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Thursday, June 16, 2016

Shearing Day

Yesterday was shearing day here on the farm. It was my first shearing day ever. Previously, I only owned hair sheep, so the experience was new too me. Farm Girl has had several shearing days at her job and was able to give me advice for the set up and what to expect.

I was told to provide the shearers with a sheet of plywood that they could work on so that when the wool came off, it fell onto a reasonable clean surface. I don't have any sorting equipment yet and wasn't sure how I was going to set up. After much discussing, me and Farm Girl decided to use the stall that led out to the runnin. The shearer wanted a small confined area with about ten sheep at a time. The stall worked perfectly. The remaining sheep needing to be sheared were spread out in the other stalls waiting their turn.


The shearers were a two brother team. It took four hours to go through 34 heads of sheep. The remainder were already sheared or heading off to market. The sheep mostly all behaved with the exception of only the one ewe who didn't want to be confined in that small stall with the brothers and kept eyeing the opening to the runnin until finally she made a run for it and leaped the fence gate as seen in the photo above blocking the entrance to the runnin.

When all was done, the boys collected over 250lbs of wool.


They will then deliver the wool to a distributor where it will be cleaned, inspected, graded and weighed. There is no money in wool but at the current prices, I should at least be able to make back the price of shearing. I'll take it. Shearing sheep is more for the comfort of the sheep and should be done annually at least. If ignored and a second years growth begins, that will actually lower the quality of the wool as it will split at the line of new growth when being spinned. So it benefits both the sheep and the shepherd to keep up on shearing.

We only have the one non-wool ewe who needing no shearing. Which was a good thing. Just before the boys arrived, she delivered her baby lamb. Alice was one of the rescues I took on last year when we first moved to the farm. She gave birth to twin stillborns just before Christmas and we thought she wouldn't be a good breeder. However she delightfully proved us wrong and dropped a single ram lamb on the ground.


She turned out to be a terrific mother so will be allowed to remain on the farm. Along with her hair lamb.

I mean really, how can I turn away such a face? Aren't Katahdin lambs just the cutest?


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