Chapter One
Carol’s Time
About that baby donkey. As I was heading down Route 30 a couple of weeks
earlier, returning from the hardware store in town, my cell phone warbled.
Anthony, working at the farm that day, was calling to say that there was a new
donkey in the pasture.
Knowing this had to be a joke, since I had no male donkeys and, to my knowledge,
no pregnant ones either, I laughed, fired off some appropriately obscene macho
banter-the staple of male conversation hereabouts-and hung up.
It never really crossed my mind that it was true.
When I pulled into the driveway, though, I nearly drove into a fencepost. There
was a tiny new donkey, soaking wet from amniotic fluid, hugging close to
Jeannette, my most recently acquired Sicilian donkey. The afterbirth was close
by and fresh. And Jeannette was snorting like a bull and glowering at any
interlopers.
No way, I thought.
Way. Obviously, donkeys have a very long gestation period. Jeannette must have
got knocked up just before she arrived last spring. I phoned an SOS to the
Granville Large Animal Veterinary Service and ran into the house for some
towels.
Jeannette and I are pretty tight, thanks to my daily offerings of carrots,
apples, and oat cookies. She let me pick up her newborn-I named her Emma, after
my own daughter-dry her off, and make sure her throat and eyes were clear. When
I scratched her fuzzy little nose, she closed her eyes and went to sleep in my
arms.
I gave Jeannette some cookies for energy, checked to see that she had milk in
her teats-she did, a lot of it-and brushed her down a bit to calm her. Then I
knelt in front of her and she put her head on my shoulder.
“Congratulations,” I said. “Who’s the father? You can tell me.” But she just
went over to Emma and nosed her.
There aren’t many donkeys born around here these days. Once, donkeys were the
tractors and ATVs of country life, performing agricultural and mercantile tasks
integral to farming and commerce. Now they’re generally considered useless-local
farmers call them “hay suckers”-so they’re rare. So people from nearby farms
soon began showing up to check out the newcomer, alerted by the mysterious rural
news network by which everyone instantly knows everything.
In an hour or so, Kirk the vet showed up, gave the donkeys their appropriate
shots, said they were fine. He also told me that Emma was, oops, a male. So
“she” became Jesus (using the Spanish pronunciation), thanks to the mysterious
circumstances of his birth.
I razzed Kirk about the fact that two large-animal vets had been by in recent
weeks and, when I mentioned Jeannette’s burgeoning girth, said she’d been eating
too much hay and probably had gas.
Truth to tell, I felt guilty about the way I’d been mocking Jeannette for her
hearty appetite and swelling belly, never guessing that she was eating for two.
Probably she should have had better prenatal care, possibly some supplements.
But she’d managed the whole process quite efficiently on her own, it seemed,
even selecting an unusually warm February day to give birth.
A cold wave was approaching in forty-eight hours, though, so we scurried to find
the heat lamps and bring Jeannette and Jesus into a cozy corner of the barn.
All this made me think even more about why I own donkeys at all.
When I got my troubled border collie Orson, we started learning to herd at a
sheep farm in Pennsylvania. A lonely old donkey named Carol lived in the
adjacent pasture. We bonded; I was enchanted by her soulful eyes and gentle
bray, and she loved the apples I brought her and the pats and scratches that
accompanied them. When I bought the farm in upstate New York, I imported some of
the sheep we’d been herding with. They arrived on a livestock trailer, and Carol
showed up with them, a surprise gift from the farmer, who thought she deserved a
better life.
Carol seemed initially stunned, then appreciative of her new life-ample
pasture, fresh water, treats and cookies, pats and grooming. But she had some
serious health issues. That meant a lot of visits from vets, something Carol
didn’t appreciate-Amanda, her primary care physician, had to call a half hour
before coming, so I could lure Carol into the barn with oats. Carol could hear
Amanda’s truck from some distance, and if she could, she’d take off up the hill.
She needed the vets, though. She’d arrived with all sorts of ailments-eye
infections, bad circulation, and weak lungs. Our first winter, she’d foundered
(foundering is an equine wasting disease of the hoof), and developed sores and
abscesses. I’d spent innumerable hours, often in the middle of the night and in
freezing temperatures, administering shots, pills, and salves. The veterinary
bills, plus the shelves of painkillers, antibiotics, syringes, and thermometers,
had run into the thousands.
I think I’d never truly lived until I was called upon to take a rectal
thermometer reading from an agitated donkey at five a.m. when the temperature
was twenty below.
Carol was agreeable, but not that agreeable. We had many a brawl in the barn and
pasture while I attempted to administer her growing list of meds. She wasn’t
above running, butting, bumping, or dragging me if she spotted a hypodermic.
The nasty case of frostbite that plagues me to this day came one bitter night as
she dragged me up the hill to avoid the thermometer.
Paula asked why I hadn’t dressed more warmly, but my neighbors just shrug. They
understand the logistics of rectal thermometers: It doesn’t work with gloves.
Generally Carol submitted, not always graciously.
It seems absurd but, over time, I swear she could read my intentions, or perhaps
my emotions. If I was simply bringing oats for a treat, Carol came running. If I
had an agenda, like an approaching vet’s or farrier’s appointment, she’d trot
out of reach. Carol hadn’t survived all her years by being foolish.
But she had a calming quality I found eerily soothing. Every night before bed,
Rose and I went out to the barn. I carried a granola bar for myself and a cup of
oats for Carol. Rose-always eager to work but able to grasp the import of
certain moments-lay down and hardly moved.
I sat on an old stool while Carol and I-and later Fanny-had our nightly
munch-and-crunch. I’d put some music on a boom box I left out there. Carol liked
Willie Nelson the most; he seemed to ease her mind.
“You really ought to shoot her,” my neighbor, a retired dairy farmer, repeatedly
advised. “You’ll never get your money back from her.” That was surely true. He
even offered several times to get his deer rifle and do the deed for me.
Yet I was crazy about Carol, felt lucky to have her, and was determined to give
her a more comfortable winter.
About Carol’s compadres:
Donkey Number 2 joined her when I got a phone call from a woman who described
herself as a “Jewish donkey spiritualist,” a term I hadn’t heard before and
don’t expect to hear again. Pat bred donkeys and had studied and written about
their symbolic significance, their place in the ancient world, and their
profoundly spiritual natures.
Both Jewish and Christian theologies abound with biblical and other references
to donkeys, she pointed out. Carol, like all my donkeys, wore a cross on her
back, a pattern of dark hair behind the shoulders.
Since donkeys are social sorts, Pat declared, Carol was not only lonely, but was
unaware of her “donkeyness.” Having lived with sheep all of her life, she
probably didn’t even know she was a donkey. She needed a companion, Pat said. My
wife, already embittered by the vet bills, said she could live with Carol being
out of touch with her donkeyness. I couldn’t, and so little Fanny soon arrived,
and then Lulu, her half sister, who was Donkey Number 3.
The Jewish donkey spiritualist was, of course, right about donkeys: They are
sweet, accepting, seemingly wise. Mine have an ostensible purpose: They’re my
security detail, fiercely protective of my flock of sheep. They run off stray
dogs and coyotes. And as I’ve lost no sheep to these common predators, the
donkeys seem to me to be doing their jobs pretty well.
But they also-and this is why I have more donkeys than I truly need-attach to
people. They nuzzle and lean into humans they like, which can sometimes be
disconcerting but is also touching. They are gentle with children, calm around
strangers. They coexist reasonably amiably with my dogs and chickens, getting
irritated only when the hay feeder gets too crowded.
When I sit out in the pasture, Lulu is usually the first to drift up behind me
and rest her chin on the top of my head, waiting for her nose to be scratched.
The others soon slide alongside, waiting for pats, carrots, scratches. We sit in
this odd, cuddly huddle for long periods sometimes, especially when I need
soothing or company. Their silent affection is quite potent, if you wait for it.
Donkeys are always watching and miss little. Nothing seems to surprise them, or
seems new to them. My private theory is that some of the wisdom of the ages has
been passed along in their genes, and a little may rub off on me, if I allow it.
When I come out of the house in the morning, the girls (and now Jesus, too) are
waiting for me at the barnyard gate, wheezily braying for their cookies. Serious
about snacks, they’re apt to nose into your pockets if you’re slow to produce
them.
But our connection goes well beyond food. Apart from the cuddling and brushing,
I often go check on them at night before I go to sleep. During winter storms, I
trudge up to the pole barn and comb ice from their long eyelashes; they hold
still for the procedure, then nuzzle me in appreciation.
Last year, donkey spiritualist Pat sold her farm. Before she moved away, she
sold me Jeannette, one of her oldest donkeys (they live to be thirty, even
forty). Nobody said anything about anybody being pregnant. But Jeannette was,
apparently.
So now there were four. “That’s a lot of hay,” one of my incredulous farmer
neighbors observed. “Especially for animals that don’t do anything.”
He’s wrong; they do a lot for me. They connect me to nature and history. They’re
dutiful watchdonkeys, affectionate companions. In many ways, they are the soul
of my farm. I want to do well by them.
One of the many second-year innovations at the farm, therefore, was the Donkey
Motel, a corner of the barn where Anthony had installed insulation, wiring for
heat lamps, and a small hay feeder. The younger donkeys were hearty creatures,
but Carol had suffered grievously from the cold the first winter; she’d need
more protection.
After all those lonely years by herself in the woods, she seemed entitled to a
few easy ones on my farm. Anthony carefully sealed the cracks in the barn so the
Donkey Motel would be sound.
He appreciated her, even if he doubted my sanity for spending money on her.
Anthony’s daughter, Ida, who was then two, liked to crawl beneath Carol’s legs,
which didn’t bother Carol at all; she merely nuzzled Ida with her nose. Once, I
was horrified to look up and see Ida and Carol munching on opposite ends of the
same carrot. Anthony often said there was no safer place for his daughter than
underneath that donkey.
So that fall, when the farmer’s weather alert service-I loved merely being on
the list-called to advise that winter was arriving suddenly and brutally, I felt
prepared.
Temperatures would drop from the forties into the single digits overnight, and
high winds would drive the windchill well below zero, the service advised.
“Winter is coming,” somebody said at the Bedlam’s Corner Variety Store down the
hill, “with a bite.” But Carol would be safe in her motel.
When I lived in Boston or Philadelphia or New Jersey, I couldn’t understand the
big deal local newscasters made of weather forecasts. I looked out the window in
the morning and either wore a raincoat or parka, or didn’t.
But at Bedlam Farm, I pay acute attention. Weather isn’t just about what to
wear, although that matters, but about livestock: hay supplies, feed and corn,
deicers and water flow, shelter from the wind and wet. Most farm animals can
handle all but the most brutal cold, but not my aging donkey.
It had been evident all that summer that Carol was no longer hardy. She moved
less, hugged the barn more, and as the fall chill came, she seemed weary,
reserving her energy for the advancing winter.
When it comes to animals, it’s easy to anthropomorphize, attributing human
emotions and thoughts to other species. I’m certain that Carol had little sense
of herself as tired or vulnerable, just as she probably had no concept of
herself as “lonely.” She’d survived for many years on her own, without the hay
and snacks I kept bringing. I would have been lonely and uncomfortable in her
previous existence, but for all I know, she was content with her hideaway.
To my mind, Carol had anchored that first chaotic, overwhelming year at Bedlam
Farm, for which I was immensely grateful. She projected confidence and calm; she
was so unflappable that she steadied me. She just made me feel better.
And not only me. Kids from miles around came to see her and bring her carrots,
and she greeted them all warmly and patiently, even when they shrieked or pulled
cookies right out of her mouth.
She appeared out of the mist or snow whenever I emerged from the house. She
hovered over the birth of each lamb. I thought of her as the silent but faithful
witness to this strange journey I’d taken with my dogs and my restless self.
When I grew confused, frightened, or overburdened-which was a substantial part
of the time-I could count on
her affection. The one thing, apparently the only thing, she
couldn’t handle was the cold. This year I thought I could spare her its worst
effects.
I wasn’t the only one concerned about her. In October, Ken Norman, the farrier
from Pawlet, Vermont, came to trim the donkeys’ hooves. He drove a converted red
fire truck stocked with medieval-looking tools. In his leather apron, he handled
the donkeys with a particular ease and authority. Even Carol submitted calmly to
his trimming and filing. As he worked, he talked quietly to “the girls.”
He didn’t like the way Carol looked. “She’s wearing out,” he told me. As skilled
as the large-animal vets were, I’d learned, nobody could read a donkey better
than a farrier like Ken. It was still golden fall then, fairly warm, but I
feared he was right. It had happened gradually, with nothing you could really
put your finger on. Carol just seemed to do less of everything-explore, eat,
leave the barn. Despite my preparations, I began to wonder.
I e-mailed Pat, the spiritualist, saying I was worried about Carol and pondering
how much more medical treatment to subject her to, should further problems
arise.
(Continues…)
Excerpted from Dog Days
by Jon Katz
Copyright © 2007 by Jon Katz.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Villard
Copyright © 2007
Jon Katz
All right reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4000-6404-5



