How to Shear a Sheep

Step one: Wait until it is warm out.

Sheep have wool for a reason: to keep them warm in the winter. They can of course be shorn much earlier in the year than we shear them here, but once shorn, the sheep are colder and therefore expend energy keeping themselves warm instead of making milk. Since Pikunieta is centered around cheese-making, the quality and quantity of milk is the first consideration in every decision made about the sheep.

Step two: Wait until it is dry out.

This year is a bit rainier than average, but even an average year in the Basque country is wet. When sheep are raised for their wool, shearing them wet can lead to discoloration, rot, or even in extreme cases fire in the bales of wool being shipped elsewhere. Here though, the wool is shorn for the health and comfort of the sheep and once shorn is nearly useless. The reason we shear the sheep dry here has more to do with the comfort of the shearer.

Step three: Get your sheep together and shear them.

Generally you want a professional to shear your sheep (especially if the sheep are raised for wool). It’s much faster and therefore less stressful for the sheep, and it is also much safer; cutting a sheep with an electric shearer is quite easy.

In the past, Spanish sheep shearers would tie the legs of the sheep, but now the Tally-hi method is the most widely used. This method of sheep shearing was developed in Australia about half a century ago and is currently used throughout the world. By holding the sheep in a certain way they struggle less, and therefore shearing goes smoother and quicker. To learn exactly how to shear a sheep in the tally-hi method, you can watch this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gKXww52dD3s

 

Sheep Cheese!

Perhaps it’s time I actually talk about what I’m doing here in the Basque Country?

As I mentioned in my very first post, I’m WWOOFing. WWOOF stands for World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms, and it is an international volunteer program in which people are given the chance to experience life on an organic farm. I am of course acquainted with the workings of small non-organic farms in the United States since my family owns Marquam Meadows Fruit Company (see their website here: http://www.marquammeadowsfruit.com/), so it seemed natural that I should take advantage of WWOOF. I get to travel, experience a whole new culture, practice my Castellano, and learn bits and pieces of a whole new language (Euskera), all while keeping the farm life I already know about as firm footing in a new world.

I registered with WWOOF Spain and sent e-mails around to some of the farms in the Basque Country that sounded the most interesting, and eventually ended up here at Pikunieta Baserria. A farm in which we raise sheep, then milk them and make said milk into cheese. Yup, that’s right. Sheep cheese. It’s actually quite tasty, I’d definitely recomend you try some if you ever have the chance.

Since When is Impulsive a Bad Thing?

It’s time to admit something: my summer plans are not yet finalized. All I know for sure is that I fly into Barcelona on May 13, and fly back to Portland on August 1. The decision to spend the summer with WWOOF was a tiny bit impulsive, but then again, who would have the courage to do something so crazy if they took the time to think it all the way through?

I’m currently figuring out the application process, and since it is after all WWOOF Spain, the page is in Spanish (there is an English version, but if I’m going to be spending two and a half months in Spain, I’d better work on my Spanish right?). I have been studying the language long enough to understand the webpage, but it’s still a little daunting… I’m going to spend all summer not just reading, but also speaking a language that I am nowhere near fluent in. I’ll be the silly foreigner with an accent who tries to construct sentences as they would in their native language.

I suppose it’s like when I ran cross country in high school. The first couple weeks suck because you’re forming new habits, but then you get into the swing of it and feel yourself improving every day. Lets just hope I, and everyone I meet can live through those first couple of weeks.

Summer Plans

I recently decided to finally become the global citizen I have longed to be for so long. I’m finally leaving my country and my continent. I will be spending two and a half months in Europe, primarily in Spain, where I will participate in WWOOFing. I’m so excited! I intend to document my experiences here: writing at least twice a week, so if you’re interested in international travel and/or organic farming, tune in between May 13 and August 1 2013!