Tag: nigerian dwarf goats

  • Tessa’s Healing Season

    Tessa’s Healing Season

    Sometimes, care on the farm looks less like sunshine and more like quiet vigilance.

    Tessa underwent an emergency cesarean section after losing her babies, Jess and Tori. She was expertly cared for by Dr. Martin at Temecula Valley Vet. During the procedure, part of her uterus had to be removed after it was found to be damaged. It was a serious surgery, the kind that reminds you how fragile even the strongest animals can be.

    Since then, Tessa has been in recovery. She spent many days on antibiotics, pain relief, and steroids, and remains under close watch while her stitches heal. She moves on her own now, steady but careful, as if her body is still remembering what it went through.

    Recovery hasn’t been instant. There are moments when you can see the discomfort in her steps. But healing isn’t about perfection. It’s about progress.

    And then, one day, she started acting like herself again.

    That small shift mattered more than anything clinical. It meant her energy was returning. It meant she was no longer just surviving.

    I didn’t want to lose my goat.

    But Tessa, in her quiet strength, chose to stay.

  • When Friends Change: Tessa and Cutestyr

    When Friends Change: Tessa and Cutestyr

    Not all changes on the farm are loud. Some happen quietly, in the space between two animals who used to be inseparable.

    Tessa and Cutestyr were always together. They slept side by side, moved as a pair, and seemed to understand each other in that steady, familiar way goats sometimes do. But after the babies arrived, something shifted.

    It started small. Buttercup wandered over and tried to latch onto Tessa. Tessa moved her away with a firm nudge, followed by a quick headbutt. Cutestyr didn’t take kindly to that. She stepped in, and before long, the two of them were clashing, not playfully, but with intention. Headbutts landed harder. Space grew between them.

    Now, instead of standing together, they keep their distance. Where there was once closeness, there is now tension. Tessa moves a little more on her own. Cutestyr stays close to her babies.

    On a farm, relationships shift with seasons, births, and loss. Not everything can be explained in simple terms. Sometimes, it’s enough just to notice that something once shared is now… different.

  • The Goatsplosion at Rainbow Road Farm

    The Goatsplosion at Rainbow Road Farm

    They don’t tell you that when goats decide to have babies, they do it all at once.

    At Rainbow Road Farm, what started as “a few expected deliveries” quickly turned into a full-blown goatsplosion. Piper welcomed Mace and Stacey. Cutestyr followed with Buttercup, Dally, and Oreo. Cutie, with a little help from Farmer Tabby, brought Halo and Clementine into the world. Seven tiny lives, all within a whirlwind of straw, hooves, and barely controlled chaos.

    Farmer Eli took on the role of official baby coordinator, making sure everyone found the right mama. Farmer Tumbleweed Scout gently cleaned birth goo off newborns like it was sacred work. And everywhere you turned, there were soft little baas echoing through the farm.

    Not every moment was easy. Tessa lost her babies, Jess and Tori, and that kind of quiet grief settles deep. Stacey gave us a scare too, needing a rushed trip to Dr. Martin after a frightening accident. Halo came into the world small and uncertain, and we held our breath longer than we’d like to admit.

    But somehow, through all of it, life kept pushing forward.

    Now the fields are filled with bouncing legs, tiny voices, and a brand new generation of Rainbow Road kids. We’re still waiting to see what bundles of bouncy joy Sweetheart brings. Hopefully, soon, we’ll have more to report.