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You are here » Home » The Accidental Smallholder Forum » Livestock » Sheep » Rams and Lambs
So yes, if you don't want unseasonal lambs, best to keep the ewes away from mature testicles.
I've had a Wensleydale and a mixed breed (her breeds including Icelandic, Dutch Texel and Shetland) lamb in August, and a Manx and a Shetland-with-a-bit-of-BFL lamb in October, all to my (very diligent) Shetland tup. So yes, if you don't want unseasonal lambs, best to keep the ewes away from mature testicles.
Too late for this year, but another year you would massively reduce your headaches by banding your ram lambs, then the wether lambs can run in any group and it's just the tup needs to be kept away from sexually mature ewes. And you can avoid even that by not keeping a tup of your own but hiring or borrowing a tup, or sending your ewes to a tup, or buying a tup lamb each year and then eating him.
Quote from: SallyintNorth on April 21, 2024, 09:37:32 amToo late for this year, but another year you would massively reduce your headaches by banding your ram lambs, then the wether lambs can run in any group and it's just the tup needs to be kept away from sexually mature ewes. And you can avoid even that by not keeping a tup of your own but hiring or borrowing a tup, or sending your ewes to a tup, or buying a tup lamb each year and then eating him.Yes I wish I had done that, however, some of the ram lambs look to be showstoppers apparently so we'll see. If not Market. My tup is the loveliest boy and I want to keep him, I just need a better set-up and rhythm to moving everyone around at these pinch points of importance.
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