[•Lancaster FarmiM. Saturday. Aoiil 2. 1994 BA Onbei a farm -And o hazar Joyce B A hint of “empty nest syn drome’’ alwayp haunts my mater nal instincts this time of year. That’s because our nestlings have soared away on their own wings, leaving me behind with no one to help cook, color, hunt, and hide those eggs that figure promi nently into the season. Nor are there as many justifiable excuses for laying in nest supplies like chocolate bunnies, marshmallow peeps, and jelly beans. But if the house nest is less occupied by nestlings (though much of their “nesting materials” remain behind under Mother and Father Bird’s wings), the rest of the farmstead overflows with nests in abundance. As the thick ice on the pond melted out under warming sun shine and gentler breezes, weather damage became apparent at one of the farmstead’s prime nesting sites. A glance toward the pond early one morning, to check the presence of our new Canada goose resident pair, warned of the nest’s imminent disappearance. The covered platform The Far mer had installed mid-pond sever al springs ago was tilting at a steep angle into the water. Apparently the freeze-expansion of the ice had separated the platform from the supporting posts sunk into the pond bottom. And the geese were already exploring and poking around what little bit of the structure remained above-the water surface. So it came to be that, on a brisk, late-March morning, we paddled the canoe through still-icy waters to make repairs. Carefully balanc ing our weight in the “tippy” craft, we lifted, wired and respiked the structure to the supports an unplanned swim had no appeal. Then, while I steadied the canoe with one paddle, The Farmer used the other to lift out the soggy, rot ted old nest materials from the platform floor. Then we turned the boat and I stuffed onto the, plat form a thick pile of grass hay we’d brought along to refurnish the nest. The geese honked furiously from the pond bank during the few minutes it took us to repair and refurbish the nest site. As we paddled back to the pier, they) passed us on their way out to inspect the “island.” And before we were halfway back to the house, the female was in the nest, busily rearranging grass with her beak. Less visible but farther under way are nesting efforts in the old bank bam. Near one comer of the upper floor of the bank bam is a large opening where big, round bales of bedding can be dropped into the heifer pen beneath. Between that access opening and the wall is a narrow, maybe eight-inch-wide, ledge. On that narrow ledge sits a small black hen, hatching out a nest of eggs. It’s a precarious homes he; one misstep out of the nest and she’ll be airborne. Just across the bedding access hole sits a wagonload of hay that has been parked there through the winter. While leaning against the wagon, pondering if we should relocate the black hen’s narrow ledge nest site, something caught my eye. Barely a foot away, at eye level, i pair of beady black eyes gazed oack at mine. My immediate reac ion was to duck, but the honey colored hen never moved. How the plans to get her chicks from Ms nest, hunkered down deep in Mai , Finnsheep I) The children are, Sarah, Willy, Tim, and Louie. Willy’s Birth LINDA WILLIAMS Bedford Co. Correspondent SCHELLSBURG (Bedford Co.) Nine-year-old Willy Mar tin has been especially happy with his own small flock of sheep this spring. One of his ewe Finnsheep had five lambs at one time. Willy says Finnsheep are noted for having more than one lamb at a time. “Dad says he read somewhere that one ewe had eight,” he says. “But three or four are more common. I am really happy with five." Willy has three ewes, three rams, and 11 iambs of his own. be straw bales several feet up in he wagon, is a mystery. And I used to think the kids ;ame up with strange places to tide eggs GOLDEN PRIDE’S FORMULA FOR HEALTH Call Or Write JESSE S. WEAVER 1431 Brunnervllle Rd. Lltltz, PA 17543 717-626-5503 GOOD FOOD OUTLET STORES See Our Original Line Of Golden Barrel Products Hus AH Kinds Of Beans, Candies, Dried Fruit, Snack Mixes, Etc. At Reduced Prices * BAKING MOLASSES * MAPLE SYRUP * BARBADOS MOLASSES * PANCAKE 4 WAFFLE , f* A BLACKSTRAP SYRUPS MOLASSES * SORGHUM SYRUP JL Afll BT'jr * CORN SYRUPS * LIQUID A DRY SUGARS [if jjl, if HIGH FRUCTOSE * PANCAKE * WAFFLE SYRUPS SYRUPS K A A CANOLA OH. v* & ■> \ r' * coconut on. A(I - - your load itore A CORN OIL ■sAU i , doo. not h»ve it, A COTTONSEED OIL send FOR * OUVE 01L BROCHURE A VEGETABLE OIL 1 1 1 * SHOO-FLY PIE MQC Processors Of Syrups. Molasses, Cooking Oils. Funnel Cake Mix, Pancake k Waffle Mix k Shoofly Pie Mix GOOD FOOD OUTLET Located At Good Food, Inc. W. Main St., Box 160, Honey Brook, PA 19344 215-273-3776 1-800-327-4406 Located At L & S Sweeteners 368 E. Main St.. Leola, PA 17540 717-656-3488 1-800-633-2676 - WE UPS DAILY - Finnsheep Gives To Five Lambs Finnsheep have very long and fine wool which Willy feels should be good for spinning. Willy lives on a 107-acre sheep farm with his dad and mom, Dave and Karen, his brothers, Louie. 10; and Tim, 4; and one sister, Sarah, 7. Willie, Louie, and Sarah all attend the Chestnut Ridge School. Louie has three rams and three ewes, all Dorsets. The ewes will have lambs later this spring. Both Louie and Willy help with feeding and shearing their own sheep. “These boys take a lot of pride in their sheep,” says their dad. They are very particular about what their sheep eat because they know this is what makes healthy sheep which have healthy lambs; The family grows all of the hay -MAC five were born and most of the grain which the sheep eat. They pasture them as long as possible. The boys enter their sheep in the Bedford County Fair, and this coming year, will be old enough to participate in the prize divisions. Louie and Willy also have pig projects for 4-H which won them a second-place award at the Pen nsylvania Stale Farm Show. They also placed first and second at Keystone competition. Both are members of the Shawnee Lakers 4-H Club. Finnsheep were originally imported from Finland, a Scandi navian country located in the far northern part of Europe. The Fin nish people are well known for their farming abilities, especially dairy animals and sheep. ] CLOSED SUNDAYS, NEW YEAH, EASTER MONDAY, ASCENSION DAY, WHT MONDAY, OCT. 11, THANKSGIVING, r mirrmi e OHRIS ™ AS 4 December mth. FISHER’S FURNITURE, INC. 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