- Thread starter
- #41
soarwitheagles
True BYH Addict
Beekissed,
Super nice pics of a super nice hoop house. Now I kinda wish I had built the style you and Babs have shown us here. Well, hopefully I learned my lesson and next time I can build the expresso version. We really did not need such a semi permanent version like I built...we needed something that would give 10+ pregnant ewes a dry place to drop and care for their lambs during the storms.
On the brighter side of things...the last 5 lambs were all born out in the rain during large rainstorms. Then, the mama ewes kept their lambs out in the rain for most of the time. I am beginning to wonder just how dangerous/risky it is to permit open field births when our weather is not as harsh as the northern climates...
I suppose that if I am to err, it is good to err on the cautious side. I still do not feel comfortable seeing all the sheep totally wet, soaked to the bone and drenched for days at a time. Maybe I need to get over thinking they need special care? But nearly every book I read stated the ewes and new born lambs need a warm, dry, sheltered area.
Here is a very strange fact: last year our herd had a warm, sheltered, dry, 5 star stable with hay bedding and all, yet we still lost two lambs to pneumonia and the flock had reoccurring upper respiratory infections that constantly required antibiotic injections. This year, the sheep will stay outside without shelter for days at a time in the wet, cold, windy, and at times freezing weather, and not one illness at all. How do I explain this? I have no clue at all. To me, this defies logic, medical science, and good reasoning. If anyone can explain to me how our flock is healthier without shelter, and while hanging out in long, prolonged, cold, and even violent storms, please do!
Scratching my head on this one...and if this type of strange stuff continues, I may not have any hair left at all!
Super nice pics of a super nice hoop house. Now I kinda wish I had built the style you and Babs have shown us here. Well, hopefully I learned my lesson and next time I can build the expresso version. We really did not need such a semi permanent version like I built...we needed something that would give 10+ pregnant ewes a dry place to drop and care for their lambs during the storms.
On the brighter side of things...the last 5 lambs were all born out in the rain during large rainstorms. Then, the mama ewes kept their lambs out in the rain for most of the time. I am beginning to wonder just how dangerous/risky it is to permit open field births when our weather is not as harsh as the northern climates...
I suppose that if I am to err, it is good to err on the cautious side. I still do not feel comfortable seeing all the sheep totally wet, soaked to the bone and drenched for days at a time. Maybe I need to get over thinking they need special care? But nearly every book I read stated the ewes and new born lambs need a warm, dry, sheltered area.
Here is a very strange fact: last year our herd had a warm, sheltered, dry, 5 star stable with hay bedding and all, yet we still lost two lambs to pneumonia and the flock had reoccurring upper respiratory infections that constantly required antibiotic injections. This year, the sheep will stay outside without shelter for days at a time in the wet, cold, windy, and at times freezing weather, and not one illness at all. How do I explain this? I have no clue at all. To me, this defies logic, medical science, and good reasoning. If anyone can explain to me how our flock is healthier without shelter, and while hanging out in long, prolonged, cold, and even violent storms, please do!
Scratching my head on this one...and if this type of strange stuff continues, I may not have any hair left at all!