lamb productivity
Final lamb update spring of 2023
This is the final tally after a long drawn out birthing time. It is so long that we will have to sort the sheep and pull off all of the three months and older lambs off of the herd before we can stick the ram back into the main herd.
- Date of update- May 13, 2023
- # of Lambs born – 63
- # of ewes who have delivered babies – 39
- # of ewes still pregnant – 0, it should be zero now!
- # of single lamb births – 17
- # of twin lamb births – 20
- # of triplet lamb births – 2
- # tagged male (weathers-neutered) lambs-idk, still have a few to tag and band
- # tagged female lambs-idk, still have a few to tag and band
- # of bummer lambs – 5
- # of lambs who died in first two weeks – 2
- Total # of lambs on farm -54 (but after predator kill this week only 52 but that doesn’t count towards productivity. That is a predator loss)
- % birthing rate- 162%
- % production rate -138%
- % survival rate at birth – 100%
- % survival rate at 2 weeks (bummers count as death as they need help and leave the farm) – 86
Dragging out the birthing process is not good. We had a lot of bummers this year, far more than normal. We still have 52 lambs to sell by the end of the year. We also want to weed out about 5-8 of the older ewes. If we get the ram in with the ewes in the next two weeks we will have more lambs five months later, so mid October. This is a much better time to lamb than January.
I enjoy the sheep way more than the cows. Currently, the cows are worth more but they are a lot harder to deal with and as I get older they may be one of the things I have to give up. I went ahead and ordered a solar powered red eye predator warning light. I can mount them on a wooden pole down in the orchard and hopefully scare off whatever is killing our lambs. It should be here next week and it can get installed. I am hopeful it makes a difference. I would advocate some 243 therapy for the predators but they are never seen so that solution is really not viable.
I am using the sheep to mow the lawn but today I opted to let the sheep go up with the cows and give the ram pasture a break from them. They will need to be brought in every night for their protection. It will be good practice for Chance.
Lamb update
This weekend some time had to be devoted to the sheep as always when we have lambs. I used to think it was special to spend a few hours in the barn but with the lambs and constantly changing situation I have just realized that I will be out in the barn for a few hours. I have been trying to clean up the old house porch which means burning scrap wood. I had a gallon of beeswax finish that was done and was holding saturated rags. I tossed it on the burn pile to get it cleaned out before tossing it in the trash. Unfortunately, I left the gallon paint can out in the pasture and one curious lamb got it stuck on its head! The dummy could not get it off of his head. This was noticed and said offending bucket was removed from said idiot’s head. The bucket went into the trash can and the lamb went off on its way as if this was a normal part of life.

I pulled down three jugs. We only have three set up now and there are no sheep in any of them. Not having to haul water is amazing! We are so glad we only have to do it when the ewes are in jugs and otherwise they can get their own water.
I have started to toss out four bales outside the barn so the sheep can pull the bales apart and eat what they want. I also gave in and opened up the barn lot to the mommas and babies. So they have another 1 acre area to roam around on and to eat the grass. I had been keeping them off of it so the grass would grow. It had grass several inches tall on it. If we would ever warm up the area would shoot up with fresh grass. The weather keeps driving the sheep back into the barn. They don’t mind a little rain or sleet but they don’t like a downpour or pea sized hail.
The sheep all have their own personalities but some tend to stand out amongst the others. This little lamb is easy to spot in the barn. It wants to run off and do everything by itself. It is super curious and will come right over to you looking for a treat. It also gets lost and distracted easily. When everyone runs off to the green pasture it stays behind and hollers because it is alone. This morning I had to chase it out of the barn area and out into the pasture as it could not seem to grasp the concept of leaving the barn to find their friends.



The back creek is running from the melting snow but since the mountains keep adding snow we have not had a noticeable rise in the runoff. I took the tractor and drove through the creek to go to the wood shed and get bee supplies and drip irrigation supplies for Annmarie. They now go in her little garden supply shed by the garden. She is eager to get out in the garden but it keeps freezing at night. I scraped the car windows last week. Maybe by mid April she can start getting plants in the ground. She has started herb seeds inside the house this weekend. I got a heat mat for starting cut propagation attempts on my house plants, so the seed starts are taking up most of the mat now. My African Violet starts are starting to take off and I may be able to get 12 more plants. I am shooting for 25 plants in the next couple of months. I have about 10 Jade plant starts going right now and have managed not to kill any yet.
- Date of update- April 2, 2023. We think there may be 4-6 ewes left per Annmarie, I think there are only two left but I would not bet more than $10 on my opinion, Annmarie is usually correct!
- # of Lambs born – 54
- # of ewes who have delivered babies – 33
- # of ewes still pregnant – 8 in area, I don’t think they are all pregnant
- # of single lamb births – 13
- # of twin lamb births – 19
- # of triplet lamb births – 1
- # of bummer lambs – 5
- # of lambs who died in first two weeks – 3
- Total # of lambs on farm -46
- % birthing rate- 164%
- % production rate -139%
- % survival rate at birth – 100%
- % survival rate at 2 weeks (bummers count as death as they need help and leave the farm) – 85%
Lambing update week 7
This weekend I had to spend some quality time in the barn again. The mother/lamb area needed to be expanded. It now covers 2/3 of the barn. The rope we used to tie one side of the creep gate in place is getting stretched by the ewes and the thin ewes are able to crawl through the side. This morning one of the ewes was stuck in the creep gate. She got stuck right in front of her back hips and could not move. I had to pull the pins out of the gate and drag her back out. It took her about ten minutes to get her sea legs under her. Her lamb was glad to see her and kept nursing as much as it could. This has prompted us to get bigger eyelets so that we can stick a 1” rod down through the right side of the gate. We are out of the skinny rods so the bigger aluminum ones need to be used. I am afraid to use an eyelet that just gets screwed into the wood. I am afraid the ewes will just tear it out by pushing on the gate. I had four of them pushing on it Saturday as they were able to get their noses into one of the feeders. They could barely reach it with their tongues but they were not giving it up! I had to lean over the gate and hang in the air to push it away from them. They would not let me pass. I have a bolt on eyebolt that will fit and now just need to install it.

We are now certain that a second ram is needed. We have been lambing for seven weeks and we are still not done. So this spring we are going to keep the sheep in a small contained area when we introduce the ram. NO more letting the sheep run over 40 acres and the ram having to chase them all down.
- Date of update- Mar 12, 2023
- # of Lambs born – 48
- # of ewes who have delivered babies – 30
- # of ewes still pregnant – 12 in area, I don’t think they are all pregnant
- # of single lamb births – 13
- # of twin lamb births – 16
- # of triplet lamb births – 1
- # of bummer lambs – 5
- # of lambs who died in first two weeks – 3
- Total # of lambs on farm -40
- % birthing rate- 160%
- % production rate -133%
- % survival rate at birth – 100%
- % survival rate at 2 weeks (bummers count as death as they need help and leave the farm) – 83%

We had one of the traveling staff from Florida come out for a few hours on Friday and see the lambs and ewes. She got to pet everyone and tour the house. We then fed her leg of lamb for dinner! It was amazing as always. She wore her snow boots out in the barn. Being a city slicker she had never seen anything like it before. She kept marveling at the fact that there were no neighbors.
Lambing update fifth week

Well our annual second winter came this week. We got about eight inches of snow and the temperature dropped into the single digits. The cows were happy I took them another big bale of hay. I fed out two more big bales this morning and only have five big bales left. I have half the barn and the machine shed full of 40# round bales that can be fed out! Once I get all the big bales fed I can let the cows into that four acre area. No animal has been in there to graze since last fall so with a little warm weather that area will perk up quite nicely and allow for some decent grazing.
This weekend some time had to be devoted to the sheep again. We have to get the ewes and babies in the jugs tagged and banded so we can make room for more babies. Currently we only have two jugs open. I think I can tag and band the single under the stairs and the other single. Both of those babies are healthy and moving around well. It gets a lot harder to find mom when there are 25 other screaming little lambs running around.
Yesterday morning I had three different sets of babies in the barn. I was able to let everyone out but those thee ewes and their babies. One of the ewes was crazy! I know this because after 20 minutes I had still not managed to trap her in a jug. I also noticed she had a notch out of the no ear tag ear. I have a notcher for marking the bad ewes. I almost never use it as I don’t like it, but this ewe is getting another notch and we need to cull her. I ended up trapping her in the chute then opening up the barn side of the chute and chasing her into the jug under the stairs. This worked surprisingly well. It did require moving stuff around but in the long run it would have saved me time. I had a set of twins and a single in with the two ewes. When I separated the ewes I must have messed up. I went out there this am and the dark black ewe was head butting both of the pure white babies I had in the pen with her. So I swapped babies and will need to go out later and see how the babies are doing. When I swapped them out the mothers went right up and were sniffing the babies. Yesterday the ewes were eating and they let the babies nurse. So I could not tell who belonged to whom.



- Date of update- Feb 26, 2023
- # of Lambs born – 41
- # of ewes who have delivered babies – 25
- # of ewes still pregnant – 16-18 in area, I don’t think they are all pregnant
- # of single lamb births – 10
- # of twin lamb births – 14
- # of triplet lamb births – 1
- # tagged male (weathers-neutered) lambs-13
- # tagged female lambs-13
- # of bummer lambs – 2
- # of lambs who died in first two weeks – 2
- Total # of lambs on farm -37
- % birthing rate- 164%
- % production rate -148%
- % survival rate at birth – 100%
- % survival rate at 2 weeks (bummers count as death as they need help and leave the farm) – 90%
The ram and his cronies got out of Alcatraz this week. I am pretty sure they got out through the lamb shed. I did not reinstall the gate in front of the barn after it got knocked off last summer. Not only do I need to reinstall the gate but I need to mount a cattle panel onto it so the sheep cannot pass through the bars. I managed to lure them back with grain and used the horseshoe door anchor in addition to the clip.