Sunday, June 28, 2009
sheep and cows
recently, we met with a local shepherd who raises
romney
and
border leicester
sheep. kenny also met with a local
suffolk
shepherd. both shepherds will sell us lambs when we're ready (and when their lambs are weaned). suffolk sheep are raised for their meat, while romney and leicester sheep are known for their wool, specifically for hand spinners.
kenny, dad, and i spent saturday cutting down all the low branches from the trees that will be inside the fence of the pasture. now we can see a bigger area of the pasture from the house. we have a small shed that's already in the area that will house the lambs until the barn is built. we hope to begin digging post holes this weekend, and then quickly get the fencing set up. as soon as the fence is up, we're ready for the lambs!
we hope to build the barn over the rest of the summer and fall as the sheep get bigger (and woolier!) for hay storage and more room for indoor feeding when it snows.
we also called a very local
jersey cow
farm (5 miles away) and they always have a calf that they're weaning and are also willing to sell us a calf. we hope to get a calf sometime in the spring. she will be housed in the barn with the sheep but won't be milking-ready until after she has her first calf (you aren't supposed to impregnate a jersey until about 18 months of age). so she'll be a pet for a while before she becomes a "working" pet. we haven't decided what we'll do with her calves - either raise them for meat, if they're male, or to sell as another milking cow.
a lot of work to go...but we're getting closer and closer! the shepherd who raises the romney and leicesters is also a hand spinner, and he promised me a few lessons once we get our sheep. i'm very eager to get started back on the wheel again...especially with our own wool!
we need to locate a shearer for the sheep, a vet for all the animals, and an "inseminator technician" which is exactly what it sounds like. apparently, it's not much money to have a technician come out with a syringe of bull semen, but there is an "arm fee" that comes with each insemination. we haven't asked yet what that means, but we're pretty sure we have figured it out. i would certainly not want THAT job.
farm
Monday, June 29, 2009 1:52:07 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Comments [7]
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Monday, June 29, 2009 2:40:46 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Wow! You are truly living the farm dream!!! I am so excited for y'all! It's so cool to hear your dreams actually backed up with action. :-) Not to get too cheesy, but it's inspiring. :-)
Sues
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susieblake23AT NOSPAMyahoo dot com
Monday, June 29, 2009 2:54:26 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
I may have missed this already, but are you considering getting a dog to help you out herding and protecting the sheep?
jonathan
Monday, June 29, 2009 3:16:00 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
thanks, sues! :)
jon - since we'll only have 4-5 sheep at one time (for starters, at least) we won't need help herding. they'll follow us around when we're in the pasture with them. they SHOULD be protected during the day and we'll lock them up at night for a while. the major thing we're worried about now is the neighborhood dog contingent. everyone has dogs, and our neighbors have a pitbull. fortunately, they're all usually inside their hoems during the day, and like i said, we'll be locking up the sheep at night for a while. so do you think sadie will want to spend a few weeks with us next summer, milking our cow and playing with the sheep? :)
~liz
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elizabethsmithAT NOSPAMzoominternet dot net
Saturday, July 04, 2009 7:03:18 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
exciting! i love that you're one step ahead of me. it's so fun and educational. ;)
will you raise them on pasture and hay? if we have sheep, that's the way we'll go. no grain.
what sort of fencing will you be installing? i assume that it will be some sort of woven wire, since you're worried about dogs? we talk about fencing over and over again, since our three acre pasture has old, old electric horse fencing set up. we want to replace it with woven wire or cattle panels, but hello $$$. it's really the only thing standing in the way of getting our sheep/goats. (oh, and the barn needs a bit of reno...) i want to avoid electric - ongoing expense, power outages, etc. but i know electric can be the cheapest and easiest to set up initially.
serina
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serinatomanAT NOSPAMyahoo dot com
Monday, July 06, 2009 2:36:46 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
serina - we are raising the sheep on pasture and hay only as well. i'm researching sheep diet (interesting stuff!) and finding that they're pretty well suited to figure out for themselves what to eat and what not to eat in a pasture. so we'll supplement with hay, and of course, feed only hay during winter months.
we're installing wooden posts (metal posts on one side of the pasutre in case we want to add on in a few years and metal ones aren't as "permanent" as wooden posts) and woven wire. we're enclosing approx. 2 acres, so it's just around 100 posts and 4 rolls of woven wire. i'm not a fan of electric fencing - especially since the pasture goes right up to the boys' jungle gym! and the small amount of electric fencing around our bees is quite enough (we have to move the bees, by the way, and we're moving them to a corner of the pasture...).
~liz
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elizabethsmithAT NOSPAMzoominternet dot net
Monday, July 06, 2009 4:27:40 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
what height/hole spacing on the woven wire? i'm trying to remember how level your pasture area is...i know your whole property is on a slope, but if it all slopes one way, it's easy to install woven wire. our pasture is hilly, up and down, and woven wire will be difficult. the upside: we have wooden posts installed already. the downside: we have no idea what condition they're in. and we still have to buy the fencing.
and you hit the nail on the head: the main reason for avoiding electric fencing is the children.
will the bees attract bears to your sheep pasture?
serina
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serinatomanAT NOSPAMyahoo dot com
Monday, July 06, 2009 4:44:29 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
the bees are in a small area protected by electric fence. the bears haven't touched the bees since we installed the electric fence and we've had bear in our yard many times since the first bee hive attack (just the other day, my mom called to tell me there was a mama and cub crossing her driveway into our yard. at 10:30 in the morning!)
this is the fencing we got: http://tinyurl.com/nsy8x2
it's smaller holes at the bottom and they gradually get larger as the fence goes up - it's 4 feet tall, i think?
the pasture is to the right of the house (as you look at the front of the house). it's a gradual slope from the street down to the line of pine trees, so i think installation shouldn't bee too problematic...but it's taking longer than we expected to install the posts, so you never know what you're in for until you're knee deep in it! :)
~liz
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elizabethsmithAT NOSPAMzoominternet dot net
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