Monday, 29 October 2018

No Sheep in Jamaica

No Sheep in Jamaica

The Pipe and Slipper Farm is an animal preserve. We say...For all creatures great and small.
At one time The Pipe and Slipper had up to eleven or twelve goats. How we acquired the goats is another tale.
When you buy a truckload of goats you're bound to have a few that are going to have little ones. The little ones are called kids. A mother goat is a nanny or a doe. We had two nannies that delivered kids. A set of twin females and a set of twin males. The male billy goats were wild from the start up and cute as can be. Jumping in the air, chasing each other and climbing anything they could climb as they grew larger every week. We watched small horns appear which grew large then got thick and curled like the horns of a mountain goat. They used these horns to tear the fences down. All this happened within a few months. They gained weight and developed a bad odour along with a bad attitude. Goats are not good listeners. The only thing you can count on...is that a billy goat will always do exactly what you don't want it to do, it will always smell bad and have a beard that no stylist would touch. Looking into the eyes of a goat. You will notice a sinister goofy stare.
  • My friend Tyler was hiking a mountain trail in South America and became bombarded by rocks from above. He looked up expecting to see some human being trying to snuff him out. He was shocked to find a pair of billy goats pushing rocks off the cliff toward him. This is sinister behaviour.
Little Joe and Maurice were the names of our billy goats. Little Joe became a giant, Maurice was only slightly smaller but a sneaky devil.
Doing our chores is usually a positive activity. Especially on a sunny March day. I was crossing the barnyard carrying a bail of hay, thinking that spring was on the way and starting to feel the warmth of the sun on my face. I heard a light pounding of hooves on the ground behind me and felt something hard as stone hit me just above the buttocks on my lower back. I was propelled forward dropping the hay as I tried to windmill myself backwards from landing in the melting stinking manure pile. I hit it with a squishy slap. I rolled over on my back in wet manure and told Maurice what I thought his new name should be. I flailed around getting back on my feet. Maurice stood looking at me with his goofy goat eyes and charged again. I was on my feet, and slippery with slime. I lifted my foot to stop him and my boot stuck between his horns. He backed up and pulled my boot off. Down I went. Back in wet manure with just a sock on one foot. I teetered my way up off the ground and out of the mess. Trying to balance on the big toe of my sock only foot, I hobbled to the house and up on the porch starting to undress outside while two cats quietly watched me through the window.
A few weeks later we went on a short vacation in Jamaica. When we arrived at our room, I threw open the curtains that faced the back garden. There was a big white goat grazing just outside our window.
I enjoyed a rum cocktail and snickered to myself. We had just walked past a cafe advertising lamb chops for happy hour. There are no sheep in Jamaica but lots of goats. Who could tell the difference between a lamb chop and a goat chop? Lol

More Tales from the Pipe and Slipper.....
Johnny LeBarr

John LeBarr Oct 2018


Sent from LeBarrs iPad

Wednesday, 25 July 2018

Picking at Lake of Two Rivers

One of our best days in a long time. Blueberry jam in January. It'll be fine.

Thursday, 17 May 2018

New dog residence at The Slipper

Someone might do the odd oil painting in there if it's okay with the dogs that are coming over. We are starting a dog team for the Iditarod race in Alaska. There's a new race for dogs that like to walk instead of run. It's called the Iditaslob. We've registered for that first. It's for training only.

Saturday, 28 April 2018

A Beautiful Day on the Veld

We took a hike this week out in the sunshine. It was warm and just what we needed to put us in tune. There was a frog named Carl who joined us for a while. The time passes quickly at The Pipe and Slipper.....

Tuesday, 17 April 2018

Easter Egg Hunt 2018

On the way to Ukulele Hill to find some eggs. Oh yes, they are chocolate.

Wednesday, 7 March 2018

We are saving up to get a fine pair of giraffes.

We need to organize a barn raising event for....The first giraffes in Washago. We'll also need....Some large sweaters and britches. Looking for volunteers to pick up giraffe patties during Canada Day parade.

The Incredible Tale of the Peacock and the Train! Believe it or Not.

A good read.

Last spring we got these two beautiful peacocks.  A real pair of love birds. 

One sunny day the peacocks were stepping around and picking up seeds under the clothesline.  I came out on the porch and started hanging up laundry.  I guess it spooked these two and they flew off into the bush.  The bush around the farm is a dangerous place.  Many a chicken, rabbit or squirrel has lost their life unexpectedly as they doddled around in the trees.  

We searched for the peacocks for a few hours but only the male turned up.  We chased him back to the barn.  We just thought the female,  Penelope, had been snatched up by a fox or raccoon.  Peacocks can fly but they tend to run along on the ground if something is chasing them.  This would have made her an easy dinner for a wild critter.

We’ll skip ahead six months to late October.  We were watching the male Peacock, David, one afternoon.  He seemed lethargic and sedentary.  Every little while he’d peck Merle the turkey on the head or knock a chicken off the roost.  Not a happy guy.

We decided to find him a new mate.

Nelly checked kijiji and the first thing she saw was... Free female peacock available to good home.  Mactier.

Mactier is 96km from our house.  We called and a lady told us that 13 other people had responded to the add.  They all said they were coming to pick up the peacock.  We told her that we’d be there in an hour.  Up the road we went with a cage and some birdseed in the car.

We followed directions she had given us and came to a cottage on the lake just north of Mactier.  A man met us as we got out of the car.  He told us that him and his wife were headed to Florida for the winter and had to get rid of this peacock that had been there all summer.  He said his sons worked for CN Rail and had found the peacock stuck on the front of a train at the rail yard in Mactier.  They had brought it back to the cottage, where it spent the summer.

We put the peacock in the car and took it home.  I took the peacock to the barn.  It hopped out of the cage and up on to the perch where our former peacock sat.  David the male was beside her in a flash.  It was his mate that had vanished six months previously.  They were happy as clams.  Lovebirds I should say.

To summarize... Our bird had gotten spooked and flew across the highway to the train tracks. She was hit by a train and became stuck in the grill at Washago.  The train traveled to Mactier, where it stopped in the yard almost 100kms from Washago.  The boys took the peacock out of the grill and back to the cottage.  This is where we picked it up after finding it instantly on kijiji.

More Tales from The Pipe and Slipper.....