The Accidental Smallholder Forum

Livestock => Sheep => Topic started by: OhLaLa on October 21, 2010, 11:36:35 am

Title: Glowing Sheep!
Post by: OhLaLa on October 21, 2010, 11:36:35 am
The other day a neighbouring farmers sheep looked like any other flock, but this morning they are positively glowing and bright white, from a distance I thought they had been sheared.

He's been dipping?? (I'd ask but I never see him).

 :sheep:   :o
Title: Re: Glowing Sheep!
Post by: daddymatty82 on October 21, 2010, 11:52:56 am
not allowed to dip are they?
Title: Re: Glowing Sheep!
Post by: OhLaLa on October 21, 2010, 12:00:35 pm
I'm a newbie shepherd so I haven't a clue daddymatty82. He could have just dipped them in Persil for all I know - 'whiter than white'.   ;D

I'm just baffled as to why 30 + sheep are soooo clean.

To quote Toyah - it's a mystery.   :D

 :sheep:
Title: Re: Glowing Sheep!
Post by: ellisr on October 21, 2010, 12:52:34 pm
we need to know his secret as mine are scruffy with the wet weather
Title: Re: Glowing Sheep!
Post by: Pony-n-trap on October 21, 2010, 03:18:24 pm
Could it be that 'bloom' stuff they dip or spray them in to sell?

We noticed some in the field in front of our steading were........bright yellow!!  They had just been bought in.
Title: Re: Glowing Sheep!
Post by: VSS on October 21, 2010, 03:43:21 pm
not allowed to dip are they?

Yes
Title: Re: Glowing Sheep!
Post by: jinglejoys on October 21, 2010, 04:58:59 pm
If they are truely glowing maybe he got them from N.wales or Cumbria! ;)
Title: Re: Glowing Sheep!
Post by: Hardfeather on October 21, 2010, 07:49:55 pm
If they are truely glowing maybe he got them from N.wales or Cumbria! ;)

Or Scotland!

Remember we had restrictions put on some of our hill farms after Chernobyl too. In fact I think there are still farms with restrictions on them.

I was doing a hill lambing in Glenlochay that year, and it rained the whole time. It was so bad that we eventually stopped going to the hill as the risk of lambs being swept away in the torrential hill burns was too great. So we left the ewes to it in the hope that they wouldn't move around too much with young lambs.

The farmhouse water supply was straight off the hill and, after sifting out the frogs and debris, we ate our breakfast and drank our tea while we listened to the breaking news about Chernobyl on the radio. The farm I was on, and the neighbouring farms all had restrictions placed on them thereafter. The lambings were disastrous, due more to the rain than the fall-out.

I'll never forget being constantly soaked, and the roar of the water coming off the hill and down the glen.