Hi Everyone,
I am after some very basic information and i appologise if this is not the right forum. I am right at the begining of realising my smallholding dream and am trying to learn and plan as much as i can. I hope to raise some stock (mainly sheep) to sell as meat, I dont want to be wholely reliant on one thing for income and am also very realistic about my expectations. I have realised I have no idea how you would sell a sheep once it was the right size ( or even what is the right size) how much is a sheep carcase worth, can you sell the hide for leather, i am guessng you shear them just before they go to slaughter.
Does anyone raise rare breed sheep for this purpose if so what and is there a different path for selling the meat (it is my understanding that most rare breeds produce meat which is considered premium).
I am guessing that population gentics is very important for smaller herds to avoid hillbilly sheep, is there a resource anywhere which would refresh my rather ancient memory on how to avoid banjo playing livestock.
From what i have read if you want to sell hens from chickens you must not have a cockerel so if i want to increase the size of my flock i would have to buy in hens to fatten up, is this correct. Can hay/saw dust from the chicken coup (along with the chicken waste) be used in a biomas/wood burner I guess this could be done for all animal bedding?
I like bacon..so would like to have a couple of pigs any sugestion on breed and cost. i understand it costs about £35 to have an animal slaughtered and butchered is this correct?
I am really sorry if any of this seams obvious or stupid and thank you for your patiance.
h
Hi Hippy
Most of your questions can be answered by reading through past messages here on TAS. They might not be asked in the same way, but the information you need will be on here somewhere.
Meantime - sheep: There is far too much you need to know to put in here. Different breeds finish at different ages and will perform differently under different management systems. If your interest is in rare breed sheep, then it is not usual to keep them only for meat, but many breeders keep registered stock to help maintain the breed. We keep the rare multihorned version of Hebrideans - most ewe lambs will be registered and sold for breeding, whereas only the occasional male is good enough for breeding so most of them go for meat (but we don't keep our sheep primarily for meat - it is a by-product). They do not reach a slaughterable weight until they are 16 months (compared with just a few months for some larger, quick finishing breeds), but they have a niche market in high end restaurants. However, the market doesn't seek you out, you have to go out there and create it.
Sheep are normally shorn in about May to July and if you have good, clean, interesting fleeces you can sell these to handcraft workers such as spinners and felters. You can also add value to the fleeces by having them processed into yarn, rugs, jumpers, or doing this yourself. If they are sold as lamb then the skins (plus wool) are taken from the slaughterhouse to the fellmonger where the wool is removed and the leather is tanned, or the whole skin is tanned to be a sheepskin. In some slaughterhouses you will get a cheque for your skins. Or, you can get your own skins back and send them for tanning separately - this will cost about £20 or so, and the skins can be sold for about £50 average, depending on the breed, colour, pattern, size and so on.
Commercial sheep are usually sold through the sales ring - it would be very helpful for you to go to a local auction for the sheep sales, and to the rare breeds sales, several times to pick up just what is going on and to learn the terminology. The value of a carcase changes with the season, with the breed, with their health and how well they have been raised, and with general trends in the market - there is no standard price. If you look in the back of the farming press you will see that weeks prices for various animals and products recorded for that week.
Some breeds are put into lamb in their first year, so they lamb at 1 year old, other breeds don't lamb until they are 2 years old. To prevent inbreeding, a different tup (ram) will need to be used once his own daughters are ready to breed, thus you may keep a tup for only one, or maybe two years. With larger numbers of breeding ewes, or if you wish to maintain high diversity in your flock, you would divide the ewes into smaller groups and use a different tup on each group. You can then swap around the tups when their daughters are ready to breed. I assume that by 'hill billy sheep' you are meaning inbred animals, although this is not a term I would use. To prevent tup lambs from mating with their mothers and sisters the tup lambs are weaned at 4 months and moved away from the females, or all male lambs born are castrated within the first week of life.