Re: [Blackbelly] Thank you

2012-05-12 Thread Michael Smith
Sandy, sorry I did not get a chance to reply earlier. I had an
inbetween issue with a new mother. the story and solution is here, in
pictures with captions. It might help you get past needing to hold
her. Or try it once you can trust her to hold still a bit. The small
cage helped them bond.

http://web.me.com/mwsmith100/spring_2010/Angie.html

-Michael, Perino Ranch Blackbellies

On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 5:38 PM, SHession slhess...@yahoo.com wrote:
 Thank you to all for the good advice.  The lambs continue to do well.  Mom 
 lets the babies nurse while I hold her, and has become increasingly less 
 aggressive with them over the course of the day.  I am hopeful that she will 
 accept them.  I will put together a headgate for her tomorrow, if needed.  I 
 wasn't good for much today since I was up most of the night.  Hopefully more 
 useful tomorrow, although there will still be interruptions to feed the lambs.

 Sandy

 ___
 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


Re: [blackbelly] Thank you

2005-08-16 Thread Barb Lee

Karen,
I am not feeding hay at this time, because there's still enough grass in 
my pasture not to stress it by overgrazing with my small number of 
sheep.  When I weaned, my two remaining adult ewes needed to put on some 
condition (one raised twins, the other triplets, unassisted), so after 
the weaning phase I accustomed the flock to alfalfa pellets, which are 
scarcely any more expensive than good baled alfalfa here, and there is 
no waste (expect about 20% waste with alfalfa hay, which is painful at 
$12 a bale).  They relish it now, as they do beet pulp pellets, and I 
give them 1/4 lb mixed grain and 1/2 lb pellets to supplement the poor 
nutrition in the grass.  They also get free choice kelp, salt and sheep 
minerals.


The ewes regained their condition in no time, and the lambs are sleek 
and beautiful, nobody is fat, nobody is thin.


I MUST do more research on beet pulp, because it is being studied as an 
alternative to grain for grass finishing, and it has nutritional value 
similar to oats, at about 9% protein.  It is low on the glycemic index, 
which means it doesn't spike the blood sugar like oats.  They like it 
quite well!


All the literature says to feed them as cheaply as possible according to 
their life cycle, but other literature says the animals will do have a 
longer productive life if kept in good shape throughout their lives. 
I'm one of those that can't scrimp on feed at any point, but everyone 
must tailor their feeding program to their circumstances, and to the 
eye of the master.


Regards,
Barb L. 



___
This message is from the Blackbelly-blackbellysheep.info mailing list
Visit the list's homepage at 
Blackbelly-blackbellysheep.info@lists.blackbellysheep.info
http://lists.blackbellysheep.info/listinfo.cgi/blackbelly-blackbellysheep.info