Lambing outdoors- catching ewe and lambs

garfield89

Member
Livestock Farmer
Just wanted to ask while this years lambing is still fresh in the mind.

My flock lambs outdoors in May, this year, despite giving them several hours to bond first. I found it hard catching the ewes once they had lambed,

I would either catch lambs, have her follow me into a pen, or failing that put lambs into the pen and chase the ewe with quad into the pen.

First technique didn't always work, ewe sometimes gave up despite seeing, smelling and hearing lambs in hand, returning to the last spot she'd seen them.

Second technique of chasing, tired out the ewe, adding unnecessary stress, burning up fuel for fun.

Would be great to have a better way of doing things for next year.

Thanks
 

Highland Mule

Member
Livestock Farmer
I catch all mine at some point on day of birth as the next stage field is across a major road that I’m not happy to walk though. The ewes get Crovect at that point, with the lambs getting tagged and rings applied, plus Spot on for ticks and Stockholm tar for foxes.

Build a couple of pens with funnel entrances around the lambing field - maybe one on each side and another at the far corner, plus one at the entry gate. Walk the ewe and lambs to the pen and shut the gate behind them. If you don’t have time to do this by hand, and they need moved, it’s a great job for a junior member of staff/family, after a short bit of teaching.
 

Highland Mule

Member
Livestock Farmer
You need a good dog and stick, wouldn't go shepherding without either

Depends on the land and the sheep. I keep a few hundred and wouldn’t have a dog on the place. Would rather spend the time and money on getting the fence lines right and a few treats for the sheep to keep them tame around me. I can have a week away in summer with minimal neighbour looking in and no need to get a dog sitter too.
 
Depends on the land and the sheep. I keep a few hundred and wouldn’t have a dog on the place. Would rather spend the time and money on getting the fence lines right and a few treats for the sheep to keep them tame around me. I can have a week away in summer with minimal neighbour looking in and no need to get a dog sitter too.
My two dogs go to local kennels when I'm on holiday and they're quite happy. The kennel block sits in a four acre paddock which they can run around in.
 

hill shepherd

Member
Livestock Farmer
Depends on the land and the sheep. I keep a few hundred and wouldn’t have a dog on the place. Would rather spend the time and money on getting the fence lines right and a few treats for the sheep to keep them tame around me. I can have a week away in summer with minimal neighbour looking in and no need to get a dog sitter too.
Our sheep would soon get wise to a few treats if it meant penning up, they respect the dog and know he/she is going to boss them.
 
Depends on the land and the sheep. I keep a few hundred and wouldn’t have a dog on the place. Would rather spend the time and money on getting the fence lines right and a few treats for the sheep to keep them tame around me. I can have a week away in summer with minimal neighbour looking in and no need to get a dog sitter too.

Up until now I thought you seemed quite sensible 😂

“I keep a few hundred sheep and wouldn’t have a dog on the place”

That’s got to be one of the strangest things I’ve heard from a sheep farmer.

Bad experience ?
 

hill shepherd

Member
Livestock Farmer
Up until now I thought you seemed quite sensible 😂

“I keep a few hundred sheep and wouldn’t have a dog on the place”

That’s got to be one of the strangest things I’ve heard from a sheep farmer.

Bad experience ?
I can't get my head round shepherds/sheep farmers without sheep dogs, it just seems wrong, there's no way I could run my business without a decent dog or two and I don't just mean shepherding out on the hill
 

Highland Mule

Member
Livestock Farmer
Up until now I thought you seemed quite sensible 😂

“I keep a few hundred sheep and wouldn’t have a dog on the place”

That’s got to be one of the strangest things I’ve heard from a sheep farmer.

Bad experience ?

In the past, I’ve travelled extensively for business and relied on others to do regular checks. That made me manage without a dog and as a result we reconfigured field lines etc to not need them. Now, I just find there’s no need. I can get any sheep caught within a couple of minutes without any hassle (maybe 15 minutes if they’re on the outlying land).

As for bad experiences, I’d rather not go there.
 

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