The Accidental Smallholder Forum
Livestock => Sheep => Topic started by: OhLaLa on April 04, 2012, 05:47:18 pm
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One of our sheep has taken to showjumping.
Clears 4ft better than some of my horses.
Stock fencing with electric tape to top, still undeterred.
Ideas?
:sheep: :trophy: ::)
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why is the sheep jumping the fence?
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Dunno. Has been in that field with the others many times before as per usual routine. The others show no interest in following. Quiet field, nothing but the sheep in there.
She certainly isn't thin, the grass is good where she is, but suppose can't rule out 'the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence'. The adjacent field is ungrazed.
Need to keep her in though, or it could well turn into a habit no matter what field she is in?
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I would say that now she has done it, it's going to be hard to deter her - unless you buy some tall fencing with top connected to mains electric! I went to buy some sheep recently, and one very pretty one took my eye. I said I'd definitely have her, and make my mind up about another two. So said sheep was put into a pen with the other two, and promptly jumped straight out! :D. I didn't take that sheep .... :P
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Which reminds me, I'd forgotten - she always has had a tendency to pen leap.
The fence is already at the top of the posts, not an inch more available.
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Sell or eat... what breed/size? If she is a gimmer she may just settle down once she has lambed once... but maybe not. I would sell her.
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you could extend the posts by using 3" x 1" timbers cut at 20" long, 8" of extension screwed into the
posts drill a hole through each extension timber 3" 0r 2" from the top - thread wire through and tie off.
U can use 2 wires etc. Remember not to over tension the wire.
BB
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We had a ewe that was a bit quick,( OH called her) i called her mental! we penned her behind some silage bales when she lambed. Only thing to hand at the time. She jumped over the top like they weren't there and buggered off up the field. had to follow her with the lamb then leave them out together! Bale hopper we called her.
Always bred a cracking lamb and that was the only reason we kept her otherwise to market she would have gone.
Now we hurdle her with two over the top!
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Sell or eat... what breed/size? If she is a gimmer she may just settle down once she has lambed once... but maybe not. I would sell her.
Suffolk. Her first lambing was this year, twins. Neither made it. Wasn't there at the birth, so one either stillborn or ignored, the other she didn't let suckle.
Was considering giving her one more chance with the tup this Autumn, but it's looking increasingly like she won't earn her keep, especially if more fencing required.
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bit drastic, but is it illegal to hobble sheep?
surprised at suffolk, thought they were a heavy docile breed
sounds too much hassle to me :(
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Sell or eat... what breed/size? If she is a gimmer she may just settle down once she has lambed once... but maybe not. I would sell her.
Suffolk. Her first lambing was this year, twins. Neither made it. Wasn't there at the birth, so one either stillborn or ignored, the other she didn't let suckle.
Was considering giving her one more chance with the tup this Autumn, but it's looking increasingly like she won't earn her keep, especially if more fencing required.
Only one I ever had problems with mothering on was a Suffolk txl cross... but she is led by the bucket.. so even after she bolted from her lambs it was a simple task of getting a bucket in front of her and leading her into a pen. Bit of a pain though having to latch on the lambs every few hours, but in her third lambing she was great and as she produces cracking lambs (even if tupped by a Shetland...) we persevered. Lets see what this year brings... if she however ALSO was leaping fences, I think only way out be selling, possibly even as a cull(?), or eat her yourself.
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Problem is, its a learned behaviour trait. At one time it will have been 'rewarded' (better grass, a tasty something) for fence leaping. You can attempt to unlearn it through fear (electric fence) or just eat it. Id do the latter.
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Some farmer once told me that the reason that commercial sheep weren't very bright was that any time one showed any initiative (ie jumping fences) it was taken out of the genetic pool :D