Sunday, July 31

The Shearer's Life



I would recommend reading "The Shearer's Motel" by Roger MacDonald for an account of how tough the shearer's job really is. Also Ray Sherman's "The Shearing Life in Australia" for some great stories and photographs. I have written about shearing before but there was an interesting front page article in the Sydney Morning Herald earlier this year.

The SMH article by Debra Jopson highlighted the toughness of the job and the nationwide shortage of good shearers. In 2006 the census counted only 4,173 shearers and they have to shear about 70 million sheep in a year - that's almost 17,000 each and at $2.50 a sheep makes $42,500 income per annum. Not much for some of the fittest athletes in the world. Of course the best shearers will earn $80 - 100,000 pa and good on them!

The Dubbo TAFE trainer observed that shearers now do warm up and down exercises and have training regimes to protect against injuries and prolong their careers. I can see the day when our local shearers are regular visitors to our planned yoga studio to learn some techniques to improve their core strength and flexibility and some ways to destress that don't involve a hundred beers. Not such a stretch when you consider most of the football players they watch every weekend are probably already using yoga in their training regimes.

Perhaps we will open the first yoga retreat in the Goulburn area and have a shearer's night once a month with prana, kirtan, asana, mudra and meditation followed by light beers and karma yoga in the shearing shed?

Sunday, July 24

Comic Alphabets



Always wanted to fill in the gaps and Miles Kingston already had in The Independent, January 1999.
A. Not much variation here. Everyone liked " 'Ay for 'Orses" except for a brave few who preferred "Ava Gardner".
B. "Beef or mutton" was the clear favourite here. Nobody liked my "beef or lamb", thinking it was far too modern. Other ideas which cropped up were "Beaverbrook", "bee for honey", "beef or mince", "before my time" and "B for Hugo". Before you go, I guess. I did, however, invent one myself here, which I was very proud of. "B for castle". Get it? "Belvoir Castle". Well, never mind.
C. Nobody liked my "Cephos Salt" either. The clear leader was "Seaforth Highlanders", though "C for yourself" was quite popular.
D. I couldn't detect a clear swing here. I was offered Differential, Deferential, D for Kate, Deaf or dumb, D for glory, Defer Payments, and Dee for Salmon. Several people insisted that Deaf or dumb was all right, because "deaf" was pronounced "deef" in the North-east, and I bet it is.
E. Eve or Adam, Eva Bartok, 'Eave a brick, Ether gas, Evolution, Eva Peron, Eva Braun, Eave oh, my hearties. I am not sure I like any of them terrifically, but there they are.
F. "Effervescence" seemed the clear favourite, though "efflorescence" cropped up quite a lot. "F for lasting" was suggested. So was "F for green", which I didn't understand until I spoke it out loud and got "evergreen".
G. Apparently, quite a lot of your parents got round the letter G by using it as a mild expletive. "Gee, for Gosh sake!", "Gee, forget it!", "Gee for crying out loud!" were all popular. Clapham and Dwyer's version, it seems, was "G for y Toye" which is incomprehensible till you learn that Geoffrey Toye was an impresario of the time. Still pretty feeble, though. The best one by far, as most of you agreed was "G for police" (Chief of Police). One or two tried "Jeefer Screepers". I wish you hadn't.
H. A lot of versions of the letter H turned on the fact that "aitch" sounds like "age". So I was offered "H for consent", "H for retirement", and so on. The best of these, possibly, was "H for beauty". Other versions heard H more like "ache" or "itch". Mr Stabb wrote from Cornwall to say that in a Cornish accent "Aitch for Scraitching" was quite all right. But I think the best was "H for Himself" (occasionally followed by "and run like mad!").
I. Ivor Emmanuel. Ivor Cutler. Ivor Novello. I for looting (high-falutin). I for an eye. I for a pretty girl.
J. J is just about the only letter on which everyone agrees, apart from X: Jaffa oranges.
K. From the days when "kaffir" was a common word, plenty of people remember being told that it was K for kraal, K for farmer, and so on. There was also the oddly English pronunciation of "cafe" as "kafe", hence K for restaurant. The most popular by far was K for answers (Kay Francis, a once famous film actress of whom I had never heard).
L. Most of us prefer L for Leather but there is also L for goblin (elf or goblin), L for Romeo and L for happiness. (How about L for Beta Gamma Delta?)
M. Emphasis or Emphasise is the clear favourite. I was also offered M forever blowing bubbles, which is novel; Emphysema, which is clever; and M for cream sherry, which is puzzling till you remember Emva was a make of sherry. Or was it Enva? In which case it should be in...
N. Lots here. Information. Envelope. N for eggs. N for cement (enforcement). Enfilading. N for a penny. N for no (inferno). I think the leader was the old N for a dig (infra dig). I did manage to think of a new one myself here, which was Enver Hoxha, but somebody else thought of that as well. And in his Comic Alphabets book, Eric Partridge reveals that the idea was thought of long ago, in Enver Pasha or Enver Bey, the once-famous leader of the Young Turks.
O. O for the wings of a dove. O for a muse of fire. O for a pint. O for a pee. O for the rainbow. O for the garden wall. O for my shoulder. O for seas. O for board. O for my dead body. O for the sea to Skye. O for coat.
P. P for relief was the clear winner, ahead of P for the doctor, P for comfort, P for whistle, P for Daddy and P for a penny. The cleverest came from Rosemary Thornton who said that her father taught her P for church because Peover Church near Knutsford in Cheshire is actually pronounced that way.
Q. Amazing what people have queued for in the past. I was given Q for rations, Q for fish and chips, Q for tickets, Q for the 1/9s, Q for bananas, Q for a bus, and - more modern - Q for clubbing. But the commonest was Q for everything. Those who heard it as "cue" gave me Q for billiards and Q for a song.
R. R for mo, R for Askey, R for English, R for bitter. That was it. No upmarket ones at all. No R for Miller, R for Bryant, R for Quiller Couch or even R for sea clerk.
S. S for you, S for example were the most common, but people remembered all the ones commemorating Esthers: S for Williams, S for Ralston, S for Rantzen, S for McCracken (who she?), S for Waters (who she too?) and S for Ofarim.
T. Everyone said T for two, except the few who said T for mouf and T for dentures.
U. U for me, U for nerve, U for got, U for mism, U for Pendragon. I liked Richard Stamp's U for today (youth of today!) and I was glad to learn that U for films refers to a defunct German film company called UFA Films.
V. V for la France, l'amour, Zapata, Espana and la difference.
W. Nobody was very happy with W, but most settled for Double You for a Shilling, or W for a Quid.
X. X for breakfast was universally liked.
Y. Y for goodness sake was popular. Less so was Y for runts (Y-fronts). But most people went for the "Wife or..." pattern. Y for husband, Y for mistress, and even Y for secretary and Y for partner. A couple of lone cockney voices suggested Y for thin and Y for communion biscuits.
Z. A difficult letter to end on. Z for breeze (zephyr breeze) was the commonest, even if we all felt it was feeble. Occasional references to old Zephyr cars, such as Z for Six, and Z for Zodiac, and two brave suggestions of Zeffirelli. Z for effect, Z someone. Two people said they had been told Z the raven and didn't know why. Sounds like the old Edgar Allan Poe line "Quoth the raven" to me...

Tuesday, July 12

Lambing Strategy


With the lambing season almost upon us it is critical that we make the right choices now to maximise our lambing percentages. We have 128 Border Leicester ewes in lamb; 67 twins, 47 single and up to 14 dry giving us a starting percentage of 141. We also have 49 of 61 maiden Merino ewes in lamb so we are going to busy next month.

Having had 5 centimetres of snow here in late June we are hoping that the weather is milder and kinder. Our first choice is which ewes to put in which paddock. We review food availability, shelter, aspect and accessibility. We try to avoid having too many ewes expecting twins in a paddock that is too small or too exposed. A neighbour lost 40% of his lambs born in the late June cold snap partly due to the sub-zero temperatures but also because the ewes rejected the second twin.

The NSW DPI recommends about 18 ewes/hectare and a paddock that can provide 1 MT Dry Matter/ha for single and 1.2 MT DM/ha for twin bearing ewes. With the season we are having and with crops of alfalfa and oats/turnips we can certainly provide that.

Newborn lambs have very limited fat reserves and a high surface area to mass ratio making them highly susceptible to chill stress. We have windrowed fallen timber to provide shelter and the twin bearing ewes will go into the paddock with north and easterly aspects. In spring we will start planting more trees for shelter and carbon sequestration.

We will also trial the Foxlight product that won the ABC New Inventors show a while back this year. The battery operated lights flash randomly from dusk to dawn to mimic a person shining a torch around the paddock. The fox believes there are people about and is diverted away from the lambs. Usually we bait for foxes but this year a combination of the lights, alpaca and human hair and urine bags (!!) will do the trick without burying highly toxic chemical laden chicken heads. 

Let's hope that it is a good season and we can maintain a 125+ percentage.