The Girls are Back in Town

...or on the pasture, actually. (They never leave town, but stay in a nearby barn over the winter.) The high spring grass must seem like a Sunday buffet after months of dry hay.

IMG_3388_2

We've been quiet for a few months. Your webmaster has been busy preparing for impending fatherhood (apparently, we'll be needing a lot of diapers - who knew?), but this week's articles in the Metrowest Daily News and the Northborough/Southborough Villager reminded me that a summer kick-off post was way past due.

First, thanks to all of you who have already contributed to the cow fund both using the website and good old-fashioned checks in the mail. Our supporters make the whole community effort to keep the cows on the conservation land possible. These funds not only buy hay, they also pay veterinary bills and other costs related to the care and feeding of the herd, and even with the cows living off the land for the next few months we need to replenish the cash reserves in order to keep this worthwhile community project going.

We should extend a special thanks to some students who helped us get through the winter by lending a hand for hay unloadings and other volunteer efforts. They made the process of unloading truckloads of hay much easier than it has been in past winters (at least for us, if not the students), and we really appreciate their efforts. Here's a photo of a hay crew from early March:

IMG_0982

As the land has rebounded from the restoration project last year, the wildlife has really started to come back. Some new additions to the conservation land include birdhouses scattered across the landscape.

IMG_3389

We've also seen red-tailed hawks, a big old owl, and numerous turkeys in the neighborhood. One morning a gentleman stepped out of his car, reached into the back seat and threw something colorful into the air, which immediately sprouted wings and fluttered off. It turned out to be a spectacular pheasant. The man saw us watching him and explained that he had found an injured bird last fall, an apparent loser in a collision with a car. He took care of it all winter, nursed it back to health, and then when the time came released it into the conservation land, which he thought was a good place for it to start out a new life in the wild. We think so too, and hope to see it again.

In other bird news, some mallards are regular visitors (perhaps even residents) of one of the ponds:

IMG_3332_2

Well, that's it for today -- good night from Breakneck Hill Road, and stop by to say hi to the cows soon.

IMG_3355