Tag: sheep

  • Visiting a sheepfold in the Tarcău mountains

    Milking cows manually

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    Part of my trip to Transylvania should consist of staying one night at a sheepfold. First, we went to the guesthouse of Levente Gáll, who drove us and a couple on honeymoon up to the Tarcău Mountains, forming a small part of the Carpathians,  On our way we passed several timber houses, which were decaying, mainly starting with holes in the roof. Thinking of the manual work just to make the wooden shingles covering the roof, I felt wistful.

    Farther away we could see farms with corrugated iron roofs located on meadows surrounded by forest. Levente told us that before grandparents, parents and children could stay for a couple of months in summer, but now they stay just one or two nights to cut hay because they get support from the EU to keep the landscape open. We also passed several wooden gates, separating the mountain in areas because each village in the nearby valleys own parts of the mountain.

    On the top of the mountain, we met some men going back to the lowlands with horse and cart and we passed a flock of sheep being guarded by two shepherds who used short, sharp commands to guide the sheep. We passed a mountain farm where a bitch had born puppies shortly before our arrival. They were playing and fighting over a piece of meat until their mother just grabbed it and ate it herself.The puppies didn’t even seem to notice their loss. They just went on playing and exploring, but next spring they will have to work for food.

    Passing another flock of sheep on our way down to a valley, we soon arrived at a small hut where I and my guide Karoly would spend one night. As a sign of welcome, the boss of the shepherds played a little music for us using his alpine horn called bucium in Romanian..

    Levente had brought a large selection of cold cuts, hams, etc. and we had lunch outside in the nice weather. The man of the newly married couple showed how shepherds can make a sound like a gunshot by moving quickly a wooden handle with a rope at one end. Since we were in a valley, the sound reverberated repeatedly until it died out. After some time, Levente and the couple drove back to the guesthouse, while we would stay one night.

    As time passed, the cows came back from grazing and went inside a pen where they would be milked. When most of the them had arrived, the shepherds closed the pen and turned on an electric fence powered by solar cells.

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    The shepherds who had been outside all day, also went to the pen where they would take a three-legged wooden chair made out of one piece of wood only and having a height, of, say, 30 cm. Then, they put the chair on the ground next to the udder of a cow and sat down, always sitting wide-legged in order to obtain good balance. Sometimes, the cows move or they sort of hit the shepherds with their tails, making a stable chair necessary. Mostly, the cows just stood upright, seemingly not even noticing that they were being milked. A nice feature about this place was the serenity, only broken by the ringing of cowbells, running water from two brooks and a slight wind. In addition, when a cow or horse was passing, the guarding dogs followed it, barking.

    Having milked one cow, they went to another one, watching the udder to see if the cow had been milked or not. If a cow hasn’t been milked, the udder looks tight and vice versa. In addition to the shepherds who had been outside all day and the man who had been playing for us, a woman also milked the cows. My guide told me that she was married to the man who played for us when we arrived, their names are Ana and Gabor Borosan, and they had been employed by Levente to supervise the sheepfold. Next, the Borosan couple had employed 3 more shepherds to help them with the animals. When they had milked all the cows, about 50 in all, they brought the milk to the hut and poured it through a porous cloth in order to filter the milk. The shepherds applied pig’s fat to the teats of the cows in order to keep the skin well and they put superfluous fat on their chairs. Afterwards. we could sometimes see the guarding dogs licking the fat on the chairs. Similarly, the cows were sometimes licking a large clump of salt lying on the ground.

    The next task consisted of feeding the guarding dogs with whey, pouring it into troughs. The dogs obviously considered it a delicacy, slurping loudly. When they were finished, they were ordered to go back to the sheep pen to guard the sheep against carnivores.

    Like the guarding dogs, the shepherds also had to work more. Next, they walked to the sheep pen where 600 sheep were waiting to be milked. Levente owns 100 of them, the Borosan couple own 400 sheep and 3 cows, while the rest is owned by various people. Besides, there were 200 lambs and young sheep, which were not milked.

    We arrived at the sheep pen at dusk, but it got dark quickly and soon it was pitch black. Having taken some photos of the shepherds milking the sheep and another shepherd chasing the sheep toward the shed where the other shepherds were milking sheep, we just had to wait for one and a half hour. Each time the shepherd chased the sheep toward the shed, they started running in a circle and almost every time, at least one sheep wasn’t able to approach the shed, instead it got further away from it.

    When they were milking the cows, it sounded like water from a garden hose was hitting a metal surface, lasting as long as the shepherd was pulling a teat, then the same sound was repeated as long as milk was remaining. Instead, when the sheep were milked, they produced little milk and we could hardly hear anything.

    In the beginning, I could hardly see the stars, but as it got completely dark, I imagined I could even see the Milky Way stretching like a diffuse ribbon across the sky. I also tried to find the polar star by extrapolating the handle of the Big Dipper. By locating it, one can find north, but since I didn’t check the cardinal directions in daylight, it was just to pass the time. Astonishingly, a large guardian dog came to my guide in order be caressed, next it came to me. Without thinking, I put my hand on its head, then I remembered that you should never do it because it shows the dog that you are dominant. Being bitten by a big dog was to be avoided at all costs and I pulled my hand towards me as quickly as possible. Next, the dog just disappeared in the night.

    Finally, the shepherds were ready to go back when I heard Mrs Borosan say the only word I understood during my whole stay at the sheepfold: perduto, meaning lost in Italian. Then, I finally understood that they were speaking Romanian and not Hungarian as I had thought. Later, my guide told me that she talked about a shepherd, who had stayed with them for two months, then he disappeared for two days before returning to the sheepfold. The reason why he was away so long was that he didn’t know their names, even after 2 months. Strange, isn’t it?

    On our walk back to the hut, I followed the shepherds as closely as possible. My trusty, old Nokia phone couldn’t even have lit up the ground next to my feet. Staying outside in the dark with 20 more or less feral guarding dogs wasn’t an option. Back at the hut, we ate dinner with the shepherds, then we went to sleep. Since the beds were hard, bumpy and short, it wasn’t a good night’s sleep. Anyway, we could sleep inside, while one or more of the shepherds had to sleep outside in a simple shed, guarding the sheep.

    In the morning, I could hear the shepherds getting up to milk the sheep again, but both of us preferred to sleep. When I got up, the shepherds had finished milking the sheep and had started milking the cows. The air was damp, crisp and cold, the ground was covered by dew, fog was rising from the ground, white dots on the meadows were in fact dogs which were sleeping on the ground, but the cows looked totally unfazed by staying outside at night. The shepherds, who were milking the cows, had rolled up their sleeves. Instead, I started freezing on my hands after having taken just a few photos. I imagined that they weren’t freezing because they held the warm teats of the cows, but the real reason was probably that I’m not used to working outside.

    After they had finished milking the cows, the pen was opened and they were free to go grazing. Next, it was feeding time for the dogs again.

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    As expected, they were served whey again, which the slurped loudly and willingly. At the same time, the pigs in the pigsty made happy noises, anticipating a tasty breakfast. When the dogs were eating, the shepherds started calling loudly because one dog was apparently missing. After some time, a big white dog came running towards the trough. The day before, four cows were missing during milking, but they arrived after some time. In addition, they chased away some cows, which belonged to the adjacent sheepfold. In retrospect, it almost feels like the shepherds are parents who want to know where all their 1000(?) offspring are staying and let other parents take care of their own offspring! When all the animals had been fed, the dogs were ordered to go back guarding the sheep. Then, it was breakfast for the shepherds, consisting of the same as dinner last night: soup, coarse sausages, bread and cheese. Afterward they went back to the sheep to let them go grazing all day before leading them back to the pen in the evening.

    Finally, the Borosan couple, my guide and I could have breakfast. My guide had collected mushrooms on our way to the hut and Mrs Borosan kindly prepared them for us. We also got served maize, bread and cheese.

    As expected, it was time to make cheese after breakfast. First, Mr Borosan separated cheese mass from the whey, he put the cheese mass inside a porous cloth and he compressed it to get rid of more whey. In the end, he put a wooden beam above the cheese mass and attached one end to the wall, while he hung a container full of milk in the other end. Doing it this way, he made the force of gravity work for him. Excess whey was fed via a chute to a container on the floor.

    Next, he reheated the remaining whey and, after having waited some time, he turned it into ricotta. Before we went down to the valley, we could eat as much ricotta with jam as we wanted. Delicious!

    romania_cheesemaking

    Mrs Borosan also told my guide that it was almost impossible to get good shepherds, they smoke a lot and she had to ration how much much they could smoke. She tried to limit their consumption to one packet a day, but they wanted more. Since they are paid very little, if they smoke too much, they won’t get any salary. Although Mr Borosan was the formal boss at the sheepfold, Mrs Borosan was the real one. This sheepfold was apparently the only one with a woman in charge, cooking good meals and keeping the place tidy. Instead, one sheepfold we visited was anything but tidy. The Borosans had been married for 30 years, they had 5 children and they had all spent their summer holidays at the sheepfold. Instead, their grandchildren want to return almost as soon as they arrive, missing soft drinks, using their smartphones and so on. Here, there is no signal and not possible to call anyone. Anyway, there has been one improvement for the last 5 years: lamps powered by solar cells. Before, they were using paraffin lamps, something only very nostalgic or conservative people can be missing.

    The season lasts from May to October and the shepherds walk with the animals from the valley to the sheepfold. It takes about 14 hours and they walk down again in October. The shepherds only have guarding dogs to guard against wolves and bears, but no shepherd dogs, which could help them guide the sheep. They aren’t allowed to kill wolves or bears and they are only armed with sticks and the wooden handle with a rope at one end..

    Mrs Borosan was pessimistic regarding the future of the sheepfold, imagining that in 10 years time, nobody will work as shepherds any longer. At least, young Romanians won’t do it. Unfortunately, it’s more or less a worldwide trend that young people don’t want to do hard and practical work.

    Last but not least: the horses. There were several horses near the sheepfold, but nobody looked after them. Being a guest, I felt they were part of the landscape. However, I suppose they are use for carrying stuff and pulling wagons at the start and at the end of the season in the mountains. Everyone at the sheepfold has to be useful in some way, else they can’t stay there. 

    Before we walked down to the lowlands, where we were told that a car with a hidden key would be waiting for us, my guide bought one big cheese, weighing about 6 kg, and one ricotta weighing about the same. In fact, we bought them together, but I had paid everything in advance. Next, we walked on more or less muddy roads back to the car, passing another sheepfold with a couple of very angry dogs.

    Having made a film on both the truffle dogs and the guarding dogs, the contrast could hardly have been greater, While the truffle dogs are part of a family, sleeping inside, getting lots of caresses and treats, the guarding dogs sleep outside all year, getting no caresses and no treats, However, they have to be tough in order to fight wolves and bears, which may attack the sheep and the cows.

    Let’s hope that some young couple from a rich country and who are fed up with a busy lifestyle will prefer to move to Romania and keep this ancient tradition going for many years to come.

    31 December 2017: I’m still with the shepherds and animals at the mountain farm in my mind. They made such a great impression on me! Fortunately, a young woman has published an article about working with goats on a mountain farm in Norway in a magazine called Ren Mat (Clean Food) of which I’ll give a short extract: We take the cold mass (meaning whey, which has been heated and stirred for several hours) inside and turn it into easily recognisable cubes. Customers consisting of tourists passing by and local people, enter, holding their banknotes ready. The brown goat cheese is easy to sell. It’s got an identity, a history and it’s the best I’ve ever tasted. It tastes cramps in my arms from not being used to milking, mastery of finally being able to milk the goats, soft and sweet and sharp. We eat incredible amounts sitting around a crowded table, we go to bed early and we dream strange dreams.

    We are woken before 6 in the morning by our teacher Even Hov when he knocks on the ceiling below where we are sleeping. I don’t have a watch, the farm where we are staying doesn’t have mains current and there is no coverage for using a mobile phone. Time doesn’t care, but everything I do during the day means something.

  • Joseba Insausti – shepherd

    Milking sheep

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    My guide asked Jose Ramon Aguirre «Marron», a versatile man (photographer, alpinist and blogger) in charge of Lizarrusti House  (Environmental Center, Tavern and Hostel) in the Natural Park of Aralar to bring us by car from the town of Ataun to the Aralar mountain range via curvy mountain roads and through forests until we reached a lovely area with rolling hills and meadows where horses, cows and sheep were grazing. Finally, we arrived at the mortared stone house of Joseba Insausti, a shepherd only 30 years old, but who has already been doing this work for 19 years, an early start indeed!. Since this area is usually covered by several metres of snow in winter, local farmers practise transhumance, that is they bring their animals in a van to the mountains in late spring and walk down to the valleys in autumn. Transhumance, man bringing animals to the mountains in summer and to the valleys in winter, has been practised for millennia worldwide, but nowadays it is done only in a few a places due to factors like national borders, heavily trafficked roads, only a few who want to be a shepherd, etc.

    Having entered the house, Jose Ramón led us through the house to a small annex where Joseba was milking his Latxa sheep manually. All the sheep were inside an enclosure next to the house and Joseba ordered his shepherd dog to chase the sheep against him by issuing short, sharp commands in Basque. Then, the sheep had to enter a small cage one by one. Depending on if it was a lamb or a ewe, he let the first ones pass, while he closed a small gate if it was a ewe. In the latter case, he milked it by hand, letting the milk into a bucket. When he was finished, he opened the gate such that the ewe could pass. This procedure was repeated until the bucket was full at which moment he poured its contents into a container through a filter of porous cloth. Then, he went back to his milking place and let the next sheep enter the cage. As the number of sheep decreased, the remaining ones weren’t entering the cage willingly, making Joseba order his shepherd dog more frequently to move the sheep against the cage.

    Having milked all the sheep, he brought the milk container to the other part of the hut where there was a small dairy, which is called Otatza de Ordizia. There, he poured the contents of the container through another filter into a rectangular vessel. Having added rennet, which is used to turn milk into curd, he lit a gas fire below the vessel to heat the milk to about 38ºC and stirred the milk for some time. Then, we had to wait for about for about half an hour until the milk started coagulating, meaning it was being turned into curd.

    Afterwards, he used a utensil, which is commonly called a harp or a guitar, because it consists of a metal frame crossed by parallel wires. Moving the harp through the curd in various directions, it is broken up into solid and liquid parts. Next, he spent some time stirring the mixture in order to make it even. Finally, he put a a perforated metal plate into the container and pressed it towards the mixture such that the liquid parts, called whey, flowed out through the holes in the plate, while the solid parts remained. Compressing the solid parts further, a thick block of cheese mass was formed, while the whey was removed by compressing the cheese mass. Next, he used a knife to cut up the cheese mass in cubes with a length of about 12 cm, which he put into circular containers. However, he had already put a porous piece of cloth in each container such that it would be easier to extract the cheese mass from the container at a later date. At last, he put first a label to get traceability, then a a lid on each circular container and put all of them under pressure to press out as much whey as possible.

    Joseba brings his sheep to the mountains in early May and he brings them back to the lowlands in November. He milks the sheep twice daily and he works 12-hour days. There are lots of mortared stone houses in this area and he told my guide that up to 47 shepherds may be staying in this area in season. During our stay, horses and cattle were walking around freely and a car with a trailer even brought two cows, which were released in the same area.

    He has two labels for his cheeses: one for mountain cheese and one for valley cheese. In 2015, he won two prizes: the first prize for the best sheep cheese of Spain and the first prize in «Premio Mejores Quesos Españoles» or «Best Spanish Cheeses Award».

    He considers what he’s doing not a job, but a way of life.

  • Basazabal farm and farmhouse dairy

    Bring a flock of sheep to a pasture

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    We arrived at the farm of the Muñoa family before sunrise. Inside a big building, we could see lots of sheep being milked by milking machines operated by Javier Muñoa and his brother-in-law. His former assistant has recently retired and he’s looking for a replacement, but he hasn’t found a suitable person yet.

    Each time a group of sheep had been milked, they were let out through an exit, while another one was allowed to enter through an entrance. All in all, 270 sheep of the Latxa race were milked this morning. Latxa sheep are considered to be native to the Basque region, but genetic analyses have traced them to present-day Israel from where they started migrating about 7000 years ago. They are very well adapted to the mild and wet climate of the north of the Basque Country.

    Having finished milking, we followed Javier to the farmhouse dairy, where the milk from the sheep already had been pumped into an open vessel, which obviously was part of a cheesemaking machine. Small dairies light a gas fire below the vessel containing milk in order to heat it, but Javier just turned on a switch to heat the milk to 38°C. Then, he prepared rennet, a substance which is used to start curdling, by mixing solid and liquid parts by means of a kitchen mixer, then pouring it into the milk. Afterwards, he started stirring the milk by inserting a couple of harps, a metal structure with parallel metal wires, into a part of the machine and turning on another switch. After some time, he stopped the stirring, letting the milk slowly turn into curd.

    While the milk was turning into curd, Javier went to another barn where he filled feed in a trough, then he let young sheep about 6 months old enter in order to eat. Having eaten, they were led back to the other barn. Then, he released a large flock of sheep, walking in front of them on the road down to a communal meadow where they were allowed to graze freely. Next, he released another group of sheep on a pasture on his own property.

    We returned to the farmhouse dairy where the milk had curdled and it was time to separate liquid and solid parts, that is whey  and cheese. First, Javier restarted the machine, letting the harp stir the curd. Having stirred the solid stuff into small clumps, he exchanged the harp with another metal tool, then letting the machine continue stirring until the mixture looked homogeneous. Next, he put a perforated plate into the liquid on one side of the vessel, likewise on the other one. While one of them was stationary, he started pressing the other one against the first one such that the whey was allowed to exit through the holes in the plates, leaving even more cheese mass inside. After having compressed it as much as possible, Javier used a stencil to divide the cheese mass into cubes whose side was 10-15 cm. Having already put porous cloths into a lot of plastic cylinders, he lifted the cheese cubes and put them one by one in the cylinders. Next, he put small labels on the top of each cheese in order to ensure traceability. Finally, he put lids on all of them and put them in a rack were they were subjected to continuous pressure in order to press out as much whey as possible.

    Having finished the cheesemaking, Javier showed us a brochure from the Guild of Fine Food  where one his cheeses had been deemed to be among the 50 best products worldwide in 2015. In addition, it also got an award of three stars, where one star means delicious, two stars mean outstanding and three stars mean exquisite. This is even more impressive when there were more than 10,000 products which were entered into the competition.

    The cheeses made at this farm from part of Idiazabal cheese  and it is a Denomination of Origin, meaning it has to be produced in the Basque region from the milk of Latxa or Carranzana sheep and the cheese has to be prepared in certain ways. There are about 112 cheese producers, who make Idiazabal cheese and they are located in the territories of Araba, Gipuzkoa, Navarre and Biscay.

    Although Idiazabal cheese has existed for many years, it was common for sheep farmers to send sheep’s milk to dairies where it was turned into cheese. About 30 years ago, there was a marked change when a priest called P Mitxel Lekuona, persuaded farmers to make cheese themselves because the price of milk was steadily decreasing, giving the farmers very little profit. He encouraged them to turn all the milk they produced into cheese and to improve their way of making cheese. He ran courses in cheesemaking, bought various tools and organised excursions to other cheese producers, e.g. in France.

    Regarding the sheep, the ewes are made pregnant by means of artificial insemination, but if it doesn’t work, Javier let the ewes stay with rams for some time. Lambs are born at the end of November and some of them are slaughtered at Christmas when the farmers get the highest price for them. When the lambs are weaned, milking of the sheep is started. Ewes, which aren’t able to get pregnant are sold to Greece and Lebanon.

    Although many sheep farmers bring their sheep to the highlands in summer and to the lowlands in winter, Javier Muñoa lets them stay at or near his far all year.

  • Sa Tiria farm and guesthouse

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    Sa Tiria is located on land where members of the same family have been cultivating fruits and vegetables besides raising sheep and pigs for more than 100 years. About 12 years ago, they decided to build a guest house together with an on-site restaurant, all of excellent quality.

    The area of Sa Tiria amounts to about 150 hectares, including the guest house, houses for the family, a garden, a barn for the sheep, a pen and a small pool for the pigs, olive forests, fields where they cultivate vegetables and fruits, meadows where the sheep can go grazing and fields for cultivating fodder for the sheep, in particular, in dry periods. The property also covers a large area of sparse trees with Mediterranean scrub.

    There is also an abandoned quarry, where granite was extracted some decades ago, at the foot of the hill behind the farm.

    The farm and guesthouse is located between the hill and the country road, while the sea is located about 1 km in the opposite direction.

    Both the interior and the exterior of the guesthouse look very attractive, while it is surrounded by an ample parking space and a rich diversity of local trees and flowers. The guesthouse is managed by the sisters Carla and Linda, while their brothers Lucio and Salvatore take care of the farm. Their parents live next to the guesthouse, but leave the daily running to their children.

    The on-site restaurant is large, high-ceilinged and airy, while a modern and functional kitchen is located in an adjoining room. An environment filled with fragrances of local dishes and where all the meals for the guests are made.

    Every morning, one of the sisters would prepare a delicious breakfast of bread, home-made jams from strawberry trees, quince and plums together with yogurt and various sheep’s cheeses and cold cuts, fruit juices, home-made pastries and of course tea and coffee. A well-assorted selection of fresh, organic fruits was always available. While not cooking, they seemed to be always busy cleaning the premises. Besides, they were knowledgeable and always willing to share information about places worth seeing, spectacular beaches and anything else which could interest their guests.

    The wholesome and ample dinners were also made from local ingredients and using local recipes. Starters were followed by various pasta dishes, while the main course could be e.g. roasted lamb or piglet accompanied by boiled vegetables, mixed salads, olives and roasted potatoes, followed by local cheeses, fruits and pastries. To drink, a bottle of wine was available together with water and a glass of myrtle was offered at the end of each meal.

    The fine rooms were located sequentially next to the restaurant, while a terrace extended along the whole building. Comfortable garden furniture was outside each room such that it was possible to relax outside the rooms in the balmy evenings or any other time of the day, sensing the scents of the abundant Mediterranean vegetation on the property.

    One evening, we followed Carla for a walk around the farm. The sheep were outside eating hay provided by one of her brothers. All or most of them were pregnant and they didn’t produce milk, but there was a room where the sheep could be milked after they had born lambs because, in general, they produce more milk than is required by their offspring.

    We also paid a visit to the pigs, which had a large pen all for themselves and a little pond where they could cool themselves on hot summer days. Like many pigs, they looked at us curiously and expectantly, waiting for a treat.

    Having stayed for four days at this welcoming place, we said goodbye to Carla and continued our journey along the south coast of Sardinia.

  • Pagadizabal mountain farm

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    We went back to Aia a few days after we had visited Joxean Bollain, the pig farmer. Having passed the village of Aia, we drove in a lovely landscape with meadows, groves, and scattered farms in a hilly terrain. Since there were no signs, it was rather difficult to find the Pagadizabal farm. There, the teenage son Joseba was preparing to make apple juice together with Jose, a man in his sixties. They had already filled the press with apples, remaining only to put a lid on the top and moving it downwards by means of a ratchet. After just a few turns, we were offered fresh, delicious apple juice.

    Having arrived at a busy farm, another farmer had arrived while we were watching the apple pressing. He had come to buy two rams in order to spread their genes among his ewes. Having restrained both of them, he put them in his car and went away. The rams had nice, curved horns and, since there are so few of them, it’s important to pass on their genes to maintain diversity. Actually, we followed the farmer with the rams in his car for a part of the way until we arrived at a meadow where there was a flock of sheep. There, Peio, the father of Joseba let out their dog Lantz, a border collie. Letting him enter the meadow, Peio gave him short commands in Basque, which was enough to make him herd the sheep where Peio wanted. Having led them into a tight spot, he could inspect their feet, which are vulnerable, he told my guide.

    Having gone back to the farm, we could appreciate the beauty of the surroundings of the Pagadizabal farm. Like the farm of Joxean Bollain, it’s located on the top of a steep hill and surrounded by groves, meadows, and hills. Birds of prey were circling overhead and sheep’s and cows’ bells could be heard in the distance. Again Peio let Lantz herd sheep, first a small flock on the top of a steep hill, then he was ordered to herd another one at the bottom of the hill. Obviously, a shepherd dog like Lantz is indispensable for the Pagadizabal family. Peio also let Lantz guide some geese which he did with ease.

    There were also several cows and calves grazing in the steep hillside. Peio told my guide that the cows bear calves unattended, but since it’s so steep, sometimes the calves fall down the hillside. In order to help the calf, they first have to restrain the cow since she’s very protective of her offspring, in particular for the first 48 hours.

    The hills around the farm were covered with fresh grass, and since their tractor had broken down, the Pagadizabal family first cut the grass with a scythe. At the same time, one of them prepared two oxen to pull a sled. It was a pleasant, but totally unexpected sight to watch oxen being walked next to each other, then having a wooden device put on their necks and having fastened everything by means of ropes. Being animals of habit, my guide was told that if an ox has been working on the left side once, it has to always work on the left side and vice versa. Having prepared both sled and oxen, the driver made them walk to the meadow where all the family raked the grass together and put it on the sled. Finally, the oxen pulled everything up to a barn where the grass was put in a barn. The oxen were completely docile because they had been castrated. In fact, there were several more oxen at the farm, which were not castrated and since they are so strong, they were getting dangerous. Peio was planning to castrate them too, but he was waiting for a cold day. I imagine they will let the oxen stay outside a whole night in order to make them easier to handle, but I didn’t ask my guide to enquire further.

    Before we left, Peio ordered Lantz to herd the sheep inside a barn. Then, it just remained to thank the Pagadizabal family for letting us watch them at work in such lovely surroundings.

  • The Catean farm

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    The Catean family lives in the lowlands in the village of Rotbav about 20 km north of Brasov. There, they have a dairy where they produce cheese twice daily, while their horses live in a stable a few kilometres northwards, and their sheep stay on meadows a short drive from the farm. Early in the morning we could watch cheese being made more or less manually, first by pouring milk from a milk can through a filter into a large container, then heating the milk to about 40°C and adding rennet to separate the cheese mass from the liquid. After waiting about half an hour, it was time for separation where the cheese mass was lifted by hand into a wide, open container with an opening in one end and being oblique such that the liquid could flow out and being collected in another container. Putting the remaining cheese mass in a porous cloth, and compressing it in various ways, even more liquid was ejected. Finally, the dairy workers tied the cloth tightly around the cheese mass and put wooden boards and weights on the top in order to get rid of even more liquid.

    The three sons of the Catean family, Silviu, George and Ionut, have taken university degrees, but all of them prefer to stay at their parents’ farm. One of them told my guide that it is in their blood to be farmers, and they can’t help it. However, they are running a profitable farm and their products are renowned for their excellent quality.

    All the brothers are members of Slow Food Brasov, and they have been actively participating in a project called Transhumance 2013 where 6 shepherds and a flock of sheep too young to produce milk walked along the whole of the Carpathians from Romania to Poland, via Ukraine, the Czech republic, Slovakia and Poland, a distance of about 1400 km. Actually, transhumance is as old as the hills, often being practised by farmers living in the lowlands bringing their livestock to the highlands in spring and back again in autumn. Besides, nomads have gone wherever there was food for their animals for millennia. However, due to border controls, passports, etc. this has more or less stopped, and it is to be hoped that their project will be an annual event.

    After having paid a visit to their beautiful horses residing indoors due to the strong heat, we went by horse and cart to their sheepfold. Walking on a gravel road, the horse brought us to a sheepfold, while her foal was walking next to her. There, they could both eat as much as they wanted, while we were visiting the sheepfold. It seems like Romanian sheepfolds are organised in more or less the same way, with an outer fence and an inner one located next to a shed where the shepherds are milking the sheep. The sheep enter through two openings in the shed, before getting milked by one of four shepherds. It was unbearably hot with no shade, but the sheep were waiting patiently, and the horse was sweating heavily. How man and animals survive, I have no idea, but probably the horses and the sheep best suited to the heat have been selected for breeding since ancient times. Going back again in a horse-drawn cart, we passed a nest of storks, 3 chickens and one adult. How they survive the heat is another mystery.

  • Sheepfold near the village of Budesti in Maramures

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    Having passed the picturesque village of Budesti in Maramures and driving on a gravel road for some kilometres, we arrived at the dwelling of a group of shepherds. Since they were outside looking after their animals, we could at least see that these guys were very practical, having made chairs and tables using trees from the forest in order to make life a little easier. Actually, they were residing at a sheepfold, which we had passed on the way to their house. Approaching on foot, we were met by a bunch of rather fierce livestock guarding dogs, and all we could do was to wait until one of the shepherds arrived. Having been “liberated”, we could finally approach the sheepfold.

    The sheepfold was located in a lovely place, being surrounded by hills and forests, and situated on a meadow. The shepherds were busy milking the sheep and a few goats, while one guy made the sheep enter the shed where they would be milked. Having milked all the animals, they brought the milk in cans and poured it into a large wooden barrel. Heating the milk and adding rennet, the milk was ready to be separated into cheese mass and liquid after about half an hour. Lifting the cheese mass out of the barrel and putting it into porous pieces of cloth which were hung up, the compressing of the cheese mass which were always done in the small dairies we had visited, was replaced by using  the force of gravity only.  After having made the first set of cheese, they poured the remaining liquid into a big pot and heated it on a wood-fired oven.

    After lunch, they stirred the liquid continuously until a thin layer appeared on the top. Having removed it, it was time to get hold of the ricotta cheese. That is, re-cooked cheese. Having placed all the ricotta cheese in a porous cloth and hung it up to dry, the remaining liquid was poured into a round trough where the dogs hungrily slurped it up.

    In the end, the shepherds let out all their animals from the enclosure and started bringing them to the lovely hills surrounding the sheepfold.

    Next to the enclosure, there was a primitive hut made of sticks and plastic in which one of the shepherds would sleep at night since wolves and bears are certainly able to attack their animals.

  • The Lebu family – sheep farmers

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    We met Constatin Lebu as he was receiving fresh milk brought by car from the three sheepfolds of his family. As usual, the milk was filtered and poured into big containers. then heated up to about 40°C, and his wife Lucretia added rennet to separate the liquid from the cheese mass.

    They have about 2000 sheep, which are split into three sheepfolds, and their two sons are helping with shepherding the sheep.

    Constantin worked for many years during the communist regime as a mechanical engineer in Sibiu. After the Revolution he lost his job, returned to his village, Saliste, and started to raise animals. He had always used to keep a few animals at home. Now, he is dedicating all his time to doing this. His wife, Lucretia is helping to make the cheese, and she is in charge of doing this twice a day, a process which takes around 3 hours. After having separated the cheese mass from the liquid in a porous cloth and put some weights on top in order to squeeze out the remaining liquid, she was finished for the time being.

    Cheese, which had already passed this stage, was put in salt water. First, they put a raw egg in the water. If it rises to the surface, the water is salty enough for the cheese. The salt is used to drive out more liquid, add taste to the cheese, and finish off bacteria.

    Afterwards, bits of sheep’s cheese, called telemea, was put in big, wooden barrels covered on the inside by plastic. When all the cheese had been put in the barrel, they closed the plastic by means of a knot. The barrels are made by a cooper in the Western Carpathians where people are well-known for producing them.

  • The Istrate farm

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    Before we could go to the Istrate farm, we had to go to a farmer’s market in Brasov in order to give a ride to the mistress of the house, Mrs Marcela Istrate, back home.

    Having passed another potholed road, we arrived at a farm with sheep, cows, chickens and pigs surrounded by meadows and hills. Unfortunately, their sheepfold was 2 hours walk away leading to that we just stayed at the farm.

    After being served a wide selection of their home-made cheeses, Mr Ioan Istrate invited us to join him slaughtering a calf which had been butchered the day before. Having just entered a cool room, he went inside their refrigerated room and came back with what was left of the calf. Then, he started the business of slaughtering by means of a knife and an ax. Having succeeded in removing bones and some meat he didn’t want, he salted the meat and put it back again in the refrigerated room. The meat and bones he had removed would be turned into sausages another day.

    After having finished the meat, we were treated to how to make cheese. Since the cheese mass was ready for separation at our arrival, he started scooping up the cheese mass by means of a bucket and pouring its contents into a tank which he had covered with a porous cloth. Always pouring the cheese in a different area of the tank, he obtained a somewhat level surface in the end. Having transferred all the cheese mass to the tank, he used a knife to divide the cheese mass in a grid, one vertical or horizontal line at a time. Afterwards, he tied up the cloth, put a wooden lid on top of it, then he put some heavy weights on the lid in order to press out the whey, which started flowing out of an opening in the tank into another container below.

    We were also shown the room where they were smoking some of their cheeses. It was simply done by lighting a fire below a bowl filled with whey, from which they would extract ricotta, while the smoke would pass the cheeses stored on a shelf in the same room.

    Our next demonstration was how he made cheese in sheep’s stomachs and in fir-tree bark cylinders. Starting with a porous cheese, he cut it in pieces with a knife and put the pieces in a box. When all the cheese had been cut up, he put the pieces in a meat grinder and turned on power. It was like watching someone grinding meat, just that the colour of the stuff being ground was yellow. After having ground the whole cheese, he mixed the shapes into fist-sized clumps. Having finished this, he started making cylinders of fir-tree bark.

    The fir-tree bark looked like a piece of leather having more or less the same colour. He started with cutting it into a rectangle, then he used a needle and a narrow ribbon used for wrapping Christmas gifts. Having joined the two long sides of the rectangle by means of sewing, making a cylinder, he started sewing a lid to one of its ends. Having finished, he used a knife in order to cut away the superfluous bark. Then, he started filling the cylinder with the cheese, compressing it as much as he could and filling it up to the top. Finally, he put a lid on the top, joining it to the cylinder by means of sewing again.

    Having made a fir-tree bark cylinder, he started filling up a sheep’s stomach with the same cheese. Having put as much cheese as possible into it, he closed the opening by putting a circular-shaped piece of fir-tree bark in the opening and closing it by sewing.

    Making a search on the internet for cheese in fir-tree bark, I found that it may date back to the time when the Romans invaded what is now called Romania. The locals fled to the mountains bringing their sheep with them. Having abundant fir-tree forests, they learned how to preserve sheep’s cheese in fir-tree bark, making the cheese edible for a much longer time than by just storing it without protection.

    Anyway, having been shown so much, it was time to have a look outside. In addition to pigs sleeping in mud and free-ranging chickens, a large flock of cows were grazing on a meadow near the farm, being looked after by a cowherd. Before we entered the room for watching preparation of meat and cheese, there was a large flock of sheep in the shade of a giant tree. When we came out again, the sheep had disappeared, possibly ascending some of the beautiful hills surrounding the farm.

  • The Tafta farm

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    We went to another Saxon village called Cincşor. As usual, it had a fortified church, but we were looking for a farm just outside the village. After just a few minutes drive, we arrived at a farm where we were met by Mr Vasile Tafta, a friendly man in his sixties who had come from the south of Romania in the 70s and stayed ever since.

    After having entered their dairy located next to the farm, he poured some rennet into the cheese in order to separate the cheese mass from the whey. While waiting, he served us their own cheese together with a glass of pálinka, a homemade spirit which almost everyone in the countryside is making by themselves. Afterwards, we went back to the dairy, watching him using a utensil like a smoothing plane in order to transfer the cheese mass layer by layer from one container to another one. After having finished the transfer, the procedure was the same as usual. Tying a cloth around the cheese mass, compress it, and hang up the cheese mass for drying.

    Afterwards, he showed us around the farm, letting us see the calves which were staying together inside, then we went to visit a young ox. He jumped across the fence and started stroking the ox who was alone inside. If I’m not wrong, it seemed like he really knew how to treat animals well.

    Walking around the courtyard on the farm, suddenly some pigs and a dog arrived in the door opening of the barn, maybe they woke up from their afternoon rest.

    Since the cows and sheep were out grazing, we couldn’t leave without having a look at them. One of Mr Tafta’s sons agreed to follow us and after having ascended a steep hill and walked for some time, we found the cows grazing on the top of a hill having a lovely view to the surrounding countryside. Then, we went on in order to see their sheep, and passing two guarding dogs, I really appreciated that we had a guide who knew them. Walking on rolling meadows and passing deciduous trees here and there, we arrived at a flock of sheep which was guarded by a shepherd. Fortunately, our guide showed us another way back such that we could see even more of this pretty part of Romania.

    The next day, we went to the home of the Tafta family where Mr Tafta’s wife, Maria, had a small refrigerated room for storing their cheeses. Free tasting of the cheeses together with another glass of pálinka was included.

  • Visiting a sheepfold near Saschiz

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    We went by a horse-drawn cart from a Saxon village called Saschiz to another sheepfold. Leaving Saschiz quickly behind us, the strong mare Dora pulled us upwards on cobbled roads, then passing fields of maize until we came to meadows covered by hay. Dora, being a strong horse, and the horse-man driving her on, we quickly got within reach of a horse-drawn cart filled to the brim with hay. Fortunately, they turned left and we were free to go as we pleased passing meadows, deciduous trees and enjoying lovely views of the Transylvanian countryside. When we were approaching the sheepfold, the ever-present guarding dogs were the first ones to meet us, then we drove down to the sheepfold.

    The setup was more or less a copy of what we had seen before: one large enclosure encircling a smaller one bordered by a shed with two holes large enough for one sheep to pass through.

    Just 3 shepherds were milking the sheep, while a young girl who was probably the girlfriend of one them, was just sitting next to them milking no sheep. Of course, another shepherd was tasked with chasing the sheep into the small container, closing the gate when it was full and solving any problems the sheep might have with entering the shed. This day wasn’t as hot as the day when we visited the sheepfold near Viscri when the sheep seemed to be breathing heavily all the time. Another reason for the more relaxed behaviour of these sheep was that one guy was continually shearing sheep, having sheared one just selected another one. I was impressed seeing this guy bending over a sheep in the hot sun, shearing for hours. Anyway, getting rid of all that wool must have been great for them.

    The milking of the sheep was by now a standard procedure offering no surprises apart from some fit sheep which tried to jump past the shepherds but always ending up being restrained by their tails and milked.

    Due to unpredictable behaviour of the guarding dogs, we let Dora bring us from the sheepfold to the hut where the cheese would be made. The cheesemaking was done the same way as we had seen before, one shepherd putting his arms into the milk and gradually extracting the cheese mass. After having put it in a cloth and hung it up, the rest of the whey was put in a large pot, heated and after some time the ricotta cheese was lifted up and put in another container by means of a sieve. The whey was poured into a container providing food for their pigs.

    A large number of pigs were just resting in the shade during our visit, while some puppies were playing. Eventually, their mother arrived apparently full of milk ready to be consumed by her puppies.

    We were also shown a baby deer which had been left by its mother just a few days before. It made a loud squeaking noise for some reason.

    Having watched both milking, cheesemaking and shearing, it was time to let trustworthy Dora and her horseman bring us safely back to Saschiz. Getting encouraging calls more or less constantly from the horseman, she easily brought us back again.

  • Viscri village

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    We arrived at Viscri from Brasov in the afternoon, having passed a potholed street lined with meadows, occasional deciduous trees, lots of flowers and distant hills. Then, suddenly, houses started appearing on each side of the road until we arrived at a crossroads. There, in front of us, was a creek surrounded by wide, grassy verges. Then, a wide gravel road followed by a grassy stretch with occasional fruit trees and benches and then a narrow sidewalk followed by a row of houses as far as the eye could see. On the other side of the creek, followed by a grassy stretch, there was also a narrow sidewalk followed by a row of houses. When later it started raining in a village with a similar layout, I soon found out that the sidewalks were excellent pathways while the puddles and mud on the gravel road were best to avoid.

    It doesn’t take long to discover that Viscri is very different from most villages having chickens, geese and ducks walking freely around as they please! In the courtyards, it’s common to see hens pecking, while turkeys and guinea fowl do whatever they want.

    Just walking along the main street of Viscri, it’s impossible not to notice lots of horse-drawn carts passing back and forth, some carts empty apart from the driver, while others may be fully loaded with beehives, milk containers, hay, and so on.

    Next day at sunrise, sounds of domestic animals and people crying could clearly be heard. This was the daily morning ritual when the cows and goats, after having been milked by hand, walk out from the courtyards in order to join the cowherds who bring the animals to some pasture nearby. The same procedure was repeated in the evening in reverse with the animals returning to the village and finding their way home where they would be met by their owners.

    Being surrounded by nutritious meadows, it’s only natural that sheep from Viscri spend the time from spring to autumn outside. We went by a horse-drawn cart early in the morning passing a large flock of sheep being guarded by a shepherd. Going by horse-drawn cart entails feeling all bumps along the road, squeaking from the cart and encouraging calls from the driver to the horse, while passing a beautiful landscape consisting of rolling hills and some deciduous trees. The hills were covered with high grasses and lots of flowers.

    The sheepfold we arrived at consisted of a primitive hut for making cheese and preparing meals, and a short distance away, a large enclosure partly full of sheep, and an adjacent enclosure almost filled to breaking point with sheep and bordering a shed with two holes large enough for a sheep to pass through. Having closed the entrance to the small enclosure, the sheep had to exit via the holes in the shed where 5 men were waiting for them. Each time a sheep entered the shed, one of the men would grab it by the tail, pull it back and milk it. This operation lasts only a short time, maybe less than a minute, then another sheep is milked. Being a very hot day, the sheep waiting to be milked were breathing heavily making a continuous sound. When all the sheep had been milked, the milk was brought to the primitive hut and poured into a wooden container. Rennet was added to the milk in order to separate the whey from the cheese mass.

    After having had lunch consisting of polenta and pork, one of the shepherds separated the cheese mass from the whey just by stirring the milk with his arms. After some time, he was able to feel that the cheese mass was being separated from the whey. He then brought a porous cloth into the container, somehow put the cloth around the cheese mass and lifted it up into another container with a sink such that the whey could escape.

    Having compressed the cheese mass to his satisfaction, he tied the cloth tightly around the cheese and hung it up such that the whey could go on dripping down.

    We didn’t stay to see how they treated the whey, but having watched cheesemaking several times, it seems like every cheesemaker prefer their own way of making it, even though they want to obtain the same, that is extracting the remaining cheese mass from the whey.

    It may seem like milking sheep for hours in a place with no running water, then putting one’s arm into the cheese mass would  create perfect conditions for dangerous germs in the cheese. However, having tasted cheese made in more or less the same way at several places without getting sick,  these guys somehow know how to make cheese safe for consumption although their cheesemaking is distant indeed from the way the cheese most consumers are eating is made.

    Going back to Viscri by the same horse-drawn cart, the driver stopped on a meadow with tall grass, brought out his scythe and started scything. After about a minute, he had cut a large amount of grasses and flowers, which he put in the back of the cart as food for the horse.

    We left horse and driver at a large trough in the middle of the village where the horse could have a well-deserved drink after having worked hard.

    In the evening we visited Gerda Gherghiceanu, in whose courtyard we could watch a bunch of turkey chickens mount a ladder in order to enter their home, a hole in the wall. The mother turkey waited until all her chickens had come home before she flew up the ladder and somehow entered the small hole in the wall in order to be with her chickens. Having passed the guinea fowl, we entered a barn where 3 pigs were kept, of which one of them would probably be slaughtered at Christmas.

    Gerda is renowned for her delicious meals, but we visited her in order to see what kinds of jams and juices she made.She told us that she mainly uses fruits and berries from her own garden, while her husband makes wine from their grapes. Some of the berries get picked from her own orchard, while other ones are gathered from the surrounding forests.

    She makes the following types of jams:

    • rhubarb
    • wild strawberries
    • blackcurrant
    • plums
    • apricot
    • hiprose
    • syrups:
    • elder
    • rhubarb

    and the following juices:

    • apple
    • grape
  • The Porcu shepherds

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    We met Salvatore Porcu following his sheep across the panoramic road between Alghero and Bosa in the region of Sedduri. Following the northeastern coast of Sardinia, the views from the road were really spectacular.

    Here, between the road and the sea, is located a shed owned by the Porcu brothers, Salvatore and Giovanniantonio, who also own the area below and above the shed stretching all the way to the mountains high above us. The landscape consisted of valleys covered with meadows and Mediterranean maquis situated on steep mountain sides.

    After having asked Salvatore if I could photograph the milking of the sheep, he accepted my not so good Italian immediately, just pointing at the shed and saying that we could drive down there. After having received such a friendly welcome, we of course did as we were told. After having first passed some free-ranging pigs, we entered the long and narrow shed, where we could watch the sheep entering the shed and that most of them found a space to reside without aid. Of course, some sheep needed guidance, but after having positioned everyone in their place, one of the shepherds locked the heads of all the sheep simultaneously by means of some mechanical device. Then, Giovanniantonio who has studided veterinary sciences and has a special interest in the welfare of their animals, poured feed for the sheep into a trough such that all the sheep had something to eat. Since all the sheep had their heads locked fast and they were busy eating, Salvatore and Giovanniantonio could, with the aid of a friend, milk about 150 sheep in just a few minutes. After having made the sheep exit one end of the shed, the second group of sheep were waiting in the other end, ready to be milked.

    All the sheep are milked twice daily, morning and evening, and after having finished the milking in the morning, all the milk is transported to a tiny dairy located in the house of the Porcu family where the milk is turned into cheese and ricotta. Before adding rennet, that is a compound consisting of enzymes having been mainly extracted from calves’ stomachs, the milk is heated to about 36°C before letting it rest for about 25-30 minutes. If you want to turn the milk mass into a cheese called fiore sardo (Sardinian flower), you should start working the curd immediately, that is putting it into small cylindrical containers. I f you, instead, want to make a cheese called semicotto, the temperature of the curd has to be raised to 42°C. Then, the curd is again lifted into small, cylindrical containers. In both cases, Salvatore pressed the curd in the containers manually, in order to let the whey exit, since a cheese should contain the fat parts and not the liquid parts of the milk. Then, he placed the small containers on an incline such that the whey would be transported back to the big container, from which the cheese mass had been taken, by means of gravity. In the meantime, Salvatore heated the remaining milk, containing mostly liquid, up to 90°C when small lumps of fat started surfacing. This liquid is used as a supplement to the mainly vegetarian food their pigs are usually eating.

    Salvatore learnt how to produce cheese from his father and years of practice has turned him into one of the best producers of semicotto in his region. A main contribution to the high quality of the cheese they are producing, is the feed their sheep are eating. Besides eating herbs growing in the wild, they are also fed organic cereals. Since they are able to roam freely between the sea and high into the mountains, they are also able to eat a diverse range of plants, which will of course improve the quality of the milk they are producing.

    Place of milking the sheep: the Sedduri region