http://touchtheearthfarm.blogspot.com/
Friday and Saturday I attended a sheep shearing course taught by David Green, an extension agent emeritus of Carroll County, Maryland, and an all around really nice guy who has been doing this course for 50 years now! And no, he doesn't show his age one little bit. We were lucky enough to have a couple other really knowledgeable instructors, a young guy named Aaron Geiman who was quite patient and explained things really clearly, and another fella from New Zealand who was diplomatic, patient and clear, once one got past the accent barrier. We also had the owner of the farm and an Animal Science professor out of Delaware State there helping out as well. We learned the New Zealand method of sheep shearing, and these guys made it look sooo easy when they did it, but I can tell you that it's anything but easy. It takes a lot of physical strength and stamina, something I was sorely lacking by the end of the second day. (One of the gals in my group got some pictures, so maybe I'll have some to post later.)I sheared two sheep the first day, which went really well. I got some nice clean blows and barely nicked the sheep at all. Gracious, I can't even tell you what some of the folks in the class were doing to their sheep—several were just too awful to look at. Even the pros got a couple nicks here and there, so some are to be expected I guess, but there's a big difference between a nick and a gash, and some folks were leaving behind huge gashes. My team did well, and I was really grateful to be with them. There were four of us working together: a fella from PA who grooms dogs and worked well with the shearers, and a mother-daughter pair out of Reiserstown, MD, who have Angora goats. The daughter was a senior in high school and interested in becoming a vet. She did a great job and held up really well because the stress of seeing the animals hurt was really taking a toll on her. The second day, I was really beat, especially considering that I haven't slept well for about a week and a half with the kids being sick and then me getting the cold. I had chills and a fever of 102° and my strength was sapping. I spent about 10 minutes in the car at lunch time closing my eyes and just trying to get warm. My first sheep of the day went well, though I still struggled a bit with the positions. Lacking leg strength, I kept letting the sheep's head slip through the back of my legs, which wasn't good. Still the shearing went well with good clean blows and no nicks but a bit of scungy stuff left on the spine where the dirt had worked way down into the wool. By the time my second sheep rolled around, though, I just had nothing left. I made it through all the positions, but was having a heck of a time getting the shearers through the wool, and I couldn't get a good clean blow down on the skin. I was exhausted and ended up asking one of my partners to finish up the last leg for me. Even he was having a hard time getting the shearers through the wool, at which point David came over and tried and had the same issue. This sheep just produced so much lanolin and it was still cool enough that it was gunking up the shears big time. I felt slightly vindicated even though David made a bit fun of me, saying he thought I'd be stronger than that. I told him how sick I was but that I didn't think he'd be willing to hold a private class for me when I was feeling better. I was so sick by the end of the day that I just crumbled when I got home. I leaned into Jim's chest and just cried I was so exhausted. He's so good to me—he ran me a nice hot tub and told me to just go to bed. I was in bed by 6pm yesterday until 7am today. I think my fever may have broken in the night, but I'm still pretty wasted. We'll see how I feel tonight, as the fever seems to creep on slowly throughout the day.All in all, it was a great class even if I wasn't 100%. I still learned a ton and got to shear four sheep. Hopefully I didn't get anyone else there sick—I tried to be careful about it. I was proud of the job I did and feel confident that I'll be able to shear our three sheep fairly adeptly if not totally professionally. I know I can get good blows, good fiber length and still keep my sheep in tact. I think if I can improve my speed by working on my positions, I'll be able to minimize the impact on the sheep even further, which let's face it is really my goal. I'm still a bit miffed at the attitude some folks had towards the animals, and I can guarantee that fleece quality will never be more important to me than the welfare of the animal itself.