When one milks ewes to make human edibles , you are stealing nutrition from the ewes' lambs so they become malnurished and / or stunted simply because the ewe just can't produce enough milk in the very short 3-5 month annual lactation cycle for both . So, are their lambs killed or bottle fed which is a labor intensive venture not to mention the high cost of milk replacer. ? ? ?
I imagine dairy ewes are treated much like dairy cows, with the offspring bottle-fed and either raised for meat, or for replacement milkers. With dairy cows, are the calves pulled immediately and bottle-fed colostrum, or are they left with the cow for a day or so and then pulled?
For the smaller farmer that wants to hand milk a few ewes, it doesn't have to make the lambs malnourished or stunted. If you have a ewe that is capable of producing plenty of milk (and some breeds or individual ewes will do better than others), and practice good management, it's not hard.
I waited till my lambs were a week or two old. No pulling lambs, no bottle feeding - I left them with their mom. I only milked once a day, in the morning, after separating the lambs and ewes overnight. My ewes had no problem giving me a cup or two of milk, and producing plenty for their lambs. I milked ewes that had singles and twins; I would not milk a ewe raising triplets. I fed my ewes extra while on the milkstand, and I kept track of their body condition and how their lambs were doing. I would have stopped milking anyone who I felt was not doing well. The lambs also got food and water while separated.
I have heard this objection before - that you are 'stealing from the lamb' when you milk a sheep. I've never heard milking a cow or goat spoken of in the same way. Is that because cows and goats are 'traditional' dairy animals, and sheep are not? Well, some sheep breeds are used as dairy animals, and have been for hundreds of years.
I didn't do much milking this year due to some logistics problems, but I'm looking forward to milking again next spring and summer. And raising good lambs, too.