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Livestock
Livestock & Forage
Lambing Placement 2022
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<blockquote data-quote="Anymulewilldo" data-source="post: 7937713" data-attributes="member: 144597"><p>That’s probably the daftest thing I’ve seen you write on here. It depends if you are on vet students or Agric students? Vet students have come here on second year placement after a first year outdoor lambing one. Learnt bugger all about lambing sheep, but done lots of shedding families off. That’s the sort of thing an Agric student needs too be learning. The vets should be in sheds learning how too deal with the problem ones! You don’t call the vet out if everything is going fine outdoors? (Personally I don’t call the vet out for lambing sheep full stop but plenty do) and too be honest the sheep industry of the future I think will have less vet involvement than it does now. <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="🤷🏻♂️" title="Man shrugging: light skin tone :man_shrugging_tone1:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/6.5/png/unicode/64/1f937-1f3fb-2642.png" data-shortname=":man_shrugging_tone1:" /></p><p>I know of a few outfits who do treat students as slaves. Both indoor and outdoor. It boils my pee, it really does. They are there too learn, Not be someone’s laccy. Much better too treat them as part of the family and not expect them too work as hard as you. (Although it’s nice when they try) I did have a pair last year when we were on the ewe lambs, pretty useless. I didn’t miss them when they went. That’s very unusual.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Anymulewilldo, post: 7937713, member: 144597"] That’s probably the daftest thing I’ve seen you write on here. It depends if you are on vet students or Agric students? Vet students have come here on second year placement after a first year outdoor lambing one. Learnt bugger all about lambing sheep, but done lots of shedding families off. That’s the sort of thing an Agric student needs too be learning. The vets should be in sheds learning how too deal with the problem ones! You don’t call the vet out if everything is going fine outdoors? (Personally I don’t call the vet out for lambing sheep full stop but plenty do) and too be honest the sheep industry of the future I think will have less vet involvement than it does now. 🤷🏻♂️ I know of a few outfits who do treat students as slaves. Both indoor and outdoor. It boils my pee, it really does. They are there too learn, Not be someone’s laccy. Much better too treat them as part of the family and not expect them too work as hard as you. (Although it’s nice when they try) I did have a pair last year when we were on the ewe lambs, pretty useless. I didn’t miss them when they went. That’s very unusual. [/QUOTE]
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