How many days until we can wean the lamb off the artificial milk?

soarwitheagles

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Hi everyone and glad to be back! Hope all is well and wishing everyone here a very happy new year.

Having some ewes reject/refuse to feed their lambs...

We found a beautiful white lamb on the ground, not cleaned off...enough to break yer heart!

My wife fell head over heels in love with this lamb...she has been bottle feeding it since day one.

Good news is we also held the mama twice during the first day, allowing this white lamb to drink deeply for the purpose of the colostrum intake/immune system development.

And now the question...

How many days until we can wean the lamb off the artificial milk?

Sheep 201 states 30-42 days, and I respect their website a lot. But does anyone here have actual experience and success in weaning a bottle fed lamb off the artificial milk?

Oh, just thought of one more question...

Was the two deep drinks of mama's milk on the first day sufficient to kick start the lambs immune system?

Thanks,

Soar
 

Sheepshape

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Hi soar and welcome back.

Fall in love with a bottle lamb? Never! (I fall in love with with about 10 every year....so hard to part with any of them.)

Anyway, the practicalities. You don't say how old the lamb is, but I'm guessing a week or two.

The mother only gives out full colostrum for the first day or so, and the lamb is only able to absorb it effectively in the first 24 hours to the best of my knowledge. Colostrum is high protein, high sugar and contains antibodies to help protect the lamb in the first 4-6 weeks from disease, until it can produce it's own. The 'rule of thumb' is 10% of the body weight in colostrum in the first 24 hours. Artificial colostrum (bovine usually) is nowhere near as good as ewe colostrum and colostrum from old ewes is the best as it contains most antibodies as older ewes have encountered more diseases. If your lamb got colostrum at this time, then good....beyond 24 hours, or 48 at a stretch, colostrum is wasted as the antibodies can't be absorbed. If only the one drink....better some than none. I've had quite a few cade lambs who have managed without, though always try to give it.

Weaning....I wean at 6-8 weeks when the lamb is taking grass, hay/silage and lamb creep. If they are small/thin/weak I continue for a bit longer. I like to wean slowly.....cutting out the midday bottles and then the night bottle whilst offering lamb creep. The last bottle to go is the morning one. Some folk wean abruptly....but the beseeching bleating all day is too much for me!

Pictures of the lamb, please....
 

mysunwolf

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Weaning is a slow process for us as well. At 3 weeks we bring them down to 3 feedings a day. Then at 4 weeks 2 feedings a day. Then we wean lambs completely at 5-6 weeks using 1 bottle a day at first, then zero. Basically, whenever they are healthy and eating well from a 16% lamb pellet I take them off the replacer.

Sheep dairies often "cold turkey" wean at 4 weeks, but I have seen more health problems develop with weaning at this age that most of us don't want to deal with.

Bottle feeding replacer past 8 weeks is not helpful for the lamb IMO. It's different if it's goats milk or sheep milk you're feeding.

It helps if they have a buddy so that they don't cry so much out in the barn! Plus, don't change more than 2 variables at a time, ex don't move locations and wean at the same time. Start by moving locations, then a few days/a week later wean.

Hope this helps. And I agree, PICTURES!
 

farmerjan

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The rule of thumb is that the greatest benefit from colostrum is the first 12 to 24 hours as far as the absorption of the anti-bodies. BUT there is a reason that the female of any species produces a thicker colostrum type milk for several days. It helps the gut tract get working, helps the newborn pass the meconium which is basically the first manure and bathe the walls of the intestine etc with anti-bodies that are absorbed longer than I believe the experts give the system credit for.
All that said, the 2 feedings that you made the ewe stand for will be the best for the lamb. After that you can plan on the lamb being on a bottle for a minimum of 4 preferably 6-8 weeks. As sheepshape and mysunwolf said, they have to be eating good. And gradual weaning is best. Doesn't matter if a lamb, kid, piglet or a calf or a foal.
 

Bossroo

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X2 what Sheepshape, mysunwolf, and farmerjan said !
 

soarwitheagles

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Thank you very, very much everyone!

I will do my best to post some pics soon.

Presently, this lamb is drinking the TS lamb milk. We have moved from 6 times per day down to 3 times per day, and he seems super healthy and super happy.

Also,last week, we began to feed him alfalfa and grain too. He is powering all of it down and appears to really like it.

I think he is 18 days old. For the last week, we have begun to let him run with the full flock, with the intention of helping him develop his social skills and he appears to be doing well.

This lamb is really, really strange. My wife will put a sweater on him and he will lay still for hours at a time. She just keeps loving on him and he keeps soaking it all up!

She already has him leash trained...

She also drove it to school for the first two weeks and kept him in her classroom everyday. Dang, I am starting to feel a little jealous...he is getting more attention than me now...

Well, such is life on the range...
 

Sheepshape

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She also drove it to school for the first two weeks and kept him in her classroom everyday. Dang, I am starting to feel a little jealous...he is getting more attention than me now...
Sounds like you've maybe lost her to her new 'love interest'.

If a lamb is healthy and happy, he's getting enough food.

Just a minor word of warning....make sure that you always are 'The Boss' with a ram lamb and don't let him start to 'play fight' by head butting.That cute little bundle of wool and baaahs will turn into a huge and slightly stinky heap of muscle.Some say petting ram lambs will lead to trouble. I don't believe this to be the case for most rams, but a bit of care and firm handling when necessary should ensure he grows up to be a gentleman. I currently have 3 rams who have 'been with the ladies' up until Xmas and now they are regaining their strength. 2 weren't bottle lambs, but the third was. They are friendly, still like neck rubs, and are totally safe to be in the field with. However, they had to be gradually re-introduced to each other when they came out from the ewes and spent 4 days in the shed with bars between them before they were allowed together.

I am SO looking forward to pics of the young man on his lead. I'm getting a small dog harness to try to do this in one of my next batch of cade lambs.
 

babsbag

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Hi, welcome back. I can't help with the lamb but it sounds like they got you taken care of. But I have to ask a hard question...what did the necropsy show on the the sheep that died a few months back?

Also, please let me know if you are selling any nucs this year. My hive made it through the winter, first one in years, but I want to add a second hive. I can order a package but would prefer a nuc.
 

soarwitheagles

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So sorry for the delay, but finally found some time to snap a couple of pics of Snow, our new bottle fed lamb project!

So sorry, he was a little grumpy today and I could not get him to smile much. Personally, I think he takes life way too seriously...

I think he is 21 days old. He is already eating grass, alfalfa, and grain. He is also still sucking down 3 feedings of the bottled milk per day.

Thanks again everyone for excellent advice.

1.JPG
2.JPG
 

soarwitheagles

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Hi, welcome back. I can't help with the lamb but it sounds like they got you taken care of. But I have to ask a hard question...what did the necropsy show on the the sheep that died a few months back?

Also, please let me know if you are selling any nucs this year. My hive made it through the winter, first one in years, but I want to add a second hive. I can order a package but would prefer a nuc.

Babs,

I am so happy to hear your beehive made it through the winter! Good job! UC Davis necro was shocking and disappointing...the professor told me the ewes were emaciated. So, I learned a very, very hard lesson. Just because the forest produced massive forage during the good rain year, does not mean it will produce good forage during a non-good rain year, and, the forest cannot support the protein needs of the sheep in the fall. My sheep were not getting enough nutrition in the forest and I had no clue!

New plan for this year:

1. Grow 3 acres of the fava beans and this time do the silage, then feed according to protein needs.
2. Hopefully grow two growths of 3 acre parcels of corn [March-May, and, June-Aug], again, try our hand at silage.
3. Monitor the sheep much more carefully all year round.
4. Stop being a tight wad and buy hay and alfalfa when required [last year I bought nothing].

It was a very, very painful learning lesson to say the least!

I am fairly certain at this time we may never sell nucs, bees, or full colonies. I did a small experiment by posting ads for renting our hives to the almond growers. What an incredible shock. I have been non-stop inundated with calls, emails, texts, etc. Farmers are desperate for bees and many are offering us $200+ for 8 frame hives and they only need the hives for 2-3 weeks.

This is a major game changer for us. Now our focus has shifted to producing as many hives as possible and then renting them out each spring. For me, it is way too much work to build a hive, split the hive, then sell it off. I would much rather increase our numbers of hives and then focus upon pollination. I think you understand.

Soar
 
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