• Horse blankets on well head
    Yesterday evening I was feeding two of our blind horses in their shed next to Beauty's Barn when the intercom on my phone rang.  It was Alayne (um, no one else here who could be calling!), reporting that there was no water at Lena's Barn.  All the automatic waterers in the corrals were out of water and there was no water coming out of the hydrants next to the barn.  It was already getting dark, it was 15° below zero (-26°C), and this was the absolute last thing I wanted to hear.  We always check the waterers whenever we're out feeding, and they were working fine yesterday morning. 

    The water system at Lena's Barn serves all of our other barns, sheds and corrals at that end of the ranch; Beauty's Barn is about 150 yards (137 meters) away on a separate well, but almost all the livestock use the water system at Lena's Barn.  In other words, this was A.Major.Problem.

    Now, one thing you need to know:  Livestock have an uncanny 6th sense about knowing when a water system fails.  And the instant it fails, they become insatiably thirsty.  They can be standing around all day, right next to full waterers, and show no interest in drinking.  But if a breaker quietly trips in the barn electrical system and knocks the well off-line, for instance, somehow they know it at that very moment … and suddenly, they're all thirsty and drinking up the water.  So by the time we discover there's an issue, there's no water left in their waterers.   

    Which is, of course, what happened yesterday.  The yellow-and-red Ritchie automatic waterers — you can see one in the background in the photo above — were dry, and naturally, we had horses hovering over them as if they hadn't had anything to drink for days. 

    So I put the phone back in my belt holster, cursed the sub-zero weather, and trudged down the drive to the house to get my headlamp and then to Lena's Barn. 

    The pressure tank for the water system sits 7 feet underground in a giant 8-foot (2.4 m) wide, 8-feet deep  culvert next to the well — that's what you see in the photo.  It's covered by a round steel plate with a hatch that slides back across the cover for access, and there's a ladder inside we climb down to the ground to check the pressure tank and fittings.  All the pipes that feed the automatic waterers and hydrants start at the pressure tank and head out across the corrals from there, all buried at least 6 feet underneath the surface for freeze protection.  Alayne had already checked the breaker panel in the barn and nothing had tripped there.  The surge protection panel for the well pump was working. 

    Had it really been so cold that the pressure tank fittings and pipes had frozen 7 feet underground?

    We pulled the metal hatch back.  As soon as we had moved it a foot I looked down and could see in the light from my headlamp what the problem was:  the 2-inch (5 cm) thick rigid foam insulation glued to the underside of the hatch had separated and fallen into the bottom of the culvert.  The cold was working its way through the now uninsulated metal hatch and seeping into the space below, eventually overcoming the ground heat that should have kept it above freezing that deep underground.  It had taken a couple of days of -20° and -30° degree cold to penetrate, but penetrate it had.  The foam insulation on the rest of the lid was still very much in place, but losing it from underneath the hatch was enough heat loss to make the difference.

    I climbed down the ladder and confirmed that it was indeed just below freezing at ground level. 

    First things first:  Provide a lot of supplemental heat, and fast!  Alayne went to the welcome center and retrieved an extra portable radiator.  I carried it down the ladder, plugged it into an outlet next to the pressure tank, and turned it on.  If the system had frozen up, this would do the trick, but only time would tell. 

    Next up:  How to insulate the hatch?  Of course, we weren't about to be able to glue the insulation panels back on to the hatch in 15 below weather, so that left the obvious choice:  Horse blankets!  Alayne headed to Scout's Barn, picked up a couple of our extra winter horse blankets, and covered up the hatch.

    At this point there was nothing more we could do except wait and see if the water started flowing.

    At 9 p.m., when we headed back out to check on all the horses, it was -20 below zero.  We walked into Lena and Nikki's corral, went over to the waterer … and found it was full of water.  Whew!  

    Not a single horse was anywhere near a waterer.  Of course not.  They were all contentedly eating their hay.  But weren't these all the same horses who were staring at their empty waterers just a few hours earlier?  Yes, but that's different.  Why show any interest in drinking when everything's working just fine?

    Button_ARS-click_120x120 Still No. 1 — But That Iowa Group Is Moving Up Fast!

    Please keep voting for the ranch every
    day in The Animal Rescue
    Site/PetFinder's Shelter Challenge.  Thanks
    to your votes, we came in third nationwide and won $3,000 for the
    animals in the previous contest earlier this year.  Now we have a shot at No. 1 and the
    $20,000 grand prize in the current contest!  Enter
    "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state postal code, MT for Montana,
    and it will bring up our listing so you can cast your vote.  Please ask
    your family and friends to vote, too.
     

    You can see how fast the rankings can change, so we really need an
    extra push in the last two weeks of the contest to hold that No. 1
    spot.  It ends on December 20th, so we're in the home stretch — and $20,000 for the animals is in sight!  Thank you!

  • Dusty on Dec 8

    Only the two blind Huskies, Dusty and Mitch, weren't complaining about the 32° below zero temperature this morning.  But even they, like the rest of us — animals and humans alike — were anxiously waiting for the sun to rise over the ridge to the east and begin warming things up a little.  

    Here's what the thermometer showed:

    Thermometer on Dec 8

    Yep, 32° below zero (-35° C).  Working outdoors in this kind of cold "builds character," as my mother likes to say.  (Alayne says I'm a "character" alright, but not necessarily in the positive way my mother meant.)  Even with "Arctic" gloves on, I could only scoop poop for about 10 minutes before having to go inside to warm up frozen fingers.  I finally switched to double-layered mittens to make it possible to do the barn chores, which take close to an hour to finish.  Needless to say, by the time Alayne and I finally headed in, we felt like human icicles.

    The dogs, for their part, do the three-legged tap dance in these temperatures.  They'll stand outside, holding up one leg, then putting it down and picking up another one, as blind Priscilla is doing here:

    Priscilla on Dec 8

    They do this because the ground is so cold and they want to keep their feet off of it as much as possible. We put them out first thing in the morning just long enough to do their business, and then usher them back inside.  Even Dusty and Mitch put their Husky hubris aside and were ready to head back in.

    Today's high was minus 3°(-19°C) but tomorrow we're going back up to 3° above zero (-13°C) and all the way to 14° above zero (-10°C) on Thursday, so we're getting ready to put the Bermuda shorts back on!

    Button_ARS-click_120x120 Still No. 1 — But That Iowa Group Is Moving Up Fast!

    Please keep voting for the ranch every
    day in The Animal Rescue
    Site/PetFinder's Shelter Challenge.  Thanks
    to your votes, we came in third nationwide and won $3,000 for the
    animals in the previous contest earlier this year.  Now we have a shot at No. 1 and the
    $20,000 grand prize in the current contest!  Enter
    "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state postal code, MT for Montana,
    and it will bring up our listing so you can cast your vote.  Please ask
    your family and friends to vote, too.
     

    You can see how fast the rankings can change, so we really need an
    extra push in the last two weeks of the contest to hold that No. 1
    spot.  It ends on December 20th, so we're in the home stretch — and $20,000 for the animals is in sight!  Thank you!

  • Charlie and Hugo on bed

    Richard and Julie S. from Olympia, Washington, just sent us this photo of their recently adopted Charlie — our once-blind Beagle who can now see — and his new pal Hugo (on the right), napping by the Christmas tree.  In their email, Richard wrote, "Thank you for such a wonderful gift, Charlie has been the missing link in our family."

    Thank YOU, Richard and Julie!  Seeing Charlie like that just warms our hearts.

    Button_ARS-click_120x120 Still No. 1 — But That Iowa Group Is Moving Up Fast!

    Please keep voting for the ranch every
    day in The Animal Rescue
    Site/PetFinder's Shelter Challenge.  Thanks
    to your votes, we came in third nationwide and won $3,000 for the
    animals in the previous contest earlier this year.  Now we have a shot at No. 1 and the
    $20,000 grand prize in the current contest!  Enter
    "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state postal code, MT for Montana,
    and it will bring up our listing so you can cast your vote.  Please ask
    your family and friends to vote, too.
     

    You can see how fast the rankings can change, so we really need an
    extra push in the last two weeks of the contest to hold that No. 1
    spot.  It ends on December 20th, so we're in the home stretch — and $20,000 for the animals is in sight!  Thank you!

  • Weather forecast Dec 6

    …there's only one place to be this weekend — in front of the wood stove.  Here are blind-and-deaf Spinner and blind Callie enjoying the fire on a bitterly cold night:

    Spinner and Callie with woodstove

    Note that for today, the National Weather Service office in Missoula said we should expect a high of 2°(-16°C) with east winds between 25 and 28 mph and gusts as high as 41 mph (66 kph) … conditions they helpfully called "breezy."  Excuse me … "breezy"?  (Click on screenshot for larger image.)  The worst is coming on Monday night, when it's going to be 30° below zero (-34°C) with a steady wind of 11 mph and gusts up to 20 mph (32 kph).  That translates into a wind chill value of -47°(-44°C).  Egads.  I guess we could call that "brisk."

    Button_ARS-click_120x120 Still No. 1 — But That Iowa Group Is Moving Up Fast!

    Please keep voting for the ranch every
    day in The Animal Rescue
    Site/PetFinder's Shelter Challenge.  Thanks
    to your votes, we came in third nationwide and won $3,000 for the
    animals in the previous contest earlier this year.  Now we have a shot at No. 1 and the
    $20,000 grand prize in the current contest!  Enter
    "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state postal code, MT for Montana,
    and it will bring up our listing so you can cast your vote.  Please ask
    your family and friends to vote, too.
     

    You can see how fast the rankings can change, so we really need an
    extra push in the last two weeks of the contest to hold that No. 1
    spot.  It ends on December 20th, so we're in the home stretch — and $20,000 for the animals is in sight!  Thank you!

    Nice Boost From Montana Newspapers:  We had some great help this weekend from local Montana papers getting the word out about the Shelter Challenge.  The Helena Independent Record published a story on Saturday about the contest and then the Missoulian ran the same piece today.  You can read the story here.

  • Daisy and Spinner

    Blind-and-deaf Spinner has decided she really likes the IKEA lounge chairs in the living room, and that's become her favorite spot for napping.  Daisy, on the other hand, long ago claimed those chairs as her own, and she always bares her teeth and growls at any dog that happens to even approach the chair she's in.  Now, the truth is that Daisy recognizes she's an 8-pound miniature Dachshund and she isn't about to get into a fight with anyone, but her bared fangs and fierce growls always work to keep the other dogs from climbing up on "her" chair.  Unless, as with Spinner, they can't see the fangs or hear the growls, in which case the display of feigned aggression counts for … absolutely nothing. 

    So Spinner, completely unaware that the last thing Daisy wants to do is share her chair with another dog … let alone a large dog … happily climbed up and settled in for an afternoon nap.  Daisy, a bit sheepish that all her Doxie ferocity didn't deter Spinner for one second, quietly and meekly moved over to make way.  And that's when I took this photo.

    Button_ARS-click_120x120 Still No. 1 — But That Iowa Group Is Moving Up Fast!

    Please keep voting for the ranch every
    day in The Animal Rescue
    Site/PetFinder's Shelter Challenge.  Thanks
    to your votes, we came in third nationwide and won $3,000 for the
    animals in the previous contest earlier this year.  Now we have a shot at No. 1 and the
    $20,000 grand prize in the current contest!  Enter
    "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state postal code, MT for Montana,
    and it will bring up our listing so you can cast your vote.  Please ask
    your family and friends to vote, too.
     

    You can see how fast the rankings can change, so we really need an
    extra push in the last three weeks of the contest to hold that No. 1
    spot.  It ends on December 20th, so we're in the home stretch — and $20,000 for the animals is in sight!  Thank you!

  • Lena and Nikki and Steve Dec 1

    After another light snow and plunging temperatures forecast for last night, it was time to bring the horses in from pasture for the winter.  Alayne took these photos of me leading blind Lena (on the left) and blind Nikki back to the barns yesterday afternoon.  The horses love being out on pasture — and we like to leave them out as much as possible, given how long our winters are — but by this time of year they're ready to head in.

    It was 9 below zero this morning (-22 C) when we got up, and the horses were all glad to be in corrals today being fed big piles of hay!

    Lena and Nikki and Steve 2

    Button_ARS-click_120x120 Still No. 1!

    Please keep voting for the ranch every
    day in The Animal Rescue
    Site/PetFinder's Shelter Challenge
    Thanks
    to your votes, we came in third nationwide and won $3,000 for the
    animals in the previous contest earlier this year.  Now we have a shot at No. 1 and the
    $20,000 grand prize in the current contest!  Enter
    "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state postal code, MT for Montana,
    and it will bring up our listing so you can cast your vote.  Please ask
    your family and friends to vote, too.
      Thank you!

  • Love of Dog web ad For the third year in a row, the Love of Dog Bakery in Maryland has selected the ranch to be their Charity of the Month for December.  That means they will kindly donate 5% of their sales during the month to the animals here.  So if you're looking for some very tasty and nutritious treats for your dog, this is the place!

    Thanks to Julie and Rob at Love of Dog Bakery for the wonderful offer!

    Button_ARS-click_120x120 Still No. 1!

    Please keep voting for the ranch every
    day in The Animal Rescue
    Site/PetFinder's Shelter Challenge
    Thanks
    to your votes, we came in third nationwide and won $3,000 for the
    animals in the previous contest earlier this year.  Now we have a shot at No. 1 and the
    $20,000 grand prize in the current contest!  Enter
    "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state postal code, MT for Montana,
    and it will bring up our listing so you can cast your vote.  Please ask
    your family and friends to vote, too.
      Thank you!

  • Cedar in crate

    A few weeks ago, blind Cedar began getting out of his crate in Widget's House during the night.  I'd walk in first thing in the morning and find him out in the middle of the floor, with a nice pile of poop left for me to clean up.  We put all the dogs at Widget's House in crates for the night, because there's no way you can leave 20 dogs loose in a building unsupervised for that long — think frat house with an open keg.  (Or "Animal House," with Trooper filling in for John Belushi.)  Some will get into the trash, some will pull the food bags off the shelves and gorge themselves sick, and others, like Cedar, will take a moment to relieve themselves indoors.  And some will do all three.

    You get the picture.

    Cedar, like most of the dogs there, sleeps in a giant crate, which has an annoying twist-handle feature that usually confuses people the first time they try to actually use it.  And to open it, you need to push a tab on the outside and twist the round handle at the same time.  It is, in short, a much more difficult and fool-proof locking mechanism than you find on smaller crates — I presume because it's designed to contain the much bigger dogs who would typically use this size of crate.  

    So the first time I found Cedar loose in the morning, I figured I must have forgotten to lock the crate door latch the previous night. 

    The next time I found him loose, I thought, what the @%$@%?!  I knew I had double-checked the latch the night before.

    So then I stuck an extra metal pin (you can see them in the corners of the door in the photo) in the lower right hand corner of the door, into the hole where the crate door's bottom pin slides when you close the latch.  Wedging it in tight would make it impossible for him to get out, right?

    Fast forward three days, and there he was again, out on the floor by himself.  How on earth?  We had never had a dog get out of one of these crates before with the door properly locked.  And now Cedar was routinely getting out, even with extra precautions.

    I added a pin to the right corner hole in the top of the crate door.  Double-wedged, that will work!

    Um, no, not exactly.  Out again.

    Okay, a third pin in the lower left corner of the door.

    Nope.

    I would walk into the building, find him wandering around, look at the poop on the floor, and want to pull my hair out.

    I finally realized I was being outwitted by this blind dog on a regular basis, and there had to be a mechanical explanation.  I got down on my hands and knees and examined the latch mechanism with a flash light.  And then I saw it:  The tab you depress with your thumb before turning the handle was bent ever so slightly … and if you hit it just right, even from inside the crate, the latch would pop loose.  After that, it was just a matter of pushing with determined paws to force the door open, regardless of how many extra pins were wedged in the holes.

    Following that "eureka!" moment, I moved Cedar to a different giant crate and … case solved.

    You know those bumper stickers that say "My border collie is smarter than your honor student"?  At this point I felt I should make a bumper sticker that says, "My blind dog is smarter than I am."


    Button_ARS-click_120x120 Still No. 1!

    Please keep voting for the ranch every
    day in The Animal Rescue
    Site/PetFinder's Shelter Challenge
    Thanks
    to your votes, we came in third nationwide and won $3,000 for the
    animals in the previous contest earlier this year.  Now we have a shot at No. 1 and the
    $20,000 grand prize in the current contest!  Enter
    "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state postal code, MT for Montana,
    and it will bring up our listing so you can cast your vote.  Please ask
    your family and friends to vote, too.
      Thank you!

  • http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=7353207&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=&fullscreen=1

    This weekend on the Internet I stumbled across the ASPCA video on the ranch that they showed at the ASPCA 2009 Humane Awards event Alayne attended back in October.  The ASPCA had told us we couldn’t post the video on the Web because of licensing issues of some sort (and we don’t even have a copy of it, so this was first time I had actually seen it).  But someone — we don’t know who — has posted it, so while it’s still up, I thought you might like to see it!

    Note that for us, at least, the video was a bit jarring in some places because they also used (with permission) footage shot by KSPS-TV in Spokane in 2006, in addition to the original material they filmed here in August — so you will see animals in this piece who have long since been adopted or, sadly, have died in the meantime.  Overall, though, it’s a very nice introduction to the ranch.


    Button_ARS-click_120x120 Still No. 1!

    Please keep voting for the ranch every
    day in The Animal Rescue
    Site/PetFinder’s Shelter Challenge
    Thanks
    to your votes, we came in third nationwide and won $3,000 for the
    animals in the previous contest earlier this year.  Now we have a shot at No. 1 and the
    $20,000 grand prize in the current contest!  Enter
    “Rolling Dog Ranch” and our state postal code, MT for Montana,
    and it will bring up our listing so you can cast your vote.  Please ask
    your family and friends to vote, too.
      Thank you!

  • Dusty eating snow 1

    Whenever there's fresh snow on the ground, blind Dusty loves to stop on his way out the door first thing each morning to lap up several mouthfuls of the crisp, cold white stuff.  There's always a full water bucket on the porch of Widget's House, and he will go back and drink from that later, but he prefers to start his day by licking at the new snow.  I got these photos of him yesterday morning, just a minute after I let him and the rest of the gang out of Widget's House.

    Yum, that snow is tasty!

    Dusty eating snow 2

    Thanksgiving holiday blog break:  I'll be taking the next few days off from posting to the blog and will resume for Monday, November 30th.  But please continue to vote in the Shelter Challenge over the holiday if you can!

     Button_ARS-click_120x120 Still No. 1!

    Please keep voting for the ranch every
    day in The Animal Rescue
    Site/PetFinder's Shelter Challenge
    Thanks
    to your votes, we came in third nationwide and won $3,000 for the
    animals in the previous contest earlier this year.  Now we have a shot at No. 1 and the
    $20,000 grand prize in the current contest!  Enter
    "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state postal code, MT for Montana,
    and it will bring up our listing so you can cast your vote.  Please ask
    your family and friends to vote, too.
      Thank you!