The Accidental Smallholder Forum

Livestock => Sheep => Topic started by: Raine on April 11, 2013, 05:41:20 pm

Title: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Raine on April 11, 2013, 05:41:20 pm
 :wave:
As we have just had our first lamb (other two ewe's are still crossing their legs), I was wondering if people named them.


We do fully intend to take our lambs to slaughter, unless a suitable home could be found for them.  As they will be un-registered, I would suspect they would not have many takers.  I'm hoping to ask our local farmer to give us a hand castrating any ram lambs we have this weekend.


Everyone outside of smallholding has told us never to name anything we intend to eat, but (so far) I haven't had any problems (only poultry so far though).


Any suggestions?
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: JMB on April 11, 2013, 05:52:04 pm
We never meant to name ours, but last year we had puppy, stick, little big horn, happy lamb, biffy and popeye. They kind of grew in to their names.
So far this year we just have panda and the plastic twins ( they had plastic macs on)
J xxxxx
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Toe on April 11, 2013, 06:05:57 pm
Personally I prefer to name all animals we have, I don't see how it makes any difference. My orphan lambs I bottle fed when I was 15 were called Thombi and Theo, I was sad when they went and thought it a little mean when my mum made a point of telling us who's leg or shoulder we were enjoying each roast dinner, but I wouldn't have it any other way. All our pigs so far have been named, and our home bred lambs this year will be too. Go for it, the trip to the abattoir won't be any better if the animals are anonymous and you will enjoy them more if you give them names.
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: cluckyclaire on April 11, 2013, 06:14:32 pm
I name everyone - my OH gets annoyed by me doing it tho!! This years lambs are Ebony, Ivory, Cassie (short for casserole!), Rosemary and Garlic (also had belly and leg but unfortunately they succumbed to watery mouth and lost their mum to twin lamb - it was a very bad start to lambing this year). Like to try and keep to foodie names if there is a chance I could end up eating them but running out of lamb related names these days! (And the most likely candidates for the freezer this year are ebony and ivory as they are the only boys so the food names didn't work there!!)
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Rosemary on April 11, 2013, 06:41:53 pm
We name the females but not the males. It's a T year or Ryelands - so we have Tilly, Tilda, Treacle, Tansy, Twinkle and Trixie. Two sets of twins to come :-)


Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Bionic on April 11, 2013, 06:57:23 pm
I name mine.  I have Taffy, Tina and Tilly. I don't know their fate yet but whatever it is I would still name them.


I had 2 weaners last year which went off for meat. They both had names. I pick up 2 more tomorrow and they will have names too.
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Fleecewife on April 11, 2013, 07:00:41 pm
Yes we name all of ours.  Some go on to be registered and they may or may not keep their everyday names as their posh ones.  When we sell any breeding quality ewes and tups on, they may or not have their names used by the next owner.  Somehow the lambs seem to acquire their names just by being like them.  This year we have only named Pedro the first lamb born, as I haven't got close enough to the twins born today yet - a ewe and a tup.  This tup will be for meat so may have to wait for a name until he has horns, as that tends to suggest a name.
 
I hate the idea of treating a living animal as if it's already a slab of meat, by deliberately not naming them.  It's to do with respect for their life.  I could never be a commercial scale sheep keeper and send my lambs off in batches according to their weight.  That just wouldn't sit right with me, but I am perfectly happy to send off our surplus males, and the occasional female when the time comes.  They have a lovely life here for 16 months before they go, then when they get to the abattoir they are dead before they know what's happened.   We appreciate every bite of the wonderful meat we get from them and try to waste none.
 
So yes - give them all names  :thumbsup:
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: twizzel on April 11, 2013, 07:18:03 pm
Nope don't name them, apart from this year I named our jet black lamb Moses, it kind of stuck and I won't be able to eat him now  :roflanim:  so he'll go in my parents freezer! Likewise the only cow to have a name is the bull.
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: ScotsGirl on April 11, 2013, 08:03:38 pm
Wish I could think of names. My ewes have daft ones like 'black knees', skinny, scruffy...  As only way I can identify them. Still trying to think of goat names  :thinking:
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Pedwardine on April 11, 2013, 08:15:47 pm
I've found naming the boys makes it harder as you wonder 'who' you're eating when you tuck into your Sunday roast. Even nicknaming makes it harder when the slaughterhouse beckons.
I name my ewe lambs I intend to keep for breeding/selling on. On 'G' names this year. So far have a Grace, a Golly and Gosh(sisters) and a Gabbi (closest to Gobby as very vocal which may have been a bit unkind!).
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: VSS on April 11, 2013, 08:30:36 pm
Giving them names doesn't have any adverse effect on the flavour ;)
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: LouiseG on April 11, 2013, 09:16:15 pm
We name all ours, it's easier to say a name than try to describe a specific animal when OH or children need a specific instruction about one in particular. The cars all have names too  :innocent:

Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: sokel on April 11, 2013, 09:19:41 pm
This is our second year with lambs and the smallest that needed that little bit extra TLC get names, last year it was Donald , this year its Geofrey   ::)
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: SallyintNorth on April 11, 2013, 11:01:54 pm
We name all ours, it's easier to say a name than try to describe a specific animal when OH or children need a specific instruction about one in particular.

This.


Although with 300-ish breeding ewes we can't name all the lambs or even all their mothers, but most of the bottle-reared ones and a few other distinctive ones get named.

Anything grand-nephew names is likely to be a friend of Thomas the Tank Engine - we all loved his choice of 'Diesel' for the runty - but very fit and full-of-life - grey Shetland x tup lamb. 

Names are often descriptive - 'Pan' has one black eye (half a Panda); 'Green Spot' was marked so we'd know which lamb to take back out when he was used to help drink out an overful udder; 'Jacket' still has his on so we can tell him from 'Black Nose' and friends; 'Stinky Mouth' has a bad case of orf and has to live on her own till it clears up - she drinks Jersey milk as the lamb milk really stings on broken flesh; 'Shy Girl' wouldn't drink if any other lambs were watching (she's getting over it now); one year we had 'Snotter' who recovered, though with residual problems ::), from pneumonia; and so on.

My favourite, I think, remains, a teeny little Swaledale ewe lamb on the moorland farm.  She needed topping up at first while her first-time mum came into her milk.  I named her Violet Elizabeth for the racket she would make until her needs were met - and Violet Elizabeth, in full, she remained all her life. :D   :love: :sheep:

Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Anke on April 11, 2013, 11:40:44 pm
Most of our sheep have names, even often it is "Swaley's daughter" and then "Swaley's daughters son" etc. Our pedigree animals get names, chosen by my daughters. First letter same as dam's. We don't have a problem eating any though, especially the boys that won't make the grade...
 
All female goats get names (and registered), all boys so far don't have names, other than descriptive so we know who we are talking about.
 
Pigs only ever have descriptive names, as in "Blaze" or "spotty ears".
 
All taste great - name or no name!
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: zwartbles on April 12, 2013, 08:01:01 am
Mickey Meatball for a ram and Betty Burger for a ewe  ;D
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Azzdodd on April 12, 2013, 08:10:43 am
I have ma,Betty,charley,abo,davey bill then this years lambs yet to be named....
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Buffy the eggs layer on April 12, 2013, 09:03:21 am
I name all my animals in part for ease of identification and also because after years of keeping dogs and horses I dont really no any other way. I talk to my animals and call them by name. Its supprising how many of them learn to recognise their individual name with a reward especially sheep.
I completly understand the need to form an appropriate relationship with them if you are planning to eat them and on that basis, naming them after meat dishes makes alot of sence but I dont feel comfortable with that. It feels disrespectful somehow. Guess Im just an old Pagan at heart!
As Rosemary said this years letter for ryelands is T so mine should be called Tikka, Tagine, Terrine and Timbal if they were heading for the freezer. But thats assuming that you can tell right from the off who is a keeper and who is catering.
A thing that I find tricky is working out just when to decide who I will keeping and who you are letting go. If I am planning to keep them then I want them as friendly and easy to handle as possible, halter trained etc. If they are going in the freezer then I want them as calm, confident and relaxed as possible but without any emotional bond.
If any of you are struggling for T names this year, here are a few that OH  suggested. So far he has come up with Turettes, Tinitus and Tomazapan and Thrombosis. You are welcome to use them because I wont be!
 I have thought of a name for him begining with T though........ ::)   
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Remy on April 12, 2013, 09:37:40 am
I don't tend to name the ones I'm not keeping (unless they are going to be registered) - but the bottle fed ones always get names!  This one is called Stewlamb - my friend wanted me to call a lamb after her so I had a Susie lamb, however Susie sadly died so this is Susie II (Stew for short!  ;D )
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Fowgill Farm on April 12, 2013, 09:40:17 am
Don't have sheep but all our pigs regardless of destiny all get names, the only time i didn't name 3 little boars that went to the butchers i balled by eyes out for days becoz when they got to heaven God wouldn't know who they were, lol, on too much diazepan/tramdol at the time ::) 
Latest batch of piglets are Brucie, Tess, Darcy & Bruno!
Mandy :pig:
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Simon O on April 12, 2013, 10:02:27 am
' Giving them names doesn't have any adverse effect on the flavour (http://www.accidentalsmallholder.net/forum/Smileys/default/wink.gif) '................................in fact Robert erstwhile of this site reckons they taste better if you name them (he was referring to pigs when he said this homever).
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: colliewoman on April 12, 2013, 10:51:54 am
Everything here gets a name of sorts!
So far we have Ariel and the twiglets (the triplets, 1 ewe and 2 tups)
Ariana and Artemis twin ewes then finally I have Andromeda single ewe lamb :thumbsup:

Hoping to have a few more tup lambs as otherwise my freezer will be empty. Don't know why but i have a real hard time putting ewe lambs in the freezer :-\
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Fleecewife on April 12, 2013, 11:28:40 am
There's deep psychology there Colliewoman - most of us are happy to send the useless males off to the abattoir  :innocent: , but females seem to have a different purpose in life  :eyelashes:   ;D
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: MrsJ on April 12, 2013, 12:24:22 pm
We dont usually name them unless something specific happens to the lamb.  So, this year, the bottle fed lamb is Spotty as she has a green spot on her back to make her easy to identify.  One year we had a lamb with hypothermia and I made him a jumper out of the sleeve of an old sweater to keep him warm when he went back outside - he was called Woolly!
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Castle Farm on April 12, 2013, 12:44:07 pm
Mine don't have names they have numbers :eyelashes:
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Pasture Farm on April 12, 2013, 01:13:39 pm
As Castle Farm ! through to 59  :thumbsup:
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Remy on April 12, 2013, 03:06:24 pm
I've got 7 ewe lambs kept from last year with the aim of breeding from the best ones, but they all look pretty identical so naming them wouldn't have helped me identify them  ::) ;D
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: bigchicken on April 12, 2013, 04:13:29 pm
I name the pedigree ewe lambs very rarely name the tup lambs or anything that is going for eating. My daughter names the odd one and we are usually left with them as I am not allowed to eat or sell them.
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: The Chicken Lady on April 12, 2013, 07:37:56 pm
Everything of mine gets a name so that I know who we are talking about. For the lambs we have a theme each year eg Emmerdale, Coronation Street. This year we have nursery rymes - Jack and Jill, Bo and Peep, Humpty and Dumpty still waiting for 4 more ewes to lamb. We have 2 weaners each year for our own consumption. The kids never bother about names - we had Rodney and Dell Boy one year - they were Trotters!  :eyelashes:
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Cosmo on April 13, 2013, 09:19:20 am
My brother has called some of his coloured Ryeland lambs Titanium and Tongstone (male) and Tinkabell (not sure if the spellings right) who is female.


Cosmo
Title: Re: Naming Lambs?
Post by: Pomme homme on April 13, 2013, 01:32:33 pm
I gave names to two of my lambs who got out of the field and took me some thirty minutes to catch. I used the same names for both, repeatedly, and none of them could be related here without me being banned!