Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Pasture Battleships





We are entering the last four weeks of pregnancy for the breeding ewes this week. This it the time when the girls begin laying around a lot more rather than standing up and picking at what little forage remains in the field. They travel between the large round hay bale to eat with gusto and then seek out the remains of other bales to lounge on and chew their cud. The only thing that get's them moving really is the twice daily grain feeding.

The temps have been dropping this morning a little and it's cloudy but the sheep find this kind of weather more to their liking than the balmy 50's and 60's we been having recently. The yearlings we are keeping romp around and kick up their heals while the bred ewes look on and grumble.


Roz appears to want to just move the belly to one side for easier resting I guess.

I believe even Sandwich is pregnant this time around. I guess we finally got a ram here that she likes because two tries with Frazier got us no where but she really seemed to be enamored with Cocomo.



Her belly is almost dragging the ground this year. Of course I thought she was pregnant last year too and it turned out she was just fat. She is even bigger this year though so I am thinking that she will indeed produce at least one lamb for us. 

This year we are down to only 13 bred ewes though so it should be an easier lambing season. We lost two breeding ewes to the Barberpole worms last Spring, retired one due to age and mastitis complications and moved two more down the road because they showed they were susceptible to the worms as well. We kept quite a few ewes for breeding but they won't be introduced to the rams until this next breeding season.

Still that leaves us expecting anywhere from 20 to 30 lambs more than likely. We almost always get twins and at least two or three triplets from the crew. Of course a couple of the older ewes should start slowing down so perhaps this is the year we get a few more singles.

Hazel is our only remaining Ramboullet ewe. Her breed showed a particular intolerance to the worm issues we had last year but of all of them she had no problems and neither did her lambs so we kept her. She is a good breeder too and always throws out twins which she watches over with great devotion and a lot of foot stomping. We got her a few years back and her owner said her lambs never survived. As I looked across the windswept field she was being kept in and noted no barn or shelter I figured her problem was one of exposure and sure enough every one of her lambs since coming here have survived.


Soon the flock will be taken off the Winter pasture, not that there is any pasture left there anyway, and confined to the barn lot. They won't like it but we need to keep the new mothers and their lambs in the barn for a few weeks. Normally we have locked them up inside completely but I think this year we are going to attempt to give them access to the barn lot after the lambs reach four days old or so. Provided we don't run out of maternity stalls anyway.

Nothing is more entertaining than a bunch of lambs running around. Even the chickens can't compete with them. Before lambing season starts though we still have shearing day. Always a fun time.

Keep Prepping Everyone!!!!!!



8 comments:

  1. Beautiful ewes. You have Rambouilette, but what are the other breeds? Just nosey. I have wool envy. ;-)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. hobo - The top picture is actually a mule. She looks almost totally Blue Faced Leicester, which is what her daddy was but I believe her mother was a Romney although she turned out looking almost 100% blue faced. However I bred her to a new blue faced ram this year rather than to the Romney ram so her lambs should be almost 75% blue faced.

      The middle two are Romneys. They are a Marsh sheep but basically in the same type as the highland sheep just a bit better at taking the heat. Probably why we didn't have ever worse worm problems during this last wet Spring.

      Delete
  2. Heh, we have a few spherical sheep around our place as well. We time the breeding of our ewes for May so that we don't have to worry about the weather.

    "Nothing is more entertaining than a bunch of lambs running around. Even the chickens can't compete with them."
    I concur.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. JL - We time it so they start about the first of April. We generally have enough indoor space to nto worry about the weather too much but can get an occasional cold snap then too. Haven't lost a lamb to weather yet though.

      Delete
  3. Hope all your lambs arrive safely. Watching lambs run around in a gang has got to be one of the most enjoyable occupations going!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Vera - I love it when they start just running in circles and then will stop and turn around to go the other way for no apparent reason.

      Delete
  4. You will have a lot of lambs soon! I feel for those ewes carrying all that weight. I remember the last days I was carrying my twins and it was not very comfortable!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Lisa - Even I have some sympathy for them lol. They look so bloated and uncomfortable.

      Delete

Leave a comment. We like comments. Sometimes we have even been known to feed Trolls.