A Great Day to Meet the Sheep

Meet the Sheep is our annual spring Open House. After a rainy week we were very lucky that it didn’t rain. We were even luckier that the sun eventually came out.

It feels so nice to get the shop cleaned up. I wish it could stay that way.

Colleen of Fiber Confections brought her fiber and some sheep.

Colleen has a couple of bottle babies that were a great hit.

Another friend, Julie, brought her goats and also demonstrated dyeing mohair.

I have some great photos of kids (people) holding kids (goats) and Julie’s bottle lamb, but I didn’t ask if I could use them here.

I’m sure Tina won’t mind a photo on my blog.

It’s hard to take a photo when a sheep sneaks up on you…

…especially when she gets in front of the camera.

I’m off on a short vacation tomorrow. Watch for photos of snow and desert!

Friends

It was a beautiful sunny afternoon and three of us Jacob sheep friends got together to play with sheep.

This is Jackie with her newest acquisition, Sid, a Jacob wether. Sid will live here until he is weaned.

This is Julie with her puppy, Evan. The black and white border collie is Moby, Jackie’s dog. That’s Rusty on the deck.

Three weeks — 81 lambs

This calendar is what I use to keep track of lambs. I have a whiteboard in the barn as well so that I can record BOSE injections, banding tails, etc.  Here are today’s lambs, # 77 through 81.

This is Sparkle and her twins waiting while I clear out another jug. She lambed early in the morning.

This is Haylee and her newborn twins.

This looks almost gruesome but everyone is just fine. Mom is a yearling, Annette, and delivered a big ram lamb. All 4 horns are prominent already. Most of my yearlings lambed this week.

Where are the spots on this one? A friend of mine came by yesterday and asked if i could babysit some of her animals while she dealt with some medical problems. This is a Merino lamb–kind reminds me of one of those wrinkly dogs.

And the little guy is the puppy that I’m babysitting.

Here are today’s jumping lamb photos:

Nine lambs today

Lambing moved into high gear today. The first lambs were born last Thursday and through yesterday (Wednesday) I had 16 lambs. Today four ewes lambed with 9 lambs and I think one more ewe will lamb tonight. Of those 25 lambs only 6 are rams!

This is Linda cleaning her second lamb. That’s steam coming off the lamb.

The lamb is trying to get up within 10 minutes of birth.

It’s always amazing to me to see lambs instinctively search for food. They know where to look for dinner. Did you know that the mom’s licking of the lamb stimulates the sucking response?

These lambs were born yesterday.  See more lamb photos on my website .

Lambs!

Lambing has started. My husband said that he’ll see me in April.

Four ewes were bred on October 1 and three of them lambed today. Suzanne was first with twins.

This is her 4-horn ram lamb.

This is Spot with her twin ewes.

Rusty is hoping that he can get involved.

I’m heading back to the barn to make the last check and see that the lambs born this evening have nursed.

Spring yet?

It was sunny this weekend and it felt like spring. The sheep have been cooped up in the barn and corral area for two months now. I let them into this small field today. There is a lot of grass to eat, but it is still wet and if I keep them there too long they’ll turn it into mud.

The sheep went right to eating, but the goats continued to race back and forth.

The oldest goat, Stephanie, didn’t participate in the silliness of the younger goats.

Too bad for the rams. They have to stay in their own area. This is Kenleigh’s Savor in front and Meridian Tioga in back, both born last winter.

This is Lola, a lilac ewe.  That reminds me (because I sold her fleece) that we had Farm Day on Saturday. Three people were here to help with sheep chores. It was great to have the help. We vaccinated all the sheep, wormed the young ewes, and put in scrapie tags.

We even trimmed a few hooves. Shelby is trimming while Jackie keeps the sheep from moving around too much. I don’t flip my sheep anymore to trim feet. I’d rather tie them to trim feet. It has the added advantage of sort of halter-breaking.

Everyone had a hand at trimming feet, but this is Shelby again while Tina holds the sheep.

Shearing Day

We sheared on Saturday. I used a new shearer this year and he did a fabulous job. He was fast (70 + Jacobs shorn before noon) and the fleeces and the sheep look great.

I am grateful for all the help I had. Linda gathered up and bagged wool all day. Other friends weighed wool, answered questions from visitors, etc.

My son, Chris, made sure that the shearer didn’t run out of sheep.

We also sheared Colleen’s CVM-cross sheep (while she took care of my shop) and…

Diane’s goats. I have to admit they are stunning in full fleece.

These are Chris’ goats and don’t need to be shorn, but they never miss a chance to sneak some a meal.

I didn’t skirt nearly as many fleeces as I thought I would. We just barely kept up with the fleeces that people wanted to purchase. I missed my friend, Joan, who usually spends all day at the skirting table.  I think it might be worth switching shearing back to Sunday so she can be here!

Here is one fleece spread out.  People asked about how to tell a good fleece, which is better than another, etc. I honestly answered that I don’t have any sheep whose fleece I don’t like.

The sunny day certainly helped make shearing day pleasant and I’m sure the sheep appreciated the warm sun.

Take a look at this shorn lamb. There was some discussion earlier this year about tri-colored Jacob sheep (if such a thing exists). I didn’t know this lamb had those gray spots until she was shorn! I’ve never had another like this.

Here is another pretty lamb.

This is Violet, loading into her van. That’s a cooperative sheep! Violet lived here until about a month ago. She is a wonderful friendly ewe and I’m so glad that she has a great home now with two other Meridian sheep at Aimee’s place.

Rusty’s brother, Jake, came to visit at the end of the day. The dogs were not too happy about posing for a brotherly photo.

But they were going to make sure these lambs stayed put.

There are more shearing photos that can be accessed on Picassa by going to my website and clicking on the photo in the shearing article.