My granddad took his well-worn pocketknife out of
his overall’s pocket, pulled out the largest razor-sharp blade and slid it
under the dead lamb’s skin. A cold sleet beat against the hill and against our
faces as his claw-like hands sliced out a section of cold and slimy
wool-covered skin from the lamb’s back and sides. He needed a portion of the
skin large enough to be tied over the back of a live lamb. My granddad knows
how to save most every lamb. Some didn't make it, but he always does his best
to keep even the frailest ones alive. For some reason known only to him, he
seems to care for his sheep more than any of the other animals on our farm.
As he finished slicing out the section of skin from
the dead lamb, the mother ewe circled him and shuffled about with great alarm,
bleating a mournful cry. Her newborn lamb had died during the cold night, or
was dead upon birth. She had not been able to breathe life into its frail weak
body by getting it quickly cleaned of the afterbirth. She had not been able to get
it on its wobbly legs and upright in order for it to suckle its first
life-giving nourishment.
The wind blew across the ridge as the dark gray
clouds sent sharp pellets of sleet toward the crumpled grass stems and the
brittle dried leaves. Most animals will seek some natural shelter when giving
birth. This ewe had found a small buck-brush thicket under the hill and away
from the strongest winds, but it was not enough. Some newborn animals will
survive the severest weather. Nature is strange that way. Life or death seems
to be such a chance.
My granddad wiped the blade on his pant leg, folded
the knife, and slipped it into his pocket. “Throw that dead lamb in a holler
and bring those other yohs to the barn,” he said as he disappeared up over the
ridge. He pronounces "ewe" as "yoh", and many other words
in a peculiar way. He didn’t have much education, but is smart about many
things. He always seems to be thinking. He thinks about important things that
will make our lives better on our farm. He wants to make all lives better, all
the animals and particularly his sheep.
He picked up the cold, soggy lambskin and started
for the barn. The mother ewe followed him and continued bleating in an anxious
way. I felt sad for her, because she didn’t know what to do.
I stood over the dead lamb, but didn’t want to look
at it. The only sound was the mournful cry of the mother ewe during its
sorrowful time. She then began running back and forth from my granddad, as he
headed to the barn with the skin, to the carcass near where I stood. She
finally ran to him as the sleet began beating down again against the side of
the hill. It was a soft sound at first, but then it turned to ice and began to
hit with greater force as the wind drove the frozen pellets across the ridge
and sent them glancing and bouncing to the frozen earth. I stood with my face
away from the stings of the sleet, and hesitated to look at the skinned dead
lamb. I didn’t want to touch it, but
knew I had no choice. I always do whatever my granddad tells me.
When stooping to lift the lamb, and trying not to
look, I caught a glimpse of its face. It was perfect in its place, and I wanted
to think it was only in sleep with pleasant dreams. The pure white fleece
around its head would keep it warm, I wished.
My granddad would be waiting, and the other sheep
were waiting too. I grabbed one of the dead lamb’s legs and lifted it from the
ground. I looked away as I slung it with all my might down the hill. The cold
blood and slime flew in my face. My granddad’s hand was bloody too, but he had
work to do, and his hands were often covered with dirt and mud and stains that
a farmer can’t avoid. I wiped my face with my coat sleeve, and then moved
toward the other sheep to drive them to the barn.