We are nearly at the end of shooting season, and our last day is the 1st of February. After a hot, dry summer in England, our birds grew well. We introduced a new strain of pheasant - the Byzanty.
Byzanty is actually the Polish word for pheasant, but it's also a strain of pheasant that's darker and has a bigger body than our usual type, and it's a stronger flyer. We needed a stronger flyer as the ground in Herefordshire is flatter than Dorset, so the birds need to take off and propel themselves, rather than just drift off higher ground.
The downside is that this strain wanders more, and we have to work harder to keep them at home. We use a combination "carrot and stick" approach: we feed them their favorite cut maize (carrot) and chase them back when they stray with a dog (stick). The shooting clients have been very complementary about our new breeding. We only introduced it to half the flock, in case it didn't work, but we will hybridise the whole flock this season, after a successful trial run.
I'm trialling a new ram too. Meet Bertram.
He's a Freisian - a milking or dairy type sheep that comes from Holland / Germany. Mike bought me a proper milking machine for my goats, and it got me thinking about how delicious sheep's cheese is. My Dorset ewes are perfect for crossing with a dairy breed. Insomnia and scrolling through a livestock sale website at 2 a.m. led me to find Bertram. My first Dorset x Friesian lamb was born this morning -
It's a ewe lamb, and what I hope will be the first of my future milking sheep flock. She was born to my ewe called One Tag, for the (probably obvious) reason that she only has one tag in her ear, having ripped the other out on some wire fence while reaching through to eat the waaay better grass on the other side.
The first lambing of the year has not been without its drama already. One Tag has mastitis so I've had to defrost some frozen sheep colostrum (the first milk with all the energy and mum's useful antibodies) and tube the little lamb, to make sure she had a full belly and necessary antibodies. One Tag looked as if she could be having twins but hours passed and there was no sign of contractions. When I checked on her a couple hours later, there was a cold, dead ram lamb in the pen.
Well, that sucks. I'm already at 50% mortality on the first day.
Breeding a milking flock is an experiment, like Mike's Byzanty pheasants. I chose Dorset ewes from my flock which were not great examples of their breed - maybe a bit masculine in the face, too woolly, pigmented eyes - or that were related to my Dorset ram. A cross could potentially improve them. I'm only lambing 7 or so this month, which are in lamb to Bertram. I won't know for 18 months to 2 years whether or not this crossbreed will succeed.
Not to put all my eggs in one basket (or lambs in one pen?) Horned Ram has covered my best ewes and those are due in April. Sadly, Prick my stock ram died in the summer.
Staggered lambing also helps me to spread out my lamb crop so that any lambs going to market will go throughout the year. If they all go at the same time and the market price is low when the lambs are ready, that's a big financial hit to take on a once a year crop.
Last year's lambing was excellent - 200% return, no lamb deaths, and lots of replacement ewes. Yes, of COURSE something went wrong. The growing lambs got a virulent worm that was resistant to the medicine programme I was using. The lambs crashed in a week, and by the time the vets identified the cause and treated it, I lost 3 ewe lambs, including my only horned ewe lamb.
While the lambs recovered I kept them inside the barn, and I had to feed them on concentrated food to bring their weight and condition back to normal. The extra feed wiped out any profit on my lamb sales last year. It was tough. I still have some of last year's lambs not yet fit as "finished" lambs and I will hold them over the winter, requiring yet more feed and care, to be sold as hoggett (young sheep) in the spring market.
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It's 4:22 am and I've been lambing for the last hour. Horned ewe was in the throes of delivering a big ram lamb when I did my early check. Thank goodness I did, as the lamb had its head out and was still in the water bag. I found his front feet, broke the bag, checked he was breathing and helped the ewe deliver him. A trick for delivering a big stuck head is to put your hand inside her bottom and push the head down. Works great, just wash your hands before making a cup of tea.
Writing is a great distraction while I wait for Horned ewe to lamb again. I didn't have them scanned so I have to use a combination of experience (limited) and observation to decide if there are going to be multiple births. She's restless and pawing the ground now so I've turned off the light in the barn to let her settle and get on with the job.
Oh yes, the barn!
Now, I walk 30 yards across the lane, turn on a light and lamb in a dry room on a bed of straw. All my meds are in reach. No more trying to time contractions in order to catch a ewe in distress, in an open field. No more being rained on while I tend to ewe and lamb.
Can you tell I'm excited about this?
It's not a huge barn, so I have to bring in batches of ewes, and turn them out on grass when their lambs are big enough, clean down, and bring in the next batch. There's another half, but at the moment it's filled with logs waiting to be split and a big bale of feed hay.
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It's 6.30 am now. Horned ewe hadn't delivered within the hour, so I went in to have a look. She had nearly loaded the lamb into the birth canal, but she just got too tired to push. The lamb was in distress and had a front leg pointed the wrong way. A bit of manoeuvring and a lot of pulling on my part (she wasn't having contractions to help me), and I managed to get the ram lamb out.
He swallowed some fluid during the birth and his breathing is laboured but improving. Barring infection, he should be OK. I learned my lesson from yesterday's long delivery and intervened earlier. So, mortality has gone down - to 25%. I'll take it for now.
I won't relax until Horned ewe passes her placenta. I had a feel inside the birth canal, up to the middle of my forearm, and nothing else was in there. But, a placenta dragging along behind is a sure sign it's over.
Time for coffee. After I wash my hands.
P.S. I owe Kristen W and my family a big thank you for the encouragement to start writing again. I guess I have a year's worth of stuff to catch you up on.
Yay! I love the lambing stories, the goat milker, the new barn, the fancy pheasants! Keep it coming!
ReplyDeleteWell, I’ve missed you and so happy you are back. Congrats on the new lambs and a cozy barn.
ReplyDeleteSo excited to see a post from you! Hope lambing odds go up - fill us in on the dogs too, please!
ReplyDeleteSo glad to hear from you again! If you're looking for a subject to write about, it would be great to have an update on all the dogs. The pack seems to have grown....
ReplyDeleteYAY!!! I am SO excited that you are blogging again! As i’ve been on my yearly rereading of your blog, I noticed that the doggie pics were updated and I was just holding my breath that that meant you were going to start back at it. Fantastic news! And I’m happy to encourage you in any way possible.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for coming back. I love hearing about your life. I have farming and sheep in common with you, but we have been having temps of well over 30 degrees every day this month and no relief in sight. franinoz
ReplyDeleteGlad you ate back!!
ReplyDeleteKJ
Welcome back, lovely to be able to have a catch up.
ReplyDeleteThe barn looks most luxurious - LX and water - goodness, you won't want to leave :-) Hope lambing continues well.
Lovely barn, an absolute necessity at our place. We have a first time calver due within the month, such poor timing in cold Canadian winter, but lucky for her as she'd have been culled in the fall had she not turned up pregnant. I am watching her very carefully so that I can get her into the barn before she is ready - I am not about to have the little thing start out life with frost bitten ears or such.
ReplyDeleteMrs. Shoes - We've been following the weather in N America here in the UK. My God. Just hang in there. Fingers crossed that the weather breaks before the calf comes.
ReplyDeleteI’ve missed you Jenn. Thanks for returning to your faithful readers. (I almost wrote ‘flock’... .) — Janice in Alaska
ReplyDeleteSo excited to read your blog again! I should have been in bed an hour ago but just *had* to catch up!!! So sorry your life/death circle is a bit lopsided at the moment. Hope it rights itself. Stay warm!
ReplyDeleteWelcome back, I’ve missed you! I’m delighted to have so much to catch up on.
ReplyDeleteSending all good wishes for a healthy and productive season.