| GOAT FARM Goats being milked and live yoghurt being made at a farm in Stretton-on-Dunsmore. | ||
|---|---|---|
| This clip is not available for streaming at this time. Please contact WPA. | Tape Master: | 6007 |
| Catalog #: | 489105 | |
| Clip Number: | 489105-1 | |
| Orginal Film: | CP 71 | |
| Timecode: | 01:43:47 - 01:46:18 | |
| Location: | Stretton-on-Dunsmore, Warwickshire | |
| Year Shot: | 1956 (Actual Year) | |
| Audio: | Yes | |
| Color: | Yes | |
| Headings: | ANIMALS/GENERAL: Baby Animals ANIMALS/MAMMALS: Goats FARMING: Dairy FARMING: Livestock, Goats LOCATIONS/EUROPE: UK, England | |
| Description: | GOAT FARM Goats being milked and live yoghurt being made at a farm in Stretton-on-Dunsmore. Stretton-on-Dunsmore, Warwickshire M/S of a herd of goats being rounded up by a man in a goat farm field in Stretton-on-Dunsmore, Warwickshire. M/S of some goats eating out of buckets and being milked at the same time in a farmyard; a man in a suit, Gilbert Harris, comes round the corner of some buildings, leading a goat in each hand; a farmhand follows with another goat that starts to eat as he milks it. M/S of the goats being milked; one of them leaps out of shot as a milker tries to stop it. C/U of a woman milker in a headscarf; a goat eating from a bucket, then sniffing his milker. Commentator explains the present herd at this goat farm "resulted from crossing an Old English billy with a Welsh Hill nanny and adding a strain of Swiss Toggenberg". M/S and C/Us of a goat being milked; we are told each one produces a gallon of milk a day. Nice C/U of the goat vocalizing natural sound. M/S and C/U of Gilbert posing for the camera with two goats, another nice vocalizing shot. C/U of a spaniel dog lying down and looking round. Gilbert walks past a haystack with a small group of goats; M/S of some goats looking out of what seems to be a scrap tractor, filled with straw; perhaps it is their climbing frame. M/S of women in a dairy; one is pouring live goat's yogurt into jars. Commentator explains how this is made (pronouncing it "yog-hort"); C/U of the jars (spelling on the jars is 'yoghourt') as the lids are put on. We are told that the yogurt is beneficial in many types of sickness - particularly when people are allergic to cow's milk. M/S of a crate of yogurt jars is put onto a truck while Gilbert makes notes and various goats watch. Very cute M/S and C/Us of five one-day-old baby goats being fed with bottles by Mrs Harris. | |


