Thursday, March 29, 2012

Thankful Thursday

This Thursday I am thankful for my fun walking buddy, Clover 

And for a dirt road that leads to a wide river that I can wad in, talk to God and think :)
What are YOU thankful for?

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Agriculture training at RLC- Part 1 Goat raising

Last week I went with 4 other girls for agriculture training at RLC.
I really enjoyed and learned a lot during the goat raising class
We learned about milking

I love the fun personalities of goats :) This doe decided to get up in my face, I didn't mind :)

Fast effective milking is a learned art that I hope to become good at one day
One my way to be a good goat milker

Weighting the milk 

Guess what I am about to do???

Castrating a young goat

It takes some concentration 

And proper technic  

I didn't find it too hard and... kinda fun

If you would like to give it a try, this is how you do Bloodless castration;
1st. Cut the tip
2ed. push one testicle out, use the razor to gently cut through the membrane
3rd. Pull a tightly fastened membrane off the testicle and push all the membranes back into the testicle sack
4th. Twist the testicle 5 times, make sure to count, so you don't for get
5th. Rip the testicle from the goats body
6th. repeat with testicle #2
7th. Clean with a mixture of gin, ginger and turmeric
8th. Return the newly weathered goat to his pen

Finishing up

Anyone up for mountain oysters??

HELP ME!! 

Brenda giving the final pull

Kelly is proud of her first castrating experience 

Eileen did a great job as a city girl getting dirty doing farm work

Juniper was a natural 

Count them up. How many goats did we castrate?

Getting instructions on how to de-bud a one week old kid goat 

This one was a lot harder for me than the castrating, but I did it!

Finishing up

The freshly de-budded kid, he was sad

I gave him a little loving before returning him to his pen

Learning about hoof trimming. I had done it a little bit before, but I learned I had not been talking off enough of the hoof 

The stand of de-budding 

Our instructor was a good teacher out in the barn

We learned about mixing feeds & growing crops to feed your dairy goats 

Soybeans 

Salt & shells 

The grain before mixing 

mixing the grains back and forth 

The farms grain storage for their own animals and to sell to local farmers
A pretty nanny goat 

These animals are great for small farmers and their milk can bring a malnourished child back to health  

For the first two weeks they live the kids with their mothers.
For 2wks to 3 months they put the kids in their own pen during the night so that they can milk the does in the the morning and return the kid back in with the mother during the day.
After the kid is 3 months old it is weaned and the nanny gets milked twice per day 

Nubin does
We were told they are the best tropical milk goats
Feeding and housing animals in a tropical country is much different. You can plant hedge rows and cut and feed your animals from them year round. The barns are on stilts for air ventilation and for easy cleaning.

I have dreamed of having milk goats for a long time. My time at RLC gave me renewed vision for my future ministry in Africa and how milk goats can fit into that vision. I am excited to see what the future holds!   Part 2 of RLC training coming soon

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Born in the bathroom

I was first up on rotation last evening. The first labor that arrived was a early twenties G1 (first pregnancy), she was smiling as she walked through the door and briskly went to the CR (bathroom) to pee & wash. I then ushered her to one of the beds, to take her vitals, listen to baby's heartbeat and talk to her about her labor.

When did your labor start, I asked her? "oh last night, but just like period cramps, but this morning there was some blood and that is why I came," was her reply. I explained to her about the mucus plug, she had no signs of contractions, but I asked again about her labor pains. "Oh, the pain from last night is less now." Smiling to myself I gently explained that for your first baby early labor can talk a long time and that she needed to go home and just go on with life like normal until her contractions came and were about 5 min apart, then she could return. "OK, I think I am just a little excited, because it has been a week since my due date." What a sweetie :)

Later on, three hours before shift change around 7pm I tell another student that my fully needs to come before 8pm. This way she can have her baby and get to postpartum before I have to go. About 20min later a labor comes waddle in and she was not smiling. She tells us she is waiting for her husband, who is coming very soon and I think to myself, "well she must have a little time," and have her go to the CR. I start filling out paper work, as I wait for her. All of a sudden the bathroom door flies open, she is standing with her legs apart with a shocked look on her face. The baby is coming NOW!

I rush to her while pulling a glove from my pocket onto my right hand and about take down my supervisor as she is racing in the opposite directions for gloves. I managed to have the one glove on by the time I walked the 7 quick steps over to the CR. The head was already about 8 cm visible and I had no time to pull on the other glove. I just reached my hand down to support the quickly emerging head. It always amazes me how fast your mind can work, because mine sure was. I was thinking about the ungloved hand and the fact that I can't hold a slimy newborn with one hand above a tile floor.

In a matter of seconds of arriving to the mother, I was calling head out, baby out and yes using that ungloved hand, there was not another option. Happy to feel the baby squirm in my hands I suddenly noticed a cord wrapped around his neck. "OH" I quickly thought, "None of my catches as of yet have had a cord wrap, nor has their mother been standing up!" I am pretty good at jumping into action when I know it is up to me to fix the problem. I quickly turned baby one way, nope wrong, then turned and flipped him the other... actually I am not quite sure what I did, or how many times it was wrapped, but I got it unwrapped. By this time my supervisor arrived, also with only one hand gloved and the baby was crying. She quickly cut the cord and we transferred baby and the shocked, but happy mama to a bed.

This was the mother's third baby and all came fast from what I hear. She delivered the placenta with no problems and two hours later after nursing her baby and drinking some water & milo, jumped out of bed, instructed her husband to clean up some drips of blood and marched to the CR. What a strong mama! What a fun crazy birth! What a treasure to be able to be a midwife! Have I mentioned that I love being a midwife? :)
Baby Andy

Ata Ermie my supervisor, baby Andy & I 

Sunday, March 4, 2012

My first labor story

I have been hesitant to write birth stories on my blog. It is hard to know how much and what to share. But I know that (or at least I think) you would like to hear some of my stories. Be advised, I am a midwife :) (I have purposely left the mother's name out for her privacy)

Once you start catching babies it is like an addiction, you just want to keep doing it again and again, no matter how busy or tired you may be. It had been nine long days since my last catch, when she walked in the door. a pretty girl of 20 years old in labor with her first baby. She smiled at me, but I could tell she was in pretty active labor. After taking her vitals, listening to baby's heartbeat and palpating the position. I did an i.e. to assess dilation. She was 9cm with only a lip on top left to go and I confirmed SROM (that her water had already broke).
She wanted to lay on her side in bed, but I told her it may take a long time for her to complete dilation if she didn't do some exercising. The best being hands and knees. She tried it and didn't like that position. Next was the birth ball and she found this position much more comfortable. I stayed with her, helping her breath through her contractions and rubbing her back.
About two hours later she started feeling "poopy" this can mean that she really does need to use the bathroom, but more likely it is time to start pushing. After talking to my supervisor we advised her to do a trial push and when she pushed the baby's head was right there. She ended up pushing for a little over an hour on her side. Her contractions were strong, but short. I encouraged her through them, telling her what a great job she was doing. In between she would rest, then right before she started pushing again she would make eye contact with me and smile. It was beautiful.
Slowly her baby's head crowned and she slowly and beautifully pushed her 7.7lb baby boy into the world with only a tiny skin split. It was a beautiful birth and what an amazing gift to watch a woman become a mother for the very first time. Her baby boy was extremely cute and started nursing right away, his mama was beaming with joy and pride at her son.

If you look at the pictures on the left he is catch #11 :0)