sue said:
Now both of those are neat to read for me. I am seriously thinking about running sheep with my cows to help make some more money from the farm. You want to sell some sheep the truth? I have been lookin at the hair sheep deal in Virginia. No shearing needed on those types.
we run our sheep and cows in the same pasture. 1 cow eats about as much as 5 ewes I'd say, if not more. But the good thing is they don't eat the same things. a sheep won't touch fescue, they'd lay there and starve to death... so if you have below average pastures, or really good ones, I'd highly suggest it. Sheep are more clover, (legume) and weed type oriented. Some of our best looking sheep are on white clover pasture. I realize that's not great, but it's what grows naturly. Our cows are fescue, and sometimes clover and we do have a little blue grass in one pasture.... but mostly fescue. As far as I know, they're parasites are different. Our only concern comes with mineral, as sheep are highly toxic to copper. We have to watch this, or just give the cows sheep mineral. Another nice thing about sheep, you only build your fences to the water's edge. this doesn't do much good for cows, but it works great for sheep.
we sell lots of sheep in a year, even though we aren't a huge operation. I counted the other day, and I've only got 5 ewes that have not produced a stud ram- 3 of which have never had a ram lamb, and 2 of which have only lambed once or twice. I think I've only got 1 'old' ewe left that I have not kept a ewe lamb out of either- she's had twin ram lambs ever year- she's 8! I'd say we have 50-60 ewes total, somewhere in there, and I forget, but for two years in a row, I have sold 20 plus stud rams. Due to a string of bad luck, I have lost some of my old-y gold-y ewes this year. One 8 year old has just declining in health for a year, and just passed on this summer, and the other ewe we lost last week to a freak deal; as we were vaccinating ewes prior to lambing here in a month, and she got trampled in the doorway of the barn. Freak deal... Anyways, both of those ewes are mothers of stud rams that we are currently useing. As well as both of them are mothers of something else in my flock. Check out our website-
www.kfacres.webs.com or my email
[email protected] we can talk further. Come on down, we'll show you some shit-horns, and some sheep!!
Now about the hair sheep deal... we took 10 ewes, and 2 baby ewel ambs out to my 80+ year old friend in DesMoines Iowa, 4 years ago to "just keep the lots mowed down". We purchased his flock of Oxfords (been the the family since 1929 atleast), and he was going to rent his pastures out to the cattleman, but needed something to keep the weeks down. We thought Katahdins would be a great fit... no shearing, no tail docking, not much work for an old guy who's going down hill (the due take of selling out of the oxfords) Within two years, we was back up to 40 ewes on these sheep he loves them so much. they do everything, he does nothing. He has averaged almost 300% lamb crop, and tfor the last 3 years one ewe has had quads. She raised 3 the first year (one born dead), 3 the second year (Tom pulled one off for a bottle), and the last year she raised all 4, as tom said they'll either live or die, he's to old to have a bottle lamb.