This weekend we continued to accumulate lambs. I had to take some time on Friday to expand the momma/baby area inside the barn. We had been losing lambs left and right. We have had five die. One hung himself on the fence, one got stomped in the doorway and three others just died. We had one stillborn lamb but it was incredibly small and may have been born alive but we did not find it until we were feeding and found it in the straw on the floor. Because of the crushed lamb we decided to build a ramp out of gravel around the entrance. This way the lambs don’t have to try and jump up into the barn. I also found a couple of boards to fill the gap so when the door is open it is a straight shot into the barn. This is working well but I may have to bring in a second bucket of gravel in a few days after the lambs and sheep use it. They will compact it and make the slants slide down, but this is okay, we have more gravel.


We have lost so many lambs that when Annmarie discovered a weak one Saturday night she just bottle fed it up. It has been alive for six days but its mother is one of the oldest ewes we have and she is so skinny it is not healthy. We don’t think the ewe is producing enough milk for the lamb. The lamb’s name is Francine and she already likes humans a lot as they bring her warm milk in a bottle! I fed her this morning and she now tends to follow us around when we are out doing sheep things.

Annmarie thinks we only have eight more ewes to give birth and one we put in a jug tonight because you could see her water membrane sticking out. It looked like a miniature ballon. She will have lamb(s) tonight. We have opened up the momma/baby outside area to include the barn lot where the horse is located. She doesn’t mind the lambs and ewes. They just don’t get to eat her hay, she will chase them away from her food. The grain we cracked last weekend is getting used up fast. We have used all the open containers we had up and are about 2/3 through one of the 55 gallon drums. We still have another 55 gallon drum. We have put out creep feed for the lambs but they have not caught on to the fact that it is there. In four days when all the ewes have had lambs we can set up a couple more buckets in the creep feed area to see if we can entice some lambs into the area. We have some feed out they are just not eating it yet. If the lambs will start consuming creep feed they will cut down on the ewe’s calorie demand.

- Date of update- April 6 2025
- # of Lambs born – 62
- # of ewes who have delivered babies – 35
- # of ewes still pregnant – 8 we think
- # of single lamb births – 10
- # of twin lamb births – 23
- # of triplet lamb births – 2
- # tagged male (weathers-neutered) lambs- no tags done yet
- # tagged female lambs- no tags done yet
- # of bummer lambs – 1
- # of lambs who died in first two weeks – 5
- Total # of lambs on farm -56
- % birthing rate- 177%
- % production rate -160%
- % survival rate at birth – 98.4%
- % survival rate at 2 weeks (bummers count as death as they need help and leave the farm) – 90%