Thursday, September 24, 2009

Quid Pro Quo

It is getting late in the season and because of that and for other reasons the milk production has been dropping off. I do not like to name names but Wronny, Winnie, Winnie, Jr., Xie Xie (of course), Lucy, Jessie, Tangy, Maddie, and Betsy have all been milking a lot less. Peaches stopped completely and has been excused from the milk parlor. Only Big Orange has been keeping up production, no one knows why. Jammies of course always milks the same amount because it is her policy.

Anyway there was a staff meeting involving the farmer showing the milkers some charts and spreadsheets and explaining about revenue projections and late lactation milk and our goals for the fourth quarter. Several of the milkers fell asleep. Not Jammies, of course.

"The bad news," said the farmer. "is that everyone needs to work a lot harder. Not Jammies, obviously."

"The good news is because we are out of pea hay we will be getting alfalfa."

This waked a few of them up. Jammies gave the farmer a polite but skeptical look which seemed to inquire whether it would be nice alfalfa or that awful stemmy alfalfa from the place in Port Orchard.

The farmer explained that it would be beautiful leafy 4th cutting alfalfa from Moses Lake in the Columbia Basin, the kind that has just a sprinkle of orchard grass in it for added flavor. It would be only for the milkers.

"And Millie, of course."

The milkers consulted and agreed that they would milk more, effective as soon as the 4th cutting was served for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Not Jammies, of course; she was already doing her best.

And they did.

5 comments :

Marigold said...

Oy. Full alfalfa? No stems? No grass? Can I come? I will trade you a few Peanuts for some. Just a few, mind you.

treemama said...

Now that would be a sight to see, too bad the farmer was too busy with his charts to take a photo!

Scully said...

The charts and spread sheets suggest the farmer may have recently attended a Ross Perot "Boost Your Goat Milk Production" seminar. Per chance Millie, did the farmer say anything like "most goats give up just when they are about to receive success (become star milkers). They quit on the one yard line. They give up at the last minute one squirt from making a winning milker".
Millie, if the answer is yes, you must arrange for deprogramming asap.
Best,
Scully

cassiejean said...

I LOVE charts and spreadsheets--- as a data analyst in my support-the-ranch job. Perhaps I should also instruct my goats in the Six Sigma way.....? On the other hand, a bit less milk is a bit less work for me. In all honesty, I am looking forward to a break in production before the ramp-up to full scale maximized peak milking while bottle feeding dozens of kids and working full-time. I think sometimes the goats know better than me. also LOVE you Blog, thanks! Lissa (rancher woman of CassieJean) at ChivaRisa.com

cassiejean said...

I LOVE charts and spreadsheets--- as a data analyst in my support-the-ranch job. Perhaps I should also instruct my goats in the Six Sigma way.....? On the other hand, a bit less milk is a bit less work for me. In all honesty, I am looking forward to a break in production before the ramp-up to full scale maximized peak milking while bottle feeding dozens of kids and working full-time. I think sometimes the goats know better than me. also LOVE you Blog, thanks! Lissa (rancher woman of CassieJean) at ChivaRisa.com