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dwbonfire
Loving the herd life
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i have been keeping her tied, shes got plenty of room to move about, and the other ewe and ram are loose in the pen. this morning they were fighting over the food but he seemed to have a little more to say than before! im glad to see this. now that ive got him pretty well trained to the grain im going to let them all out tomorrow since i will be home all day, and hopefully he has bonded with them enough to come in in the evening. i am thinking when they are out he will have much more room to escape her if she bothers him, which i doubt she will unless he gets too close. i guess time will tell, if she comes into heat i think ill see a big attitude change and hopefully he is old and bold enough to breed them. its much easier to tell with my goat when she is in heat than it is the sheep, i havent seen them mount eachother at all or do any of those behaviors. ill be watching closely for it now though.Bridgemoof said:Hey dwBon, these Jacobs I have seem to have a lot more attitude than the other sheep I have. I'm going through the same kind of power struggles with mine, although not exactly as you describe. I guess because they are horned, they have to establish some kind of pecking order, and they usually do it viciously with those horns!
If it were me, I would be afraid she would hurt him. She's quite possibly bred and trying to make sure he should not try to pull anything funny on her. Is there a way you can keep them separated by a fence or gate and let them see each other for a while without being together? That way they can kind of get used to each other, but not interact.
My young Jacob ram Uriah is a head butting maniac,he's about 10 months now. Lily, the oldest ewe of the bunch, has been head butting him, but they go head to head. He starts it, but she won't take it and she goes after him. She's trying to keep him in line. I'm quite sure she is bred (by him) and doesn't want him to hurt her, so she fights violently with him, head to head. Eventually he walks away. Your guy just sounds a little shyer and meeker, so he's getting beat up.
Just this week I introduced my flock to the new Jacobs I got. I was worried Uriah would head butt them, especially the one who is a whether. But instead he is trying to breed them all, even the whether. The Jacob ewes were running... running away from him! I don't know if they were in heat, but they would not stand for him and let him have his way. But fortunately, there was no head butting. BY about day two everybody had calmed down and I guess they established some kind of agreement between them all because they are calm.
Good luck!
p.s. i am still wanting a ram lamb from you! do you have all jacobs?