Moved the sheep today in our second true pasture rotation....2 days on the first section was all our grass could stand right now...not much grass in that particular area. Mom scalped the lawn during last season's drought last year and it's had a hard time recovering from that....just now seeing some grass that is going to seed in places, so it's tall enough to graze here in the middle of the meadow.
I'm so tickled to actually be starting what we've worked so hard for this past year! Still have a long, long way to go to get all the paddocks done and functioning in a MIG situation, but it's a start. B paddock got overgrazed while we were trying to work around Eli's work schedule and the rains, but it should get a nice, long rest and should recover well. Can't wait to see what happens there after all this trampling, pooping and peeing went on in that paddock. The apple trees should really benefit from it.
Very lovely to see the sheep browsing on the briers, autumn olive and honeysuckle and then grazing, all in the same paddock. When I moved the polybraid today, they RAN to the newly opened up section and started mowing down the grass, baaing all the while. I think they'll get the hang of this moving to new graze every 2-5 days pretty fast.
The lambs are all healthy, fat and sassy and bouncing all over the place. Still waiting for one ewe to lamb....Eli thinks she's not preggers but I think she is. If she goes past the end of May I'll be proved wrong, but we had the ram in with them clear up to New Year's day, so she could lamb any time this month. If she doesn't lamb, we'll have to decide if we'll keep her and try her in the next breeding or butcher her fat little self....she is one solid chunk of meat.