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- Newsgroups: misc.rural
- Path: sparky!uunet!mercury.hsi.com!mlfarm!rosie!ron
- From: ron@mlfarm.com (Ronald Florence)
- Subject: Re: Profitability of Sheep
- In-Reply-To: broy@vaxa.weeg.uiowa.edu's message of Fri, 8 Jan 1993 17:12:08 GMT
- Message-ID: <1993Jan9.130923.7294@mlfarm.com>
- Sender: news@rosie.mlfarm.com
- Organization: Maple Lawn Farm, Stonington, CT
- References: <1993Jan4.151615.5570@news.weeg.uiowa.edu>
- <QfGl_xg00000R0AEYG@andrew.cmu.edu>,<1993Jan7.154412.5068@mlfarm.com>
- <1993Jan8.171208.12125@news.weeg.uiowa.edu>
- Date: Sat, 9 Jan 1993 13:09:23 GMT
- Lines: 47
-
- Barbara Roy writes:
-
- How large is your "small" flock?
-
- Twenty brood ewes, mostly registered Cotswolds. Two rams (one
- registered black Cotswold, one registered white Cotswold).
-
- Is the wool of grass-fed sheep better than that of feed-lot sheep or
- just cleaner?
-
- Our shearers, Kevin Ford and Carol Markarian, would know far more
- about that than I do. Healthy wool requires adequate protein and a
- number of trace minerals and vitamins. I suspect that the wool is not
- sensitive to the source of those nutrients. A sudden change of feed
- can affect the wool.
-
- How much pasture do you use for your sheep and how often do you
- rotate pastures for them?
-
- We have a mostly-clover pasture of a little less than three acres, a
- mostly-grass pasture of an acre, another clover-grass pasture of a
- half-acre, and a three-acre hayfield. We do not rotate as
- aggressively as we should, but generally try to move the sheep between
- the clover and grass pastures before they are eaten down. After each
- cutting of hay, the sheep go onto the hayfield for cleanup. The small
- pasture is for the rams, and for late finishing of lambs while the
- rams are in with the ewes.
-
- What about shelters?
-
- We have a small barn that we use for lambing. In rainy weather and in
- the weeks after they're shorn, we let the sheep into the barn. In
- snow, they're happier outside. Our rams are locked out of the barn
- from February on because their section of the barn becomes a lamb
- creep. As a result, the ram fleeces are sometimes the cleanest of all.
-
- What works for us may not work elsewhere. Our winters are relatively
- mild, Cotswolds are very large sheep with very heavy fleeces, and we
- don't use coats on the sheep because they tend to matt the wool. I'd
- guess we could raise more sheep on the same amount of pasture if we
- used temporary electric fences and rotated aggressively between small
- paddocks. We're lazy, and we prefer looking at stone walls instead of
- electric fences.
- --
-
- Ronald Florence
- ron@mlfarm.com
-