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Suffolk mules
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<blockquote data-quote="Estate fencing." data-source="post: 7747192" data-attributes="member: 83694"><p>I lambed home bred Suffolk mules for 10 years I said I would never do it again after lambing 500 yearlings one year. They where terrible, didn’t mother there own lambs and got big a fat easy. But couple of years ago bout a nz Suffolk and lambed the resulting yearlings down for the first time this year, they mothered better than mules and where no problem at all. The lambs have done well and most have gone as strong stores. Got 100 more this time and they are looking well, more like dark mules than heavy Suffolk’s really, only problem is the jump out the prattley as soon as the come in.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Estate fencing., post: 7747192, member: 83694"] I lambed home bred Suffolk mules for 10 years I said I would never do it again after lambing 500 yearlings one year. They where terrible, didn’t mother there own lambs and got big a fat easy. But couple of years ago bout a nz Suffolk and lambed the resulting yearlings down for the first time this year, they mothered better than mules and where no problem at all. The lambs have done well and most have gone as strong stores. Got 100 more this time and they are looking well, more like dark mules than heavy Suffolk’s really, only problem is the jump out the prattley as soon as the come in. [/QUOTE]
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