This is a blog post that I meant to write a few months ago following our summer Road Trip to Colorado. While traveling I took photos of sheep I saw along the way. I forgot about this until I was going through photos tonight for another project.

This was a band of sheep on the way to Bodie, a ghost town in Mono County, California. There are more photos of them in the post that is linked above.
So not all hardly any of the sheep I saw were alive. That doesn’t mean they weren’t impressive however.

A bighorn ram outside the visitor center at Arches National Park.

Another ram inside the gift store.
Petroglyphs seen on one of our hikes in the park…

…and a license plate in the parking lot (not a sheep, but I thought a mountain goat was cool anyway).

After hiking all day in the park we stopped at the visitor center to fill up our water jugs and spent a little time with this ewe and lamb.

Maybe it is a stretch but this is a photo of Sheep Mountain on the way to Leadville, Colorado.

One of the old buildings in Leadville. OK, so it’s not sheep, but it’s fiber related, right?

Also on a street in Leadville.

In the restaurant where we had lunch (another mountain goat)…

…and in one of the old hotels on the main street.

I’d sure love to have brought home this ram…

…but that price tag on his leg says $2900 (marked down from $4770).

This print was on the wall of our motel room in Leadville.

Somewhere on the road after leaving Leadville.

On the way home we saw sheep and some other fiber animals in a few places but I was always too late with the camera. I barely caught these yaks. With the exception of the first day, this was not a sheep-watching trip (at least not live sheep). The last sheep photo I got was one that Dan pointed out to me:

An anticlimactic photo of sheep on the road.






































This one is Sylvia and the photo below was taken last week. (Rotor x Sonata)
Here is Marilla (named in a contest for her mother, Marilyn, and because she was our Spinzilla ravatar) in March and below in September. This is a good pair of photos that show that even when a sheep is black and white, the wool may look brown due to sun bleaching. The markings on the face and legs will indicate the true color, at least in Jacob sheep.
This is Marilla’s brother, Marv. He is one of only two ram lambs that I kept this year. He was champion Jacob ram at Black Sheep Gathering and his dad, Rotor, was 
This is Stacy as a newborn lamb and below at 7 months. (Crosby x Estelle)
More newborn photos. This is Jean with twins. I kept both of these lambs. The ewe lamb, trying to stand, is Cindy, below. The lamb nursing is the ram, Joker, in the photo below Cindy. (Nash x Jean)

This is Vanessa with her lambs. Vanna , on the right, was 5.2 pounds when she was born, but you wouldn’t know that now. (Rotor x Vanessa)









This is the 9 month old ram. He needs a name.
This is Meridian Nash. These rams have the same sire so I don’t need both. I think this one will be for sale.
Puddleduck Ringo is also for sale. I have used him for two seasons and he needs to move on.
Meridian Rotor.
Isn’t this a beautiful stylish ewe lamb? She was born a month before everyone else because the ram lambs weren’t weaned soon enough. Too bad I don’t know her sire. Her very cute baby pictures with her brother are in
Lamb in early morning light. Meridian Vanessa x Meridian Rotor.
BFL-cross lamb. Love those BFL faces.
I’m keeping this lilac lamb. Mud Ranch’s Foxglove x Meridian Nash.
Not sheep, but the sunflowers Across the Road.
Amaryllis following.
Dallisgrass.








Ginny in her watching the road spot. She likes to chase trucks from her side of the fence.












I looked it up. Western Kingbird. I know my birder friends will tell me if I’m wrong.

…I saw this hawk being harassed by another bird.



