CattleIn the Fields

Playing In The Rain

calf standing by a pile of hay in the fieldWe all need a little down time, that moment or two throughout the day to kick up a heel or do a little jig. Those carefree moments can seem to transport us from a day of slogging through the rain, to light and carefree exuberance.

Babies of all species learn from those times of wild gyrations or wiggly movements, new muscles are being worked while balance and new abilities are forged.

The younger calves in the nursery field are testing their strength with each other by touching heads and trying to push each other out of the way. They try messing with the bigger calf and even the mom’s in the field, with the larger animals ignoring the little ones attempts to bother them. black angus calf fighting a slab of hay in the fieldThe calves love to run toward the Gator when we are driving out in the field and fly their tales high in the air as they come flying across the pasture.

angus calf scooting in a pile of hayThe newest baby in the nursery field is KAOS,  now just a week old now and can be seen chomping on a single spear of hay during meal time. It is still more important to grab a few slugs of milk from his mother #99 than eating solid food, but he is getting the idea that when there is food being placed in the field it is time to eat.

At mealtime when we throw out slabs of hay, the babies spend time nosing around and sometimes fighting the hay in an attempt to outwit the pile that fluffs into loose hay as the calf flips it around. Once it is broken into a loose pile rather than a stiff slab, the calf changes tactics and flops down in the hay to enjoy the soft downy pile.

It was a gray, rainy day that I happened to get a few pictures of Hopper who was having  a grand time scooting around a slab of hay and trying to work it into submission. He was not troubled by the muddy ground, the rain coming down or any other creatures out in the field. He was busy taking time to play in the rain.

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2 thoughts on “Playing In The Rain

  • Bonnie Shumaker

    Makes me reminiscent of lambing season in the years that we raised sheep. Those young ones seem so full of joy that they can’t help leaping and playing. And the joy spreads to the caretakers, too, as you well know.

    • Taking photos of the enthusiasm is hard because I am chuckling and jiggling the camera at their antics!

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