Farm jobs
When it rains heavily, the pony stall tends to get filled with water which means the ponies need to move into the barn aisle for a few days while it dries out. They don't like it; I don't like bailing water out of the stall; no one is happy. J. decided that perhaps if there was a gutter along that side of the barn, the water could be drained away and the pony stall wouldn't flood. So today he added a gutter.
You can't even really see it, can you? What I love is that he put it on so that it blends with the light panel and makes it virtually invisible.
The downspout still needs an extension at the bottom to move the water away from the barn.
This is a better view where you can better see the gutter.
So that was the barn, then it was time to move onto sheep. Actually that should be a sheep, singular. Clark is the only sheep with horns and because of the way they curve, we have to keep an eye on them, otherwise they would grow into his skull. As you might imagine, this is not a good thing, so they need to be trimmed occasionally. Today was horn trimming day.
The first one J. could do with some heavy clippers.
The piece of horn that got trimmed off.
The other horn was just that much thicker so J. had to use a small saw to get it trimmed.
Clark wasn't thrilled, but G. has done a great job working with them and Clark was extremely cooperative.
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