Welcome from just over the border in Cumbria

We're commercial beef and sheep farmers, farming in a traditional, low-input way along Hadrian's Wall. In truth
he's a farmer and I a smallholder, so the occasional pair of weaners

are mine, the funny little primitive sheep

are mine (and I spin

their and some of the better commercials' fleeces) and the expanding Jersey

herd-within-a-suckler-herd are mine. I handmilk them for the house (and make butter, yoghurt and cheese), for any lambs needing bottle-fed, and rear set-on calves as well as their own.
Useless to try to grow plants here, so my veges come in a weekly organic veg box.
There's a very shy farm cat

who won't come near a human, but she keeps on top of the rodents for the most part. The road's too busy to replace my lovely boy Jacob

. Collie dogs

who work the sheep and my two also work on cattle, and a few native ponies.

. The freeloaders

scratch about the place looking pretty, making a mess and hiding their eggs. We buy corn for a neighbour with a fenced hen run (still plenty large enough to call them free range) and she gives us eggs to eat as we can never find the ones ours lay!

Our 'earlies' are lambing now, but it's just a very few. The main flock start nearer the end of March. The commercials are mainly Texel cross and Charollais cross, some Swaledale NC Mules.
My primitives are mainly Shetland and Shetland x, with a couple each of Castlemilk Moorit and Manx Loaghtan. Last year I used a Shetland tup, this year his Shetland x Charollais x Beltex x BFL x Swaledale son - so I'm not quite sure what to expect with that mixture! Because he was running with them all year I haven't any dates for when they'll start, so it could be any time