Care of Our Farm Animals

Abstract: Story collected by Kevin White, a student at Ring, Dalahasey school (Ring Commons, Co. Dublin) (no informant identified).

Original reference: 0783/1/19

Loading...School Ring, Dalahasey [Vol. 0783, Chapter 0001]

County The Schools' Manuscript Collection : County Dublin Schools

transcribed at

 

Care of Our Farm Animals [duchas:4383520]

At the beginning of the worlk God created animals for mans use and benifit, therefore we should not ill-treat them, but to care them as much as they can, they are the cow, the horse the cattle and sheep.

The cow is one of our faithfullest servants, she gives us milk butter and cheese when she is drove into the cowhouse in the evening a chain is put around her neck and fastened by a crook then she is given hay and milked she is milked into an enamel basis then she is given turnips and oats if the turnips was given to her before she is milked they would taste the butter.  When we want to call the cow we call her pruggy, next to the cow ranks the horse - a useful farm animal when he is born he is called a foal when

Care of Our Farm Animals [duchas:4383521]

he is year old he is called a colt, then he is trained by our local horse-trainer to cart plough to mow to reap.  First he is trained to his harness and he must learn to go quickly and slowly whatever his master wishes he must not kick bite or have any will of his won there is a name given to the horse generally Jack Jimmy or Paddy. There are race horses also which are trained to hunt jump and to carry a jockey on his back.

(Only) only two miles away from us was bred and trained the famous racehorse Reynoldstown who won the Grand National two years in succession he was bred by Mr. Richard Ball Reynoldstown House Naul County Dublin.  Next are the sheep, the farmer rears sheep for the market from them he gets wool of which caps stockings gloves are made.  In spring the sheeps have their little lambs which are reared for the Easter market.  In the yeaning time they must be watched carefully, when they (their, they are) have their lambs they are fed with turnips and oats to keep up the supply of milk to rear thelambs, sheep are quiet and need not be tied.

Origin information
Ring Commons, Co. Dublin
Date created:
Type of Resource
text
Physical description
p. 51-52
Volume 0783
Note
Collected as part of the Schools' Folklore scheme, 1937-1938, under the supervision of teacher M. Ní Reachtaire.
Languages
English  
Genre
Folktale
Subject
Animal culture   linked data (lcsh)
Animal husbandry--Riar ainmhithe
School location
Ring CommonsCoimín na RoinneRing CommonsBalscaddanBalrothery EastDublin
Location
https://doi.org/10.7925/drs1.duchas_4456114
Location
University College Dublin. National Folklore Collection UCD .

Original reference: 0783/1/19

Suggested credit
"Care of Our Farm Animals"in "The Schools' Manuscript Collection," held by University College Dublin, National Folklore Collection UCD. © University College Dublin. Digital content by: Glenbeigh Records Management, published by UCD Library, University College Dublin <https://doi.org/10.7925/drs1.duchas_4456114>
Note
Collected as part of the Schools' Folklore scheme, 1937-1938, under the supervision of teacher M. Ní Reachtaire.
Funding
Supported by funding from the Department of Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht (Ireland), University College Dublin, and the National Folklore Foundation (Fondúireacht Bhéaloideas Éireann), 2014-2016.
Record source
Metadata creation date: 2014/2016 — Metadata created by Fiontar, Dublin City University, in collaboration with the National Folklore Collection UCD and UCD Library. Original Fiontar metadata converted into MODS by UCD Library.

Rights & Usage Conditions

Creative Commons License
Care of Our Farm Animals is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

Copyright of the original resource: University College Dublin

To use for commercial purposes, please contact the National Folklore Collection, UCD - See: http://n2t.net/ark:/87925/h1cc0xm5