1 / 32

Sheep Production

Sheep Production. Chapter #9. Why choose sheep?. Sheep can survive where cows can’t Sheep will eat problem weeds like Leafy Spurge Profit per acre is the same for sheep and cows, and usually higher for sheep Easier to get started due to less equipment needed. Breed Categories.

Download Presentation

Sheep Production

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sheep Production Chapter #9

  2. Why choose sheep? • Sheep can survive where cows can’t • Sheep will eat problem weeds like Leafy Spurge • Profit per acre is the same for sheep and cows, and usually higher for sheep • Easier to get started due to less equipment needed

  3. Breed Categories • Wool Type: white wool only, better quality • Meat Type: any black wool • Dual Purpose: white wool, but better meat than wool types

  4. Feeding Sheep • Mostly roughages, concentrates for finishing • Average adult eats about 4 lbs..... dry feed per day • Overfat ewes - problems conceiving & delivering

  5. Feeding Sheep • If sheep can eat all their feed in 1/2 hour, increase amount • If food left at next feeding, decrease amount • Average lamb weighs 7-9 lbs..... and will gain 1/2 LB per day • Flush ewes 17 days prior to breeding (increased level of nutrition)

  6. Sheep Reproduction • Seasonal breeders - only breed in spring and fall • Ewe lambs must be 100 lbs..... to breed • Ram can service 12-15 ewes as a lamb, and up to 100 as a yearling • Most common = 3 rams / 100 ewes • Usually not kept after 6 yrs

  7. Lambing • Lamb should nurse within minutes, especially if cold weather • Strip teats to remove a mucous plug that seals the teat, lamb may not be strong enough to suck the plug out and not get any milk, if he fails, he will quit trying and die

  8. Lambing • Colostrum: mothers first milk (antibiotics) • Keep ewe and lamb together for first 24 hours or more if the ewe doesn’t want to claim the lamb • Grafting: adopting lambs (triplets) onto other ewes (with singles or dead lambs) • cam be difficult to get ewe to claim lamb

  9. Management • Identification: mark lambs with paint brands, or ear tags or tattoo ears (purebreds) • Docking: cut off tails • tails are a bother • between 1st and 2nd vertebrae of tail • Elastrator: rubber band cuts off circulation • Hot Iron: electric, heated knife stops bleeding

  10. Management • Castration: remove testicles • Elastrator • Cut with a knife • Burdizzo crushes cords • Dock & Castrate before 6 weeks old • Wean at 5-6 months or 100 lbs..... • Shear at least once per year, before lambing (20-40% of income)

  11. Management • Culling: choosing animals not to keep for breeding purposes • Aging Sheep: less than 1 yr.. = milk teeth • 1-2 yrs = middle two teeth replaced by 2 larger teeth • each year to 4 yrs = another set replaced • 6-7 yrs = begin to lose teeth (broken mouth)

  12. Sheep Terms • What do you call an adult male? Ram or Buck • What do you call an adult female? Ewe • What do you call the act of giving birth? Lambing

  13. Sheep Terms • What do you call a castrated male? Wether • What is the gestation for sheep? 147 days • What do you call a young female? Ewe Lamb

  14. Cheviot

  15. Columbia

  16. Dorset

  17. Finn

  18. Hampshire

  19. Lincoln

  20. Merino

  21. Polypay

  22. Rambouilette

  23. Romanov

  24. Southdown

  25. Suffolk

  26. Targhee

  27. Texel

  28. Goats

  29. Alpine

  30. Angora

  31. Cashmere

  32. Boer

More Related