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You are here: Home / Archives for Sheep

Sheep

Last Drysdale shearing for 2017

December 15, 2017 by Wendy Beer

“Better late than never”

Beersheba Gilbert – enjoying his post-shearing snack

Mostly true….

Finally (finally!) have all the Drysdales shorn which means they are fly-safe, grass seed-safe and happy campers in general!

It’s been a challenge to get my shearer – have been trying for 2 months – but we’re all good now.

A good shearer is a thing to cherish. There are more good shearers around than some “interest groups” would like you to believe. The handful of “bad apples” wouldn’t last long here that’s for sure.

So, back to the fluff! This was the first shearing for the Drysdale lambs (born Aug-Sept). There aren’t many breeds of sheep that can produce 15-20cm (4-6″) of wool growth in their first 4 months! Give a Drysdale protein and it just pumps out the wool.

Beersheba Gilbert -in (more than) full wool. 11 months growth

As you will know (from reading the info on our Drysdale page…) the Drysdale fleece is a primitive type of fleece with medullated outer coat and soft, fine undercoat. In lambs this is less defined as the undercoat is typically the same length as the outercoat at this stage.

Drysdale lamb fleece

This means they need shearing 2-3 times a year, on average, to keep the fleece to a “commercial” length.

This was the first time for the lambs in the shearing shed (they will see a bit of it over their lives….) and it was a warm day today. Even so, I was pleasantly surprised as to just how ZEN the lambs were this time.

Waiting for the shearer….

Lambs aren’t supposed to be this quiet… they are supposed to be stark-raving loonies, terrified by the world and trying to kill each other in the process. Ooops. Drysdales didn’t get that memo! ๐Ÿ˜† ๐Ÿ˜†

Waiting for their chance to get closer to the shearer

I said zen…. ahem….

Mutual navel-pondering

And even afterwards the calm continues:

Heck, some of them even had a nap in the “going out chute”. ๐Ÿ˜†ย  Unheard of!

Extra trivia: when you wear 40 micron wool it’s great to get it off and have a good scratch!

LambMetrics – Drysdale & English Leicester lambing, Aug 27th

August 27, 2017 by Wendy Beer

#LAMBMETRICS for the day

Drysdale & English Leicester Flocks

Born today: 4
Total Lambs Born: 80
Drysdale lambs (live total): 49
DrysdaleX lambs (live total): 21
English Leicester lambs (live total): 6
Total Sets of Twins born: 25
Total Sets of Triplets born: 1
Total ewe lambs: 34
Total ram lambs: 46
Ewes lambed /72: 52 (72.2 %)
Lamb % : 146% [live]
Assisted/Dystocias: 4
Losses: 1 ewe, 4 lambs

Notable Midwifery tales:

Been a busy few days with several more sets of twins born.

Amusing thing this morning – noticed a ewe had had a lamb, could tell she was on the second and decided to go check it out. Found it hanging out back feet first (supposed to be the other way around!) but she didn’t need my help at all and just delivered it with no effort. Not bad for a maiden ewe. ๐Ÿ™‚ย 

Ooops!

Challenging thing was a beautiful English Leicester lamb born yesterday that isn’t quite “right”. Am hoping it will come good. Its mum is very attentive to it in any case.

In better English Leicester news: here’s a young ewe with her twins enjoying “breakfast in bed”. ๐Ÿ˜†ย 

LambMetrics – Drysdale & English Leicester lambing, Aug 22nd

August 22, 2017 by Wendy Beer

#LAMBMETRICS for the day

Drysdale & English Leicester Flocks

Born today: 6
Total Lambs Born: 52
Drysdale lambs (live total): 33
DrysdaleX lambs (total): 15
English Leicester lambs (live total): 2
Total Sets of Twins born: 14
Total Sets of Triplets born: 1
Total ewe lambs: 23
Total ram lambs: 29
Ewes lambed /72: 35 (48.6 %)
Lamb % : 143% [live]
Assisted/Dystocias: 3
Losses: 1 ewe, 2 lambs (stillborn)

Notable Midwifery tales:

Today was the that young Hermione finally lambed. Hermione has an interesting parentage: her sire is an English Leicester and her dam is a Drysdale. This year she was put to the English Leicester ram.
Hermione’s mother (commonly called the Kimmy or “Her Imperial Highness”) has a well-documented history of “lamb thieving”. (In the end she had to be mated so she lambed first… it saved fights….!) These things appear to have some heritability – today Hermione had her own try at such behaviour. ๐Ÿ˜•ย 

Only her first lambing season but she tried to take someone else’s lamb as she had hers.
This actually occurs more commonly than a lot of farmers realise – some ewes look after the stolen lamb fine, others will abandon it when they have their own. This accounts for some of the neonatal deaths when there are quite a few twins. (More common with twins because the birth mother gets distracted while having #2)

Hermione and her lamb

LambMetrics – Drysdale & English Leicester lambing, Aug 19th

August 19, 2017 by Wendy Beer

Two days worth of info here. ๐Ÿ™‚ย  Too busy last night with getting ready for handspinners coming for a Farm & Fibre Day.

#LAMBMETRICS for the day

Drysdale & English Leicester Flocks

Born today: 15
Total Lambs Born: 43
Drysdale lambs (live total): 27
DrysdaleX lambs (total): 12
English Leicester lambs (live total): 2
Total Sets of Twins born: 11
Total Sets of Triplets born: 1
Total ewe lambs: 19
Total ram lambs: 24
Ewes lambed /72: 29 (40.3 %)
Lamb % : 141% [live]
Assisted/Dystocias: 3
Losses: 1 ewe, 2 lambs (stillborn)

Notable Midwifery tales:

Finally! Some English Leicester lambs have arrived. Twin ewes delivered their lambs within 12 hours of each other.
(Note very ordinary picture of the first one, using a flash.)

 

Quite a few Drysdale ewes gave birth too. Here was one young ewe that lambed this afternoon.

LambMetrics – Drysdale & English Leicester lambing, Aug 14th

August 14, 2017 by Wendy Beer

#LAMBMETRICS for the day

Drysdale & English Leicester Flocks

Born today: 5
Total Lambs Born: 20
Drysdale lambs (live total): 12
DrysdaleX lambs (total): 8
English Leicester lambs (live total): 0
Total Sets of Twins born: 6
Total Sets of Triplets born: 0
Total ewe lambs: 9
Total ram lambs: 11
Ewes lambed /73: 14ย  (19.2 %)
Lamb % : 143% [live]
Assisted/Dystocias: 2
Losses: 0

Notable Midwifery tales:

Two sets of twins today and a large single lamb who decided to come feet first. Back feet first. Thankfully, he was actually a simple extraction.

Picture today is of a set of crossbred twins in the commercial ewes…. One of these is not like the other. ๐Ÿ˜‰

LambMetrics – Drysdale/English Leicester lambing, Aug 10th

August 10, 2017 by Wendy Beer

The last few years I’ve kept track of the lambing statistics in the Drysdale flock (& now English Leicester flock too). I call these “LambMetrics”.
Hopefully, they provide a little insight into the real-life “goings-on” here.

#LAMBMETRICS for the day

Drysdale & English Leicester Flocks

Born today: 6
Total Lambs Born: 9
Drysdale lambs (live total): 4
DrysdaleX lambs (total): 5
English Leicester lambs (live total): 0
Total Sets of Twins born: 2
Total Sets of Triplets born: 0
Total ewe lambs: 3
Total ram lambs: 6
Ewes lambed /73: 7ย  (9.5 %)
Lamb % : 100 % [live]
Assisted/Dystocias: 1
Losses: 0

Notable Midwifery tales:

Yesterday was straightforward with 3 single lambs being born.
Today started with a set of twins, a dystocia, an attempted “thieving” and basically spiralled from that…!

Each morning the ewes are shifted from the night paddock into the day paddock. This helps to drift off the newborn lambs and mothers. It also helps to deal with a certain number of “thieving mothers” who, when starting to feel the first stirrings of birthing hormones, start to see every newborn lamb as “theirs”. It’s not so much of an issue when the lambs are singles but when there are twins it is all too easy for a ewe to sneak one off while the real mother is attending to the other lamb. In the big scheme of things I don’t care who feeds the lambs – as long as they are fed – but with a stud setup I need to keep accurate records on who is the mother of who!
So, this morning, I noted there was a new set of twins born and by the time I had shifted all the other ewes out of the paddock and came back there was a labouring ewe who was trying to claim one of the twins.
One good thing about my Drysdales is that they are so quiet they will essentially follow me – like alpaca do – when I pick the the lamb and move off. So, I moved the twins and then came back to give the attempted thief a little bit of a hand to get her lamb out so that she was fully satisfied with her lot.
Then, it was onto checking the last handful of commercial ewes who haven’t lambed. And found one upside down and “stuck”. Helped her (unfortunately, too late for her lamb) back up on her feet again and then there was another maiden ewe who looked suspiciously like she needed help. Sure enough, her lamb was large and stuck fast. It didn’t take much to get out though. Being concerned about her lack of “mothering” towards the lamb I collected her with the tractor and she spent a good portion of the day in the shed adjusting to “motherhood”.

Meanwhile, another Drysdale ewe had lambed (twins) in the day paddock and, again, there was a starry-eyed ewe trying to pinch a lamb. Grabbed the lambs and got ewe and offspring safely into a different paddock.

And that was just the morning.

The afternoon was quite chaotic with badly behaved maiden ewes and a new set of triplets (all in the commercials) as well as juggling newborn Drysdales around into the shed for the night.

Most of the lambs are sired by the same Drysdale ram so far. However, today, Gilbert finally had his first offspring born. ๐Ÿ™‚

First Drysdale lamb for 2017

 

Gilbert’s first lamb

 

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