Branding Crew. I'm the one in the floppy hat. Sitting right behind the author of my misfortune. |
And that banging your head against it .
. . hurt?
Sigh . . .
Branding in the early summer is a time
of great excitement.
For the humans.
I don't think the calves are all that
enthusiastic.
The animals are pushed down a long
chute and caught up in a squeeze.
Which then tilts sideways and
secures the animal on its side.
Allowing the rancher to brand, tag, and
inoculate the creature.
Each animal spends, at most, about two
minutes up there.
Because it is attended by several
people.
Each with a specific job.
I had just recently graduated from
being the 'pusher'.
It's not what you think.
To being the 'inoculate-er'.
To accomplish my assignment, I was
charged with the care and use of the vaccine gun.
Which would pump 5cc. of serum into the
neck of the calf, quickly and efficiently.
Simply by pulling the trigger.
It was the best of jobs.
And very soon, I had mastered the
technique and was injecting with the best of them.
I was the queen of the world.
Then, that squeeze.
Each of these machines have a long
lever on them, which is pushed down to force the sides of said
squeeze together, trapping the animal.
When the apparatus is flipped sideways,
that lever hangs out . . . a trifle.
And that is where I came to grief.
Numerous times.
Having completed my injection, I would
return to my post near the back of the squeeze, check my gun, and
recharge, if need be.
Concerned for my responsibility, I
usually started checking my gun as I walked.
Not too bright.
Smack!
That stupid arm hit me right at nose
height.
And I do mean nose.
“Ow!”
Everyone turned to look.
“What's the matter?” Dad asked.
“I hit this stupid lever!”
“Well, watch where you're walking.”
I scowled and, rubbing my sore nose,
continued to my station.
The animal we had been working with was
returned to the upright position and released.
My younger brother brought up the next
one.
Capture. Squeeze. Tilt.
Inject. Check gun.
Wham!
“Ow!”
“What's the matter now?”
“I hit that lever again.”
“Diane! Look where you're going!”
“Okay.”
Tilt. Release.
New calf.
Capture. Squeeze. Tilt.
Inject, check gun.
“Ow!”
This time, my nose started bleeding.
Rats.
I put up a hand.
Dad turned around. “Did you hit that
lever again?”
I had one hand over my nose. “Maybe.”
“Diane! Watch where you're going!”
I found a rag, which I quickly stuffed
up my nose.
“Okay.”
Tilt. Release.
New calf.
Capture. Squeeze. Tilt.
Inject. Check gun.
You know where this is going, don't
you?
I hit that stupid pole six times.
Six.
Before I finally figured out that I
could just as easily walk OUT and AROUND.
Sigh.
Maybe it wasn't the pole that was
stupid . . .
Hubs is forever calling inanimate objects stupid...I keep telling him you need a brain to be stupid.
ReplyDeleteHmmm . . . good point.
DeleteI can't help but wonder what your dad thought about your repeated "OW!".
ReplyDeleteAll I can say is, he was used to me. :-)
DeleteAt least you didn't get what Earl Williams got--more than once. He was branding and oftentimes the calf would excrete a stream of pale yellow doo-doo, which would catch on its tail and then get spread everywhere. Earl had his mouth open and caught a large blob. Dad asked him, "What flavor was that? Butterscotch?" Always keep your mouth shut when a calf is being branded...
ReplyDeleteNo. Probably the only thing I did right was keep my mouth closed!
DeleteYou were were "in the moment." The innoculation moment, not the exiting moment.
ReplyDeleteYeah. I think I would have preferred the 'exciting' moment! :)
Deleteha ha, oh dear, this made me laugh because it is something I would do too! Stopping by from No Ordinary Blog Hop
ReplyDeleteI get so caught up in what I'm doing . . . :)
Deleteoh dear! Your poor nose!
ReplyDeleteYou described it perfectly, by the way! I'm kinda glad when one of my kids gets to be the vaccine giver... the pusher, the brander, the rocky mountain oyster cutter, and the ear cutter all come home with some pretty yucky stuff on their clothes! But the vaccine giver stays pretty "clean"... well relatively anyway. ha ha Branding is quite the experience, isn't it?
That's one of the reasons I like talking to you so much! You have lived and are still living the dream! I miss branding!
DeleteDiane! Oh my goodness! I'm so glad I'm not the only one that needs a few rounds before I really learn my lesson! ;)
ReplyDeleteLove you!
Christy
Wow that is a hard lesson, of course we all have hard lessons to learn in life;) I am glad you weren't hurt more;)
ReplyDelete