Ridgetop
Herd Master
Wolfemama: I looove the length on that ram! The loin is where the money is. Thick, wide and meaty is the wining proposition. Weight and size don't mean anything unless they are carrying the muscle and thickness for meat.
As to the lamb, they go through such crazy stages - gorgeous one day and the next you are ashamed to admit they are yours! LOL I bought a very young registered ram lamb last year. He was a quad, out of a fabulous ram and bloodlines, only 3 months old, but so wide and long. The last lot in the sale and I got him for the minimum bid. I did not bother with him last year since he was too young to breed to my ewes and I had a lovely ram I was using. This year I was excited to use him but when I pulled him out of the ram pen and put him in with his chosen girls, I thought he was soooo ugly - scrawny looking without the thickness he should have had from those lines! I decided to use him anyway and see what he produced, then I would dump him at the auction. His lambs are breathtaking! I put him back in the ram pen still ugly and scrawny, thinking maybe he was one of those peculiar studs that are ugly themselves but produce magic. That was several months ago. The other day I visited the rams to check them out. What a difference! All of a sudden in just 3-4 months he was beautiful. He had always been super long, but now he was thick and wide too! He had grown into himself and is definitely not auction fodder! LOL
Definitely I vote for Type A Katahdins. A good market animal should look like they are full of meat.
As to the lamb, they go through such crazy stages - gorgeous one day and the next you are ashamed to admit they are yours! LOL I bought a very young registered ram lamb last year. He was a quad, out of a fabulous ram and bloodlines, only 3 months old, but so wide and long. The last lot in the sale and I got him for the minimum bid. I did not bother with him last year since he was too young to breed to my ewes and I had a lovely ram I was using. This year I was excited to use him but when I pulled him out of the ram pen and put him in with his chosen girls, I thought he was soooo ugly - scrawny looking without the thickness he should have had from those lines! I decided to use him anyway and see what he produced, then I would dump him at the auction. His lambs are breathtaking! I put him back in the ram pen still ugly and scrawny, thinking maybe he was one of those peculiar studs that are ugly themselves but produce magic. That was several months ago. The other day I visited the rams to check them out. What a difference! All of a sudden in just 3-4 months he was beautiful. He had always been super long, but now he was thick and wide too! He had grown into himself and is definitely not auction fodder! LOL
Definitely I vote for Type A Katahdins. A good market animal should look like they are full of meat.