramatic cliff face.



We journeyed on. Some colourful plastic flowers in Westport, County Mayo:



We then stopped at a memorial sculpture to the Famine, but I do confess that I took a moment to look at some sheep across the road first...





The view behind the sculpture was the best I had seen so far.





The sculpture itself was very powerful.





I got a photo of little Blue Belle there too.



But then my attention was drawn to the real horses and ponies that had been distant silhouettes in the bay. They were coming closer!







We got into the cars again, and then we came upon Doolough Valley, also in County Mayo. It was truly breathtaking.









A little further on, we arrived at our hotel, a full ten hours after we had set off that morning.

The following morning, after a full Irish and too many slices of toast, we headed for Cong which sits on the borders of Mayo and Galway. I was having trouble with the insoles of my boots so I didn't take many pictures here, and I didn't really like how they turned out. But Blue Belle had fun at the Abbey!



We stopped for lunch (or in my case, something to drink - Cong was very warm!), and by the time that was done, it was approaching two o'clock. The others were heading to Kylemore Abbey, but I had somewhere else that I really wanted to be - Killary Sheep Farm. Thankfully it was on the way to the Abbey, so I was dropped off, and of course it immediately started raining. But I wasn't bothered, as there were lambs in the shed!







They were very cute. I really wanted to turn this into a lamb shopping opportunity, but it wasn't very practical, really, so far from home. But being in the shed, I got a close-up look at the Mayo Blackface. This one had had her lamb that morning.





I really like them, and I would love to get my hands on a couple of ewe lambs at some stage.

Farming is not all sunshine and roses. This ewe lost her lamb to a fox, so farmer Tom is using the skin of the dead lamb to try and trick the ewe into rearing another one.





There were some weaned pet lambs. They were quite a size.







Also in the shed were ewes and their lambs. They could come and go as they pleased.









The view from Tom's yard.



As three o'clock approached, more tourists started to arrive. The rain wasn't falling just as heavily, so Tom led us out to enjoy his sheepdog demonstration. My camera got a bit wet, but totally worth it!























The star of this display was sheepdog Roy. (He reminds me of Sheila so much!)





Display over, we all went inside to feed the pet lambs. I fed my favourite, a little two-day-old Mayo Blackface ewe. Since I couldn't take her home with me, I called her Ruth in my honour.



The rest of the pet lambs enjoyed the attention too.











My lift back to the hotel arrived, but before I left I squeezed in a little more sheep photography.







What a trip it was. The weather was (mostly) fantastic, and I ended up falling in love with both Connemara and its stunning landscape, and the Mayo Blackface sheep. The hotel provided great rooms and delicious meals, and the company I was with provided the great craic. Words cannot describe how much I enjoyed myself!