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Ranger Trampings

The world is ahead.

Island life

Island life

October 12, 2011 gingerranger Comments 0 Comment

Life on the island has been pretty exciting the last couple of months. For those of you who aren’t following the official San Diego Zoo blog at this link: http://blogs.sandiegozoo.org/author/steph-walden/, you may not know that kiwi are crazy birds! My supervisor Sarah seems to think we’ll finish this research to become more confused and mystified by kiwi than when we started! They apparently started breeding 1.5 months earlier than last year, also giving us more nests by far. We were pretty psyched about all of the excitement for chicks… but then the mess set in. Multiple males have abandoned their nests, and some chicks haven’t survived. Luckily we had some successful hatches in late September!

kiwi chick
“Babe” in Dave’s hands

I’ve enjoyed watching the seasons on the farm. The pastures now hold many cute lambs – both twins and singles. When we’re done finding our kiwi (usually by early afternoon), there’s sometimes farmwork we can help with. We’ve helped with mustering (riding on the motorbike to round up sheep), drafting (separating ewes, hoggetts, and rams), and docking (clipping lambs’ ears and putting rubber bands on tails and balls to cut off blood supply and make them fall off). It’s fascinating to watch the dogs work for Dave. He barely has to do anything… but when the dogs do misbehave it’s rather amusing to hear kind Dave’s voice change to crazy Dave. 🙂

donkey
Aww, it’s our “baby” donkey!

Flowering tree

commute
As close to Rush Hour as I get!

Here are some photos for your enjoyment. In addition to farmwork, there’s a camp on the island and the police/army run drills there. (That’s what Dave, Ros, and Sarah tell me, and I don’t think they’re all pulling my leg!)
In the woolshed…

packing
Sarah packs down wool by stomping. It’s fun!!
shearing
The shearing tool Dave uses

Docking…

lamb
Rose with one of our adorable lambs
slide
The slide we put the poor lambs on for docking

There was even a wedding in August! Sarah, Rose, and I got to attend the pre-reception reception in Xtra Tufs because we had helped decorate camp and hose down the barge.

The main room in the camp building got all decorated for a wedding!
wedding people
The bride was pretty excited to change into her “gumboots” for the ride.
boarding
Everyone got to the wedding by taking a ride on the barge that Dave typically uses to move livestock!

We definitely have more happening on the island than just farming and kiwi research! The crew is fun, I have 4 puppies I can visit, and our findings are never quite predictable.

petition
Our petition to Dave and Ros
milking
When Dave and Ros leave the island, the kiwi crew sometimes steps in for farm chores…
b&w ponga
Bush photography involves tricky lighting, so I tried this one in B&W.

Life is pretty interesting out there! I like it, but St. G will always be my island home, I think. (No offense, NZ.)


New Zealand
farmwork, kiwi, New Zealand, seasonal changes

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0 thoughts on “Island life”

  1. terialaska says:
    October 20, 2011 at 13:48

    Hehe, I like the petition to Dave and Ros. Why do they “dock” the animals? I understand why they would be castrated but is there a medical reason for clipping their ears?
    Gorgeous picture of the tree in the sunshine.

    Reply
    1. gingerranger says:
      November 3, 2011 at 17:39

      The petition mostly worked! But now they’ve moved them again. 🙁
      I think they dock to avoid having sheep with poopy butts and potential parasites/infections. If you look at fully grown sheep, they often still have a mess. 🙂 Here’s a link for your browsing pleasure!

      Reply
  2. Sue Schweier says:
    October 17, 2011 at 09:29

    Awww, the baby donkey. What a cutie!
    Love that you’re sharing your personalized view of this part of the world.
    Sending good wishes from your hometown.
    Love, Sue Schweier

    Reply
  3. Dad says:
    October 12, 2011 at 01:48

    But where are the pictures of their tractors????????

    Reply
    1. gingerranger says:
      October 12, 2011 at 19:09

      Dave and Ros don’t use the kind of tractors you’re looking for! You’re hopeless. (They don’t have a big crop farm or a need to clear land, as far as I know.)

      Reply

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