Sheep 101
SUSAN SCHOENIAN
Sheep & Goat Specialist
University of Maryland Extension
sschoen@umd.edu | sheep101.info
Why raise
sheep?
Profit
Tax advantages
Lifestyle, hobby
Project for youth
Self sufficiency
Pets
Vegetation control
More than one reason
Pros and cons of raising sheep
PROS
• Less acreage required
• Less investment
• Ease of handling
• Multi-purpose
• Reproductive efficiency
~5-month gestation, prolificacy
• Grazing behavior
• Can finish lambs on grass
• Niche demand for products
Demographics and immigration
• Can complement other enterprises
CONS
• Small industry
• Lack of infrastructure
e.g., medicine, veterinarians
• Lack of mainstream
demand for products
• Fencing needs
• Labor needs
• Predator risk
The 3 P’s: parasites, predators, and profitability
Decide what you are
going to raise them for?
• Meat
• Wool, skins
• Dairy
• Vegetation control
• Show
• 4-H, FFA project
• More than one purpose
Meat
production
• Raise meat breeds
• Ewes lamb every 6-12 months
Annual lambing most common
• Sell lambs at weaning or
heavier weights.
• Take to sale barn or direct
market (meat).
• Grow/finish on pasture or feed
or combination.
• Wool income negligible.
Wool
production
• Raise wool breeds
• Ewe flock; meat important
product
• Annual shearing (sometimes
more often)
• Direct market fleeces to hand
spinners and crafters.
• Add value to wool before selling.
• No longer a wool pool in
Maryland, but in other states.
Dairy production
• Raise dairy breeds/crosses
• Lamb annually
• Remove lambs at birth or begin milking after
weaning lambs at 30 days or do hybrid system.
• Sheep milk usually made into cheese.
• Lots of regulations to follow in order to sell
products (can make soap without license).
• Few sheep dairies in US
Vegetation
control
• Get paid to graze
• Control unwanted vegetation
• Solar grazing getting popular
• Any breed
• Often dry ewes
Image: American Solar Grazing
Association (solargrazing.org)
Seedstock
(breeding stock)
• Any breed
• Purebred or crossbred
• Registered or commercial
• Rams or ewes or both
• Keep good records
Only sell “best” rams and sound ewes
• Set high health standards
• Have high ethnical standards
US Sheep Breeds
• About 60 recognized sheep breeds in the US.
• No best breed(s)
• Each breed (or type) has specific
characteristics that make it suitable for
certain production systems and/or markets.
• Breeds usually excel in the production of
meat, wool, or milk – seldom two or all three.
• Sometimes there’s as much difference within
breeds as between breeds.
• Not all breeds are available in a geographic
area.
Classify by
type of coat
or wool
• Wooled
• Fine wool
• Crossbred wool
• Medium wool
• Long (coarse) wool
• Carpet wool
• Hair / shedding
Most popular
Katahdin
Dorper
Dorset
Suffolk
Hampshire
Rambouillet
Classify by purpose
MEAT | WOOL | DAIRY | DUAL-PURPOSE
Most popular
Katahdin
Dorper
Dorset
Suffolk
Hampshire
Rambouillet
Breeds with
unique
characteristics
• Prolificacy
Finn, Romanov, Booroola
Merino
• Parasite resistance
St. Croix, Barbados Black Belly
Katahdin
• Short, rat-tails
Finn, East Friesian, Icelandic,
Romanov
• Heavy muscled
Texel
• Dairy
East Friesian, Lacaune, Awassi
Rare and
heritage
breeds
What you need
to raise sheep
• Feed source, usually pasture (land)
• Properly fenced pasture
• Other feed sources
• Housing
• Shelter
• Feeders: hay, grain, minerals
• Watering system
• Feed storage
• A way to handle them
• A veterinarian
Feed source: pasture + supplements
How much land do you
need to raise sheep?
• It depends on many factors
• Geographic region / climate/
rainfall / season
• How many months of the year
sheep can/will graze
• When lambs will be sold
Weight lambs will be sold
How lambs will be finished
• Mid-Atlantic “rule of thumb”:
1 AU (1000 lbs) per two acres
2-3 sheep/acre
Confinement “zero grazing”
Sheep can be raised in total or partial confinement; there’s pros and cons
Fencing
Perimeter fence
Fencing for sheep needs to control animals and deter predators
High-Tensile Electric Woven wire
High-tensile
electric fence
• 4-6 strands of smooth galvanized wire
• All electric or alternate hot and cold
• Wires closer together at bottom
• Strong corners
• Good tension
• Good charger/energizer
• More of a phycological barrier
• May need to train animals to respect
Woven wire
American wire, field fence, box
wire, mesh wire
• Visual barrier
• Horizontal wires with vertical stays
(many configurations).
• Use fence with holes small enough
that sheep/lambs cannot get their
heads stuck.
• Common to add barbed wires to top
and bottom of fence.
• Electric off-set wires also common.
• Cover board fences
Interior fences
Control animals, subdivide pastures for rotational grazing
Interior fencing
materials
• High-tensile electric
• Smooth electric wire
• Poly wire or rope
• Electric netting***
Sub-divide pastures for rotational grazing
Housing
Panels for making pens
Ram housing or paddock
Shelter
Feed storage
Watering system
½ to 4 gallons per day depending on animal, feed, and environment
Feeders
• Hay – loose, square, round
• Grain
• Combination
• Minerals
Make
your
own
feeders
Feed, water, and space requirements
Ewe Ewe with lambs Lambs Ram
Limit feed, inches 16-20 16-20 9-12 12
Self feed, inches 4-6 4-6 1-2 6
Creep, inches 2
Bowl, no. head 40-50 40-50 40-50 10
Nipple, no head 40-50 40-50 40-50 10
Tank, no head 15-25 15-25 15-25 2
Dirt lot, sq. ft. 20 25 15-20 20
Open shed, sq. ft. 8 12 6 8
Confinement, sq. ft. 12-16 16-20 8-10 20-30
Slatted floors, sq. ft. 8-10 10-12 4-6 14-20
Source: Midwest Plan Service
Feed
Water
Space
A way to handle and restrain sheep
sort, weigh, trim feet, vaccinate, deworm, FAMACHA© score, body condition score, load
Labor
Sheep can be labor intensive at times
• Breeding
• Lambing
• Hoof trimming
• Vaccinating
• Monitoring for parasites and deworming
• Rotating pastures
• Feeding
• Shearing/crutching
• Bottle feeding
Livestock
guardians
• Common to sheep farms
• Another line of defense against
predators.
• Dogs (specific breeds)
Llamas
Donkeys (standard size)
• Pros and cons to each type of
guardian
Getting
started
• Buy from reputable breeders or
sales
• Buy from as few sources as
possible
• Favor performance tested
animals
• Prices will vary
• Put more emphasis on ram ($)
• Biosecurity, biosecurity,
biosecurity – beware of hidden
diseases.
Regulations
pertaining to
sheep/goats
• Scrapie
• Nutrient Management
• Zoning
• Covenants
• CAFO
• Sale of meat and dairy
• Regulations vary by state and
locality.
US Scrapie
regulations
• Producers are required to follow federal and
state regulations for officially identifying their
sheep/goats.
• Call 866-USDA-TAG to register you flock
(get flock/premise ID)
• Buy approved tags
• Tag sheep before they leave your farm
(some exceptions).
• Keep records for five years.
• Voluntary Scrapie Certification Program
Support $$$ for sheep/goat
farmers
• Take advantage of Extension:
“free” education available in
every county and state.
• Participate in a grant project.
• Apply for a grant, e.g., SARE
• Apply for cost share with
Natural Resource
Conservation Service (NRCS)
– EQIP program
Sheep 201:
A Beginner’s Guide to Raising Sheep
50 chapters
1) Getting started
2) Facilities and equipment
3) Reproduction and breeding
4) Health
5) Lambing
6) Management
7) Feeds and feeding
8) Predators
9) Environmental stewardship
10) Marketing
11) Economics
www.sheep101.info/201/
Small Ruminant Q&A
• 52 Q and A’s
• Breeding and reproduction
• Drug use
• Facilities
• Feeding and nutrition
• Health
• Internal parasites
• Lambing and kidding
• Management
• Marketing
• Pasture and forages
www.sheep101/QandA/
SUSAN SCHOENIAN
Sheep & Goat Specialist
University of Maryland Extension
sschoen@umd.edu
sheepandgoat.com
sheep101.info
wormx.info
Facebook @MD Small Ruminant

Sheep 101

  • 1.
    Sheep 101 SUSAN SCHOENIAN Sheep& Goat Specialist University of Maryland Extension sschoen@umd.edu | sheep101.info
  • 2.
    Why raise sheep? Profit Tax advantages Lifestyle,hobby Project for youth Self sufficiency Pets Vegetation control More than one reason
  • 3.
    Pros and consof raising sheep
  • 4.
    PROS • Less acreagerequired • Less investment • Ease of handling • Multi-purpose • Reproductive efficiency ~5-month gestation, prolificacy • Grazing behavior • Can finish lambs on grass • Niche demand for products Demographics and immigration • Can complement other enterprises
  • 5.
    CONS • Small industry •Lack of infrastructure e.g., medicine, veterinarians • Lack of mainstream demand for products • Fencing needs • Labor needs • Predator risk The 3 P’s: parasites, predators, and profitability
  • 6.
    Decide what youare going to raise them for? • Meat • Wool, skins • Dairy • Vegetation control • Show • 4-H, FFA project • More than one purpose
  • 7.
    Meat production • Raise meatbreeds • Ewes lamb every 6-12 months Annual lambing most common • Sell lambs at weaning or heavier weights. • Take to sale barn or direct market (meat). • Grow/finish on pasture or feed or combination. • Wool income negligible.
  • 8.
    Wool production • Raise woolbreeds • Ewe flock; meat important product • Annual shearing (sometimes more often) • Direct market fleeces to hand spinners and crafters. • Add value to wool before selling. • No longer a wool pool in Maryland, but in other states.
  • 9.
    Dairy production • Raisedairy breeds/crosses • Lamb annually • Remove lambs at birth or begin milking after weaning lambs at 30 days or do hybrid system. • Sheep milk usually made into cheese. • Lots of regulations to follow in order to sell products (can make soap without license). • Few sheep dairies in US
  • 10.
    Vegetation control • Get paidto graze • Control unwanted vegetation • Solar grazing getting popular • Any breed • Often dry ewes Image: American Solar Grazing Association (solargrazing.org)
  • 11.
    Seedstock (breeding stock) • Anybreed • Purebred or crossbred • Registered or commercial • Rams or ewes or both • Keep good records Only sell “best” rams and sound ewes • Set high health standards • Have high ethnical standards
  • 12.
    US Sheep Breeds •About 60 recognized sheep breeds in the US. • No best breed(s) • Each breed (or type) has specific characteristics that make it suitable for certain production systems and/or markets. • Breeds usually excel in the production of meat, wool, or milk – seldom two or all three. • Sometimes there’s as much difference within breeds as between breeds. • Not all breeds are available in a geographic area.
  • 13.
    Classify by type ofcoat or wool • Wooled • Fine wool • Crossbred wool • Medium wool • Long (coarse) wool • Carpet wool • Hair / shedding
  • 14.
  • 15.
    Classify by purpose MEAT| WOOL | DAIRY | DUAL-PURPOSE
  • 16.
  • 17.
    Breeds with unique characteristics • Prolificacy Finn,Romanov, Booroola Merino • Parasite resistance St. Croix, Barbados Black Belly Katahdin • Short, rat-tails Finn, East Friesian, Icelandic, Romanov • Heavy muscled Texel • Dairy East Friesian, Lacaune, Awassi
  • 18.
  • 19.
    What you need toraise sheep • Feed source, usually pasture (land) • Properly fenced pasture • Other feed sources • Housing • Shelter • Feeders: hay, grain, minerals • Watering system • Feed storage • A way to handle them • A veterinarian
  • 20.
    Feed source: pasture+ supplements
  • 21.
    How much landdo you need to raise sheep? • It depends on many factors • Geographic region / climate/ rainfall / season • How many months of the year sheep can/will graze • When lambs will be sold Weight lambs will be sold How lambs will be finished • Mid-Atlantic “rule of thumb”: 1 AU (1000 lbs) per two acres 2-3 sheep/acre
  • 22.
    Confinement “zero grazing” Sheepcan be raised in total or partial confinement; there’s pros and cons
  • 23.
  • 24.
    Perimeter fence Fencing forsheep needs to control animals and deter predators High-Tensile Electric Woven wire
  • 25.
    High-tensile electric fence • 4-6strands of smooth galvanized wire • All electric or alternate hot and cold • Wires closer together at bottom • Strong corners • Good tension • Good charger/energizer • More of a phycological barrier • May need to train animals to respect
  • 26.
    Woven wire American wire,field fence, box wire, mesh wire • Visual barrier • Horizontal wires with vertical stays (many configurations). • Use fence with holes small enough that sheep/lambs cannot get their heads stuck. • Common to add barbed wires to top and bottom of fence. • Electric off-set wires also common. • Cover board fences
  • 27.
    Interior fences Control animals,subdivide pastures for rotational grazing
  • 28.
    Interior fencing materials • High-tensileelectric • Smooth electric wire • Poly wire or rope • Electric netting*** Sub-divide pastures for rotational grazing
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 31.
  • 32.
  • 33.
  • 34.
    Watering system ½ to4 gallons per day depending on animal, feed, and environment
  • 35.
    Feeders • Hay –loose, square, round • Grain • Combination • Minerals
  • 36.
  • 37.
    Feed, water, andspace requirements Ewe Ewe with lambs Lambs Ram Limit feed, inches 16-20 16-20 9-12 12 Self feed, inches 4-6 4-6 1-2 6 Creep, inches 2 Bowl, no. head 40-50 40-50 40-50 10 Nipple, no head 40-50 40-50 40-50 10 Tank, no head 15-25 15-25 15-25 2 Dirt lot, sq. ft. 20 25 15-20 20 Open shed, sq. ft. 8 12 6 8 Confinement, sq. ft. 12-16 16-20 8-10 20-30 Slatted floors, sq. ft. 8-10 10-12 4-6 14-20 Source: Midwest Plan Service Feed Water Space
  • 38.
    A way tohandle and restrain sheep sort, weigh, trim feet, vaccinate, deworm, FAMACHA© score, body condition score, load
  • 39.
    Labor Sheep can belabor intensive at times • Breeding • Lambing • Hoof trimming • Vaccinating • Monitoring for parasites and deworming • Rotating pastures • Feeding • Shearing/crutching • Bottle feeding
  • 40.
    Livestock guardians • Common tosheep farms • Another line of defense against predators. • Dogs (specific breeds) Llamas Donkeys (standard size) • Pros and cons to each type of guardian
  • 41.
    Getting started • Buy fromreputable breeders or sales • Buy from as few sources as possible • Favor performance tested animals • Prices will vary • Put more emphasis on ram ($) • Biosecurity, biosecurity, biosecurity – beware of hidden diseases.
  • 42.
    Regulations pertaining to sheep/goats • Scrapie •Nutrient Management • Zoning • Covenants • CAFO • Sale of meat and dairy • Regulations vary by state and locality.
  • 43.
    US Scrapie regulations • Producersare required to follow federal and state regulations for officially identifying their sheep/goats. • Call 866-USDA-TAG to register you flock (get flock/premise ID) • Buy approved tags • Tag sheep before they leave your farm (some exceptions). • Keep records for five years. • Voluntary Scrapie Certification Program
  • 44.
    Support $$$ forsheep/goat farmers • Take advantage of Extension: “free” education available in every county and state. • Participate in a grant project. • Apply for a grant, e.g., SARE • Apply for cost share with Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) – EQIP program
  • 45.
    Sheep 201: A Beginner’sGuide to Raising Sheep 50 chapters 1) Getting started 2) Facilities and equipment 3) Reproduction and breeding 4) Health 5) Lambing 6) Management 7) Feeds and feeding 8) Predators 9) Environmental stewardship 10) Marketing 11) Economics www.sheep101.info/201/
  • 46.
    Small Ruminant Q&A •52 Q and A’s • Breeding and reproduction • Drug use • Facilities • Feeding and nutrition • Health • Internal parasites • Lambing and kidding • Management • Marketing • Pasture and forages www.sheep101/QandA/
  • 47.
    SUSAN SCHOENIAN Sheep &Goat Specialist University of Maryland Extension sschoen@umd.edu sheepandgoat.com sheep101.info wormx.info Facebook @MD Small Ruminant