When Spring finally arrived, it came with warm temperatures, green
grass growing, more eggs to hunt for, daily swims for the geese in
their kiddie pool -- and baby goats!
I missed the main miracle -- the actual birth -- while fidgeting in
a community meeting during my workday. Jack notified me by phone that
the babies were here -- two fine and healthy and the little
"pinko" (runt) that might not make it. He asked me to pick up
bottles and nipples so that we could bottle feed her. Off I raced to
the store, wildly excited that Patch's pregnancy had finally come to an
end and I could now experience the little kids.
"Bambi" (the runt) arrived as a damp pile, left in a
forlorn heap in the corral with the rain and sleet pelting her tiny
newborn self. Patch was too busy to care for her as she continued to
birth the remaining triplets that were now arriving in a warm barn with
Jack's assistance. As he left the barn, he heard a faint noise over the
storm and searched for the source of the tiny bleats, finding the runt
hypothermic and barely hanging on to life.
Jack carefully picked up the tiny two pound "pinko" and
cradled her under his sweatshirt to keep her warm. Later he wrapped her
in a towel and placed her on the dog bed in the back of our green
Subaru Forester.
By the time I arrived home, Patch was exhausted but eating, Sally
and Scout were wobbling around on their newfound legs and the little
runt was still alive, so fragile and making little mewing kitten
noises. We took her home and placed her in a cardboard box in the warm
kitchen. Getting her to drink from a bottle when she could barely stand
upright was a challenge. Her hooves were clear gelatinous lumps at the
end of her spindly legs -- legs that played out and sent her sprawling,
reminiscent of Bambi on the ice pond with Thumper.
I marveled at her delicate mocha brown-colored form and petite
little features. She was tiny and frail as I cradled her in my lap,
determined that she was going to live. Overnight her hooves hardened
and turned black. She tried her best to stand without swaying.
Her sisters were strong and sturdy and appeared to be thriving in
comparison to Bambi's puniness. Patch ignored Bambi after the second
day, no longer recognizing her smell, and we fed the baby when we
milked Patch, helping her stand and brace herself to latch onto her
mama's teat. She was still too weak to butt her head or
"punch" Patch's bag to bring the milk down, but we made sure
she drank her fill and tottered away with a huge pot belly full of rich
mama's milk.
Too delicate to leave with aggressive Lido and her rambunctious
sisters, Bambi joined our household in a human/dog/baby goat capacity.
Bottle fed and cuddled similar to a human child, she soon slept in her
box amidst the dog beds and spent her days in the yard with Maya, the
black and white border-collie lab mix, and Kharma, the jealous
four-month-old tan dachshund and Mexican beach dog puppy mix. None too
pleased with the attention being showered on Bambi that had most
recently been hers, Kharma spent her days trying to terrorize our
mini-goat.
HAVING BEEN SEVERELY reprimanded to leave Bambi alone, along with
the ubiquitous command to "Be Nice" , Kharma harassed the
baby goat on the sly. I responded to many bleats of distress, most of
which seemed to come from the shallow window well where Bambi always
seemed to end up. After scooping out the baby goat to put back into the
yard, I wondered why Bambi kept falling in there when she knew there
was no way to get out.