Sheep Breeding & Sheep Rearing Information

Looking for some tips and sheep rearing information? Learn about a few dual purpose sheep breeds to develop your perfect flock.

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by AdobeStock/Cami

Looking for some tips and sheep rearing information? Learn about a few dual purpose sheep breeds to develop your perfect flock.

It was a happy accident, really, involving a road trip, a mistaken identity, a negotiation and a bunch of Corsican rams.

Five years ago, I decided my sheep flock wasn’t meeting my goals. I had purebred Katahdin sheep, a hair sheep that sheds its coat each spring so you don’t have to shear them. There’s almost no local market for wool where I live, and very few shearers. I can shear one sheep if you give me half a day. The process also may require an emergency blood transfusion for the sheep or me, or both. So hair sheep are right for me.

The Katahdins were hardy, docile, successful mothers, great meat producers and formed a good flock. But I wasn’t quite satisfied, and thus my sheep-breeding program began.

I knew that managing our goats was physically much easier than wrangling the sheep, because the goats had horns. That may seem counterintuitive, but in our operation it’s much easier to sort the animals, move them, load them and ship them if you can reach out and grab an animal by the horns. Given that none of our goats or sheep had ever been aggressive toward humans, I didn’t feel that the horns were a safety hazard. Moving adult sheep can be a physical experience akin to no-pad tackle football. The animals weigh 150 to 250 pounds, and there’s a lot of blocking and tackling involved. I never liked football, so I wanted to add handles to our sheep.

  • Updated on Jan 11, 2024
  • Originally Published on Jan 14, 2013
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