We are a regenerative farm & ranch specializing in Katahdin sheep in beautiful Stevens County Washington. Please visit our website for more info. waterloo-ranch.com/
He was on hay and the occasional bottle at this point. I've read many different opinions on this but many say that a bottle lamb should reach 25 lbs. before being fully weaned. We weighed him (and everyone else) about a week later when they were all moved to spring pasture. He weighed 23.5 lbs. at that time and we let him fend for himself from that point on. He's smaller than his fellow lambs (obviously) but he's doing well. Thanks for watching.
If ya give em a bigger pasture you won't have to move em as much, also it ain't rocket science jus look up how many acres you need per sheep in Stevens county, i think its something like 1 per acre so say you got 5 sheep then you just need a 5 acre feild, and go from there.
We've come a long way in rotational grazing since this video. This paddock was clearly too small for the full 3.5 days. Ideally, in the spring especially, we'd have them only eat it down to a height where it still remains in premium growth phase (about 3-6 inches in this case), and that's what we strive for now. A good rule of thumb is about 1320 sq ft of paddock a day for every animal unit (1,000 lbs. of animal). This is, of course, dependent on an incredible number of variables, such as forage growth phase/height, forage variety, forage species/nutritional value, forage density, and whether or not the animals are pregnant or nursing, just to name a few. Moisture plays a role as well since it makes the flock/herd more susceptible to parasites, and that's another big reason why we move them so frequently, dry or wet, despite larger paddocks. In any case, we have a lot more animals now and the paddocks in the spring were nearly 2 acres in size this year. Still, we moved them about twice a week for nearly 3 months, basically until prime growing season was over. In addition to all the other considerations above, we managed to keep a lot of our pasture from going to seed and losing nutritional value as forage, and we got a lot of re-growth during 30ish day paddock resting periods. Thanks for watching. Enjoy the rest of summer.
We now work exclusively with 3x4x8 bales of orchard grass and alfalfa that have been hay-tested so we know metrics like ADF, NDF, TDN, and RFV, etc., before we buy a semi load. This, of course, limits our supplier choices but we've found a good producer/supplier in Oregon. Not as local as we'd like but at least still here in the PNW.
Both: We good? What are you looking to do? Both: ...No, we good. Goat: You wanna wrassle? Ewe: Nah Goat: Headbutt? Ewe embarks together on casual stroll Goat: Okay new buddy. Whoopee! Cheerful dancing ensues.
I loved having goats when the kids showed them in 4H. They're almost like a dog. They would play and follow you around the yard. Couple time they even got into the house...I'm sitting there watching TV and look over and there's a goat in the living room 😂
so much friggan cuteness in a very short span of time! I love how well goats and sheep get along w eachother - just be sure not to add any donkeys, their roughousing/play is almost always far too rough for most other livestock with whom they're multispecies grazed, esp bc they sometimes bite each other.
Our reels go out to 1320 feet each, so we can build a paddock of any size, up to about 4.25 acres if we use our permanent fencing as one of the four sides. We'll never need a 3.5 day paddock of that size...not even for our four cows. We adjust the paddock sizes each paddock move with the reels of twine based on 'animal units' (one animal unit = 1,000 lbs. of animal). As a rule of thumb, one animal unit requires about 1320 sq. ft. of grazing area per day. Naturally, this varies based on pasture quality, and many other factors, but it's a good place to start and then you can tweak the next paddock size based on how much your animals eat it down. Hoping to do a video on paddock size calculations soon. It will, however, bore anyone who isn't a newish rancher, but that's fine.