I have a little "small holding" - we keep Kune Kune pigs in our woods, and have 4 existing sheep:
two 6year old huge rectangular romney marsh/kent wethers (Clarkson
and Paxman
) that used to be sop lambs... and a Soay wether, and a one-eyed Jacob female ( ?lambed before?) No idea how old they were when we got them, 14 years ago..
Our sheep are effectively pets/advance team before the shetland ponies are released on a patch of field, and we use their wool as bedding for our pigs, mixed with straw, which they love!
A neighbour (who has an organic farm, and therefore couldn't keep them) found 4 wandering sheep, and we put them in one of my paddocks while we put up notices and tried to find their rightful owners, but no one locally has any idea where or who had them. No tags, very thin, and they were covered in dried mud up to the belly - had obviously been kept in deep boggy conditions... We are pretty sure they were dumped, or "released" rather than escaped. Closer examination revealed one ram with horribly overgrown feet, full of foot rot which has duly been cut out, all hooves cut back to normal size eventually, and well sprayed with terramycin. How long would it take for hoof to grow to about 4 or 5 inches, splayed out? I presume he's over a year old!?! and seems very interested in our other sheep through the fence! However, he's only the size of a labrador, barely past my knee.. is he full grown? Are these southdowns if so, or the olde english babydoll southdown? any ideas? I can provide pictures!
Will he ("Darwin") try and mate with our elderly Jacob? Is it possible she could conceive? would it be dangerous for her?
There are also 2 slightly smaller tegs/young females ("Collins" and "Huxley") and 1 young uncastrated one ("Dickens") - I would say nearly a year old? Feet needed trimming (all had foot rot too, but not quite as bad) not massively overgrown, and they don't appear to be pregnant yet.
Dickens also had a small bald scabby pink patch on his back, near his tail - rain scald? previous fly damage? also treated with terramycin whether it will help or not? any other suggestions as to what it could be? My existing sheep are normally horribly healthy, with ad lib hay and field shelters -spoilt creatures! I believe in prevention rather than cure, so I don't know much about these conditions they get, which seem to be related to poor management/neglect?
I think they are Southdowns from looking at some breed pictures - like teddy bears, but they do have mottled pigmented skin on lips/nose/ears (pure southdowns should have uniform dark skin I believe) and are really very small, which make me wonder if they are Southdowns. Are they rare?
They seem otherwise healthy, and I have wormed them and put them in a small paddock on their own but not really sure what to do with them, although I'm happy to keep them. I do have individual paddocks so I can separate boys and girls if necessary, but would prefer to keep them all as a group if I am keeping them, but don't intend to pay a vet to castrate them.
My mother suggested we should just eat them, as we can't breed them without knowing they aren't related.
I do have holding/flock numbers, but I obviously have a tagging dilemma. Problems with taking them to the abattoir as they have no tags at the moment. How do I deal with the tag issue? Just put my own in? Not sure I can claim that I bred them.....
Does mutton get "ram taint"? I assume lambs are castrated for a reason, even if they are slaughtered before reaching sexual maturity? When will the girls become sexually mature? (if they aren't already, Darwin not interested though).
Sorry about all the questions, but everything I read seems to give different answers... They are quite cute and friendly though, so doubt the mutton idea will not come through as I have now named them, much to my husband's consternation! "No, please not
more animals..." seems to be his usual phrase.