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Bellwether

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Pepe and Dunkin, June 18, 2008
Loco, Savery Creek
photo by Sharon O'Toole

Sometimes, for one reason or another, a lamb ends up as an orphan. We call them bum lambs, because they try to "bum" milk from ewes not their mother. In Nevada, they are known as "leppies" although I'm not sure why. We usually bring them home and raise them on a bottle until they can graduate to grass and grain pellets. Bum lambs have a lower survival rate than lambs with moms. It is critical that they receive colostrum, which is the first anti-body laden milk that comes from the ewe. We often rob some of this thick golden elixir to give to orphan lambs, for without it, they usually succumb to disease, sooner or later.

Pepe found Dunkin standing next to a dead mother. I don't know why she died, but Dunkin was a lucky lamb. Pepe (who has never done this before) took Dunkin under his wing and kept him as a pet. Here are a series of pictures showing Dunkin throughout the past seven months, thriving as I have never seen a bum lamb thrive. I attribute this to the vast amounts of lamb milk replacer he consumed, along with horse oats, as well as Pepe's TLC. We actually packed lamb milk replacer ( a powder) on mules to Pepe's high mountain camp last summer, along with Pepe's groceries, dog food, and sheep salt.

Dunkin was born a buck lamb, and while we eventually convinced Pepe to castrate his pet, he never did dock his tail. Dunkin spent the summer following Pepe's band of sheep to the summer pastures, playing with the other lambs, and sleeping with the sheepdogs under the sheep camp and by Pepe's tent. Given Dunkin's superior social skills, with people, sheep and dogs, we decided to keep him as a bell wether. A wether is a neutered male sheep, and the original meaning of bellwether is a sheep who leads the others into a corral or pen.

The final photo shows Dunkin outside looking in, as his peers are loaded onto a semi, destined for a feedlot in South Dakota, and eventually, fine dining establishments. He still has the ewes and the ewe lambs for company.

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Pepe, Dunkin, Marie and George
Dudley Creek, Routt Forest, July 3rd
photo by Sharon O'Toole

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Pepe, Dunkin and Megan
Farwell Mountain, Routt Forest, August 8th
photo by Sharon O'Toole

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Pepe and Dunkin
Routt Forest, September 29th
photo by Pat O'Toole

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Pepe, Dunkin in hunting season, October 31st
Cottonwood corrals, north of Dixon
photo by Sharon O'Toole

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Dunkin, saying goodbye to his friends
Badwater, November 15th
photo by Sharon O'Toole

Comments

What a nice piece, Sharon! A kid's story for adults, a real-life diversion, an escape from Wall Street ethics, etc... we'll be expecting to read & see the future adventures of Dunkin, the Wonder Wether, maybe even send him to Washington!

Happy Holidays and Merry Christmas!!

XXOO
J

Wonderful story and series of photos. I always learn something new about the sheep world and ranching in Wyoming visiting your blogs.

Happy New Year to your family.

Meg

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About Pat & Sharon O'Toole

Sharon O'Toole
Pat and Sharon O’Toole are ranchers in the Little Snake River Valley near Savery, Wyoming, right on the Colorado-Wyoming border. They raise cattle, sheep, horses, dogs and children. Pat “immigrated” from Florida in 1970. He attended Colorado State University, where he met Sharon when both worked for the campus newspaper. Sharon grew up on their ranch, where they live and work with her father, their daughter, son and granddaughter (soon to be grandchildren!). Pat is a “water buffalo” and has served in the Wyoming House of Representatives (1986-1992), on the President’s Western Water Policy Review Advisory Commission, and is the current President of the Family Farm Alliance, which advocates for farmers, ranchers and irrigators. Sharon is an author, poet and journalist. She writes extensively on Western issues and is a columnist for “The Shepherd” magazine. Pat and Sharon are the parents of three children: Meghan, 27; Bridget, 26; and Eamon, 20.
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