The Accidental Smallholder Forum
Livestock => Sheep => Topic started by: Bumblebear on May 02, 2015, 10:54:39 am
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Having raised a few lambs for meat we want to have some 'keep sheep' and 'eat sheep'. We have 3 acres for them, which they will share with our 2 goats. The question is if we buy say 2 or 3 sheep is it worth buying a ram too? How easy are they to handle etc? If we bought ewes with lambs at foot then would we be able to use a son on the mothers? If we did there must get a point where we cant keep doing that. OR should we buy a male cade lamb each season to tup the ewes?! There MUST be a simple solution LOL Thanks :)
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hi :wave:
we had the same issue, a small amount of ewes so for the first couple of years we bought in a tup and when job was done he went in the freezer but this year we bought a tup (boreray) which we will keep for a couple of seasons until this years lambs are ready for tupping then we'll move him on.
When he's not in with the ewes he shares a field etc with our billy goats, its a good size field so they have space to get away from each other but for the most part they co-habit quite happily. So really it depends if you can be bothered with looking after him for the other 11 months of the year but they are easy to keep but it would be worth keeping a wether for company for him so he wont get lonely.
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I also thought I could buy in a cade lamb, rear him then let him tup the ladies before sending him to the freezer. I guess I could do that each year :thinking: OR just do the cade lamb thing with a commercial breed and get a couple of pet sheep. :excited:
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We bought a ram lamb for our 6 ewes. He did the job well and we sold him on the next year.
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You could buy a tup lamb off a neighbour in the autumn, run him with the ewes kill him at xmas? Some people do that with me every year
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Depends if you want to pure-breed (and use ewe labs for future breeding, either yourself or for sale as breeding stock) or if you just want to rear (all) lambs for meat (as lambs rather than hogget or mutton). Also depends if you want to sell lambs at market or just have meat for yourself.
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I have a small flock an I keep the ram with them year round an he's no problem at all everyone is different all my lambs including ewe lambs are killed really unless there outstanding (small ewe's) so most go in the box for my customers until the ewes get to 4/5 years then I will keep the ewe lambs an eat the tup myself an replace him works easier for me
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I would say 3 ewes is a minimum. A fairly common practice is to buy a ram lamb about October to tup them then either sell or eat him when he's finished. I know that is one of your options, and plenty of people do that.
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If we bought ewes with lambs at foot then would we be able to use a son on the mothers? If we did there must get a point where we cant keep doing that.
That's called inbreeding and it's something that most shepherds go to considerable (and expensive) lengths to avoid. By inbreeding you are running a great risk of concentrating and fixing any bad traits, such as poor teeth or feet, poor carcase and susceptibility to problems such as swayback. It can also fix good traits but you really need to be an expert shepherd and have a closed flock that you know extremely well to do it successfully.