The Accidental Smallholder Forum
Livestock => Sheep => Topic started by: vfr400boy on August 23, 2021, 05:38:50 pm
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I weand my lambs from the ewes last night moved them on to some better grass along with our pet lambs , my question is when will they settle down and be quite ha ?
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Lol, a couple of days
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Thats ok then I was thinking they would get an asbo at this rate I live half a mile from them in town and can hear them if the wind is right so am sure the other half of town can too ha
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We don't wean our lambs as such. At 4 months we take out the males and they go over the road in with the tups. They don't make a sound. Any ewe lambs stay with the mothers who have them weaned themselves by about 5 months or so, plenty of time to get their condition back by tupping time. However we are not trying to push fattening for market as we don't keep meat sheep which might need to be fed extra so would need to be separate from the ewes for that. Our system suits us and is stress free for the ewes and the lambs and coincidentally us ;D
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We don't wean early either, never younger than 5 months and often don't separate until or unless pre-tupping management requires it, and we rarely get a so much as a peep. (We band the tup lambs so don't need to separate them early.)
Lambs sent to the abattoir straight from their mums makes the tastiest, tenderest lamb meat - no stress, no check, all grass and milk and no cereal ;)
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Unfortunately the grass was getting low were they was and I can only keep 10 head on other feild so I had to move them and leave the ewes don't think I will have to give them any creep as the grass is very good
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It’s whatever works for you. The majority of my fat lambs go straight off their mothers, but anything left by mid July is weaned (I lamb end feb/beg March). The ewes need time to get condition back before the rams go in, and I have access to grass away from home that they can graze. The lambs and any cull ewes stay at home where they are handy to bring in to weigh and pick out fat lambs.