What time of year do you breed sheep?

big brown horse

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Just wondering what time of year sheep are normally bred? How long is the typical gestation period?
 

Beekissed

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Hey, BBH! I was just going to ask this question and saw your thread. I'm always curious as to when folks breed and why they choose that particular time.

I know some folks do breed to have available lambs for certain religious and ethnic holidays, as this brings higher sale prices.

I will be breeding in December, as the typical gestation is around 5 months. I would like my lambs near the end of March, first of April or thereabouts. I don't want my girl's first lambs to be born when it's too cold and I also want plenty of new spring grass to be growing to help with flushing.

Since mine are always on pasture, they are introduced to the new grass gradually as it grows in, so I don't have to worry as much about tetany or bloat as folks who do the feedlot all winter and then turn them out to pasture. I'll still offer hay, of course, for the transition, but I still want them to have the higher nutritive grass available for the birthing and nursing time.

I'm always puzzled by the folks who have lambs in Jan. and Feb. The coldest, most damp times of the year and folks are dropping lambs and calves. I've read that the lambs and calves born later benefit enough from the availability of good grazing(richer milk) that they actually catch up to the ones born earlier, in size and weight.

It would be interesting to do an experiment and see if this is so.
 

KareyABohr

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People calf and lamb in Feb. because of the fairs. My friend raises "club lambs" and they have to be born then in order to be competitive for the county and State Fair.

Not this chick! We calf, kid, and lamb in late March early April.
 

justusnak

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The lady I got my sheep from told me they SHOULD be in season, around November...and lamb in April. Since I only have the 3 ewes, ( only 2 will be bred) and one ram, they all run together full time. Im not sure if Sonny boy will be able to "do the deed" this fall. He was born in April of 09....so, will only be 7 months old dureing breeding time. I know he already has the "hots" for April...who wants Nothing to do with him...for now. ;)
 

Beekissed

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Just, 7 mo. old is old enough to do the deed! :p Actually, my girls will be breeding age....well.... this month! I don't know about sheep having a season...I know Katahdins can be bred up to three times in two years, as they do not have a breeding season, per se.

I won't be doing this, of course. One time per year is good enough for me to make the profit I desire.
 

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Run-A-Muck Ranch

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a sheeps gestation period is roughly 145-150 days...almost 5 months.
We have a barn with lambing jugs set up so we can lamb in Feb.
We also have a few girls that prefer to lamb in April-May outside. So we just kind of let nature take it's course.
The ram is with the girls from Jan-Sept. Then we separate him and bring him back with the girls around October(beginning to mid). That way we get the Feb-March babies. He stays in the pen with the girls until about end of Nov-beginning of Dec. Then again goes with the girls in Jan. which give us the April-May babies.

Ram...............
jan... breeding
stays in with girls from jan-sept
give april-may babies
then separated
oct. breeding
stays with girls oct-nov/dec
gives feb-march babies

and just keep repeating the cycle.

we have 2 rams, 1 weather, and about 20+ ewes.

our weather is used as a teaser once in awhile. we let him in the pen a few days early to help the girls go into 'heat' 'breeding stage'. then bring the rams in.

does that make sense?!?!?! sometimes I confuse myself when I try to explain things....lol :D
 

jenn

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We just got 2 ewes that have been with a ram all year(till about 3 weeks ago). We think they are both preg. They both have udders and its hard to tell what they look like because they have a years worth of wool on them. We are getting them sheered this Sunday. My question is a hard one, do you think they are preg and when do you think they will lamb?? I know the 5 month thing but I have no way of guessing when they got preg if they are and can the size of their udders give you a rough estimate???? :hu
 

Run-A-Muck Ranch

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jenn said:
We just got 2 ewes that have been with a ram all year(till about 3 weeks ago). We think they are both preg. They both have udders and its hard to tell what they look like because they have a years worth of wool on them. We are getting them sheered this Sunday. My question is a hard one, do you think they are preg and when do you think they will lamb?? I know the 5 month thing but I have no way of guessing when they got preg if they are and can the size of their udders give you a rough estimate???? :hu
Are you shearing them yourself?? Or having a professional do it???
I know the first time we had ours professionally done he went through and checked each ewe over. He was 100% correct on which ones were prego and which ones were in heat. He was a little off on due dates (by about 3 weeks), but he was still a wonderful help for us.
Watch the area right above, around, and under the tail....changes mean lambing soon...(or at least with our girls it does). We have never had to help a ewe lamb until this year. We had one who went down during lambing...Sadly we lost her and her triplets, but otherwise 100% of the girls lambed on there own.
The utter size can help alot, but if they have lambed in years past, it might not be as easy to tell.....
I know, probably not much help....I'm no expert on sheep, I just know what seems to have worked for us in the past....

Good luck and can't wait to see pictures.
 
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