Fleecewife
I contacted a breeder only yesterday to enquire as to the availability of ewe lambs of a particular breed someone on the net and member of society
the price i was quoted was from him and yes i was shocked. We neither show nor pump our sheep full of foods grains or anything else and consider that we have fine healthy looking sheep that are a joy to keep and look after and also serve us well.
Friends of ours keep and show a totally different breed and at a show we heard them tell one of their previous customers who was a little put out at not winning a prize that if he was not prepared to pump food into his sheep and lots of it at great expense then he would never win.They have learnt and perfected lots of little tricks to distract a judging eye from an imperfection in the name of winning.......some of the things i've heard and experienced have left me a little disenchanted with societies rules and regs and would be reasoning for not wanting to join any.......

I'm totally with you there and in fact have just been on the receiving end of something similar

That sort of show preparation, especially in a breed with low numbers, can alter the breed entirely - just look at Jacobs and how they have changed from a small agile breed into a much heavier breed, with some huge specimens seen at some shows. They now lamb indoors, usually in January for those showing, and are fed large volumes of grain to get the size onto them. A few years ago I even heard someone say that they fed turkey feed to their Jacobs as it increased their size

Obviously that couldn't happen now.... I apologise to anyone who keeps Jacobs and takes offence at what I have written, but I know it is only those who are well into showing who do those things. When we kept Jacobs they lambed outside with perfect ease and were fed concentrates only when our other sheep were, and they were slimmer and more agile for it, but still much larger than the original type. Not being greatly into showing, or competitive at all, I don't really understand the drive to win, but I suppose when it gets you it gets you

Some sheep are of course very much more expensive than others, both according to their breed and according to their individual qualities - but you judge for yourself if those qualities are ones which are important to you and if they are worth the asking price.