On Wed, Mar 7, 2012 at 2:23 PM, rodnas...@gmail.com <rodnas...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4GLTE smartphonewe are y'all talking about
> 14
> percent creek feed for sheep.I've got a little over a dozen barbedos out
> here. I don't know if I'm lucky or what iv  work 2 years I've never lost
> sheep.every morning I give my sheep a 5 gallon bucket with 14 percent
> creep
> and corn.my pasture  are nice green here in texas right now so I'm not
> even
> give a man a haymy sheep herd is young the oldest 1 I got is 3 years old
> .it
> sounds like some of the people sheepherd get a little old that's when you
> start to have laming problems.right now with all the rain everybody think
> it's fields should have plenty in  nutrients for my animals.
>
> ----- Reply message -----
> From: "Carol J. Elkins" <celk...@awrittenword.com>
> To: <blackbelly@lists.blackbellysheep.info>
> Subject: [Blackbelly] Limping ewe
> Date: Wed, Mar 7, 2012 11:29 am
>
>
> It is helpful to everyone to learn the various regional lingo so that
> we have a broader understanding of the sheep community. When I first
> started, here in Colorado they refer to "sweet feed" and "COB" and I
> didn't have a clue. Now we know that "lamb text" isn't literature for
> baby sheeps.
>
> Carol
>
> At 10:18 AM 3/7/2012, you wrote:
>>I believe you are correct with the name textured feed.  Sorry, I'm
>>new to all this and don't have the lingo figured out.
>
> _______________________________________________
> This message is from the Blackbelly mailing list
> Visit the list's homepage at %http://www.blackbellysheep.info
_______________________________________________
This message is from the Blackbelly mailing list
Visit the list's homepage at %http://www.blackbellysheep.info

Reply via email to