Episode 6: What Guanaco Births Taught Us About Waiting

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On any given day, every one of us is waiting for something. And, I don’t know anyone who likes to wait. Also, everyone copes with waiting differently. And get this, Whether you stare or pace or plan or whatever you do, it’s impossible to end waiting. See, when one wait is over, you are just going to move on to the next wait. So, maybe rather than trying to end the wait or beat ourselves up for being impatient with the wait, we should try to think of it as a normal, everyday occurrence… and then sometimes we can celebrate the kind of waiting that brings a baby guanaco into the world. This episode is about waiting for the birth of our guanacos. It’s my hope that this episode helps you see waiting as a normal part of life, in this case, a whole new life.

Listen on Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music

Episode Highlights: 

  • How can you tell if a guanaco is pregnant? 
  • What it’s like to wait for the birth of a baby guanco called a chulenga
  • Listen to the actual birth of a chulenga sounds like
  • What happens in the moments right after a chulenga is born? 
  • Nature vs Human Interaction: How much should farmers be involved? 
  • What waiting tells us about life. 

Listen To These Episodes Next: 

Ep 5: Guanacos In Love? (What Breeding Taught Us) 

Ep 4: The Great Guanaco Escape

Ep 1: How It Started 

Show Notes & Episode Transcript

The clock ticks down. 

“Was that a kick?” Lisa asks. 

“She says, What are you doing?” Greg said. 

Since we moved to our farm, I’ve become much more relaxed, but not when it comes to waiting for guanaco babies.  With babies, I’m obsessed and impatient.  I don’t like waiting.  I don’t like wondering when or if they’re going to come. 

I wish I could be more chill when we’re on guanaco baby watch, but I’ve tried and I just can’t.  So I resort to the only thing I can do–staring. I stand there and watch the beautiful curve of the guanaco mama’s belly. A lot. And really, tolerating my impatience is a small price to pay for the magic that happens when a guanaco baby is born.

Lisa Mitchell
Hi, I’m Lisa!

I’m a fiber farmer and land steward committed to making beautiful things and making a beautiful life. I raise animals for their fiber, ceate things you can buy, and write and tell stories about the discoveries I make along the way.

1 Comments

  1. Sharon Eakes on March 1, 2022 at 5:33 pm

    Waiting for babies might be the best thing ever. As I’ve gotten older I wait more patiently. I enjoyed this episode a lot. It is funny how people have different styles of waiting. I didn’t have to wait much for you, because you came early. Besides tuning in to the experience of waiting I was touched by the universal miracle of welcoming new life. No matter the species

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