Well it's been a long time coming as we packed up from our old farm and moved to the new one (big, big job!!) and at the same time I've been in the process of registering our herd so our stock will now come registered, vaccinated, microchipped, halter and lead trained and of course they're friendly as can be having been extensively socialised with both adults and children.
You can view stock for sale on the donkeys page - and here's a sneak peak to get you started...
Farmer Jen Blog
Well it's been raining all weekend at the farm... which is good luck at the best of times... but it must have been especially lucky because my Winnie gave birth to her first foal. Flopsy was born yesterday morning and is teenie... not unusual for the first born... and very, very cute. His right ear is hanging a little bit lower than the left, which is making him all the cuter!
Welcome to the world, Flopsy!
At last... donkey foals now available for sale
Jen Dalitz - Sunday, August 14, 2011
Happy New Year!
Jen Dalitz - Saturday, January 01, 2011
A new day, a new year, a new problem to solve at the farm. Today it was waking up to a scorcher of a summers day, to find a donkey mum and bub separated from each other. With mum on one side of the fence and bub on the other, it was lucky I found them before the heat of the day to get some much needed milk into this little fella:
So how long can a donkey foal last if separated from its mum? That depends on lots of things including its age, the weather, and factors such as predators or dangers to its health. A newborn foal if separated at birth (as happened to one of ours which rolled under a strandwire fence on birth) could last only a few hours if it can't get to its mum for milk. A new born could also be rejected by its mum if its too long - because her ever expanding udder as the milk comes in becomes very sore if the pressure isn't relieved, resulting in an intervention to milk the Jenny and take some pressure off in order to allow the foal to drink painlessly.
In this case my feeling is that the foal was separated almost 24 hours earlier from its mum when one of them wondered through an open gate and along the fence line without the other. The good news is that the foal is 3 months old so apart from its mother's milk it's also eating grass and probably drinking from the dam on occasions, and has plenty of body fat to sustain it over this period.
So while he was certainly a very thirsty boy, he's had a couple of good drinks from mum now and is doing perfectly well out by the front gate. It certainly gave me a bit of a scare though... let's hope it's not a sign of things to come in 2011!

So how long can a donkey foal last if separated from its mum? That depends on lots of things including its age, the weather, and factors such as predators or dangers to its health. A newborn foal if separated at birth (as happened to one of ours which rolled under a strandwire fence on birth) could last only a few hours if it can't get to its mum for milk. A new born could also be rejected by its mum if its too long - because her ever expanding udder as the milk comes in becomes very sore if the pressure isn't relieved, resulting in an intervention to milk the Jenny and take some pressure off in order to allow the foal to drink painlessly.
In this case my feeling is that the foal was separated almost 24 hours earlier from its mum when one of them wondered through an open gate and along the fence line without the other. The good news is that the foal is 3 months old so apart from its mother's milk it's also eating grass and probably drinking from the dam on occasions, and has plenty of body fat to sustain it over this period.
So while he was certainly a very thirsty boy, he's had a couple of good drinks from mum now and is doing perfectly well out by the front gate. It certainly gave me a bit of a scare though... let's hope it's not a sign of things to come in 2011!
Welcome to the world, Flopsy!
Jen Dalitz - Monday, October 04, 2010
Well it's been raining all weekend at the farm... which is good luck at the best of times... but it must have been especially lucky because my Winnie gave birth to her first foal. Flopsy was born yesterday morning and is teenie... not unusual for the first born... and very, very cute. His right ear is hanging a little bit lower than the left, which is making him all the cuter! Welcome to the world, Flopsy!
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